'Necrophagy, DaNGeRous indigestion, defecation and immunity to cancer' - Seminar

Seminar by Prof. Caetano Reis e Sousa (Francis Crick Institute, Immunobiology lab, UK),
hosted by Prof. Sophie Janssens.

Innate and adaptive immunity work concertedly in vertebrates to restore homeostasis following pathogen invasion or other insults. Like all homeostatic circuits, immunity relies on an integrated system of sensors, transducers and effectors that can be analysed in cellular or molecular terms. At the cellular level, T and B lymphocytes act as an effector arm of immunity that is mobilised in response to signals transduced by innate immune cells that detect a given insult. These innate cells are spread around the body and include dendritic cells (DCs), the chief immune sensors of pathogen invasion and tumour growth. At the molecular level, DCs possess receptors that directly sense pathogen presence and tissue damage and that signal to control antigen presentation or to regulate a plethora of genes encoding effector proteins that regulate immunity. The lecture will focus on understanding how DCs integrate environmental signals to drive immunity to cancer, with applications in immunotherapy.

  • Venue : UGent-VIB Research Building FSVM, seminar room of the FSVM building,
    Technologiepark-Zwijnaarde 71, 9052 Ghent    OR   online
  • Stream View stream: Stream ID 829 7797 9334  &  Stream Password 250969
  • Website