Your body produces potential cancer cells every day; how does the immune system track them down?

The Core Framework: The Three-Signal Model of Immune Surveillance
Core Dimension Explanation
Missing Self Signal Cancerous cells downregulate MHC-I → NK cells recognize the missing "self" signal → immediately attack and clear.
Stress Signal (NKG2D) DNA damage and cellular stress → NKG2D ligands (MICA/MICB/ULBP) appear on cell surfaces → NK cells are activated to attack.
Neoantigen Signal (MHC-I) Mutated proteins produced by cancer cells are presented via MHC-I → CD8+ T cells recognize neoantigens → precise, specific killing.
Tumor Evasion Strategies Downregulating MHC-I (hiding from T cells) + expressing PD-L1 (stepping on the brakes for T cells) + secreting TGF-β (building an immunosuppressive microenvironment).
Diagram: Core Mechanism

DNA replication errors during normal cell division / Environmental mutagens

↓(Generation of early cancerous cells)

Abnormal signals: MHC-I downregulation + Appearance of NKG2D ligands + Neoantigen presentation

NK cells (Rapid response) + CD8+ T cells (Precise killing)

↓(In most cases)

Successful clearance →You feel absolutely nothing

↓(If evasion occurs)

Tumor microenvironment forms →Immunosuppression →Tumor growth