About this Research Topic
Studies published in high-impact journals and widely accepted by the scientific community that describe an innovative technology or use advanced techniques to tackle difficult questions about mechanisms of action in the tumor microenvironment did not necessarily start out as success stories. For example, immune cells in the tumor microenvironment are difficult to image or manipulate in vivo because of the inherent limitations of these studies (rare cells, short lifespan, low transcriptional activity, etc.) and their extraordinary phenotypic and functional heterogeneity in the tumor and across organs. In this research issue, we aim to focus on impactful published stories that have struggled to make their way to the hill and can help other investigators learn from their failures. In other words, we are interested in the experience of other researchers in developing innovative techniques and exploring the tumor microenvironment at a mechanistic level.
We are interested in articles covering the following subtopics:
• Follow up on published articles in the form of peer-reviewed commentaries or research articles
• The aim is for authors to share their experience and expertise on specific studies; what bottlenecks have they encountered?
• The topic is strictly related to tumor immunology and immunotherapy
• Focuses on advanced techniques and mechanistic studies
• An interview with the principal investigator may be included
Keywords: Tumor microenvironment, Cancer immunology, Immune cells, CRISPR, Single-cell RNA sequencing, Fate mapping, In vivo imaging, Spatial transcriptomics/proteomics, Metabolism, Epigenomics, ATAC/scATACseq, Soluble factor screening, Cytokines, Chemokines
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.