Gut microbiota and the paradox of cancer immunotherapy

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Abstract

It is recently shown that beneficial environmental microbes stimulate integrated immune and neuroendocrine factors throughout the body, consequently modulating regulatory T-lymphocyte phenotypes, maintaining systemic immune balance, and determining the fate of preneoplastic lesions toward regression while sustaining whole body good health. Stimulated by a gut microbiota-centric systemic homeostasis hypothesis, we set out to explore the influence of the gut microbiome to explain the paradoxical roles of regulatory T-lymphocytes in cancer development and growth. This paradigm shift places cancer prevention and treatment into a new broader context of holobiont engineering to cultivate a tumor-suppressive macroenvironment. © 2014 Poutahidis, Kleinewietfeld and Erdman.

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Poutahidis, T., Kleinewietfeld, M., & Erdman, S. E. (2014). Gut microbiota and the paradox of cancer immunotherapy. Frontiers in Immunology, 5(APR). https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2014.00157

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