Skip CCR Main Navigation National Cancer Institute National Cancer Institute U.S. National Institutes of Health www.cancer.gov
CCR - For Our Staff| Home |

Our Science – Trinchieri Website

Giorgio Trinchieri, M.D.

Portait Photo of Giorgio Trinchieri
Trinchieri Logo
Cancer and Inflammation Program
Program Director
PO Box B
Bldg 560, Rm. 31-93
Frederick, MD 21702-1201
Phone:  
301-846-1323
Fax:  
301-846-1673
E-Mail:  
trinchig@mail.nih.gov

Biography

Dr. Trinchieri was most recently the Director of the Schering Plough Laboratory for Immunological Research in Dardilly, France, and an NIH Fogarty Scholar at the Laboratory for Parasitic Diseases, NIAID. Since August 2006, he has been the Director of the Cancer and Inflammation Program, and Chief of the Laboratory of Experimental Immunology. His research at the CCR focuses on the interplay between inflammation/innate resistance and adaptive immunity, and the role of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the regulation of hematopoiesis, innate resistance, and immunity. He discovered interleukin-12 while at the Wistar Institute in 1989 and for many years has been characterizing the molecular mechanisms of interleukin-12 production and action, and the role of this molecule in tumor immunity, infections, and autoimmunity.

Research

Role of inflammation, innate resistance, and immunity in carcinogenesis, cancer progression, and prevention or destruction.

Recent studies are shedding quite a different light on the way in which innate resistance, as an integral part of inflammation, is participating in oncogenesis and tumor surveillance. For a long time, innate resistance has been considered a primitive non-specific form of resistance to infections eclipsed by the potent and specific acquired immunity of higher organisms. More recently, it has been recognized that innate resistance is not only the first line of defense against infections but it sets the stage and it is necessary for the development of adaptive immunity. It is now becoming evident, however, that the processes that the organisms use for resistance to infections are derived and shared with the mechanisms essential for tissue homeostasis and morphogenesis. Innate resistance is mediated not only by specialized cells but most stromal and parenchyma cells participate in the process and they may express and utilize many of the receptors also utilized by “immune� cells with similar signaling and physiological responses. Similarly, in cancer biology, it is becoming manifest that what used to be considered the defensive mechanisms of innate resistance and inflammation are indeed manifestations of tissue homeostasis and control of cellular proliferation that have many pleiotropic effects on carcinogenesis and tumor progression and dissemination. The interaction of the inflammatory mediators and effector cells with carcinogenesis and tumor progression is complicated and results in effects that either favor or impede tumor progression. The simple concept that early inflammation is necessary for carcinogenesis whereas inflammatory and immune response would prevent, when successful, tumor progression has being replaced by a more subtle understanding that the degree of inflammation and the type of inflammatory/immune response are responsible for tilting the balance between tumor progression and regression. The different investigators of the Cancer and Inflammation Program, also in collaboration with many investigators focusing in carcinogenesis and tumor biology, both in Bethesda and in Frederick, will be investigating many aspects of the complex cross-talk between inflammation and cancer.

In my own group and in collaboration with the other investigators in the Cancer and Inflammation Program, I plan to pursue a scientific program both in the mouse and in humans on the interface between inflammation, natural resistance and adaptive immunity with a focus on:

1) The molecular and cellular mechanisms regulating the activity of Dendritic Cell subsets, particularly the type I Interferon producing plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells as well as conventional Dendritic Cells and their cross-activating interaction with other inflammatory cell types, NK cells, and T cells.
2) The role of plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells in the regulation of immune response and tolerance in experimental models of cancer, autoimmunity, and infections.
3) The study of the molecular, structural and signaling aspects of receptors recognizing pathogens, particularly Toll-like receptors, cytoplasmic NOD and RIG-I-like receptors, and other surface receptor and their synergism/antagonism in the regulation of the inflammatory response.
4) The role of cytokines (including IL-12 family, type I and II interferons, interleukin-10) and dendritic cells in regulating the early innate response to infections and cancer and the deviation of the adaptive response for the development of preventive (vaccines) and prophylactic treatments for cancer and infectious diseases.
5) The study of the immunosuppressive tumor environment resulting in alternate activation of macrophages and myeloid cells and paralysis of Dendritic Cells, with an emphasis on the role of IL-10 and STAT3 activation; the reversion of the immunosuppressive environment will be combined to activation of innate resistance or modulation of the inflammatory response for anti-tumor therapy.
6) The role of various inflammation related gene products (Tumor Necrosis Factor, IL-12, IL-23, IL-27, IL-10, IL-17, IL-22, Toll-like receptors and their signaling molecules) in carcinogenesis utilizing various genetic or chemical models of colon and skin carcinogenesis.

This page was last updated on 11/15/2007.