Publications by authors named "Aladdin M Bhuiyan"

There is a need to develop effective therapies for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA), a highly lethal malignancy with increasing incidence and poor prognosis. Although targeting tumour metabolism has been the focus of intense investigation for more than a decade, tumour metabolic plasticity and high risk of toxicity have limited this anticancer strategy. Here we use genetic and pharmacological approaches in human and mouse in vitro and in vivo models to show that PDA has a distinct dependence on de novo ornithine synthesis from glutamine.

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Checkpoint blockade immunotherapy has failed in pancreatic cancer and other poorly responsive tumor types in part due to inadequate T cell priming. Naive T cells can receive costimulation not only via CD28 but also through TNF superfamily receptors that signal via NF-κB. Antagonists of the ubiquitin ligases cellular inhibitor of apoptosis protein (cIAP)1/2, also called second mitochondria-derived activator of caspases (SMAC) mimetics, induce degradation of cIAP1/2 proteins, allowing for the accumulation of NIK and constitutive, ligand-independent activation of alternate NF-κB signaling that mimics costimulation in T cells.

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The therapeutic potential of recombinant cytokines has been limited by the severe side effects of systemic administration. We describe a strategy to reduce the dose-limiting toxicities of monomeric cytokines by designing two components that require colocalization for activity and that can be independently targeted to restrict activity to cells expressing two surface markers. We demonstrate the approach with a previously designed mimetic of cytokines interleukin-2 and interleukin-15-Neoleukin-2/15 (Neo-2/15)-both for trans-activating immune cells surrounding targeted tumor cells and for cis-activating directly targeted immune cells.

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Cancer therapy with the T cell growth factor interleukin (IL)-2 is limited by low response rates and toxicity. Multiple protein engineering strategies have attempted to improve IL-2 therapy, typically through enhanced IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) binding. Intriguingly, Mo et al.

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Article Synopsis
  • Some tumors don’t respond well to treatments because they lose important signals (MHC class I) needed for immune cells to recognize them.
  • A new treatment involving specific proteins (cIAP1/2 antagonists) can help the immune system fight these tumors by changing how certain immune cells (macrophages) attack.
  • Using this new treatment alongside another therapy (CD47 blockade) might work even better against tough tumors that usually resist other types of treatments.
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Article Synopsis
  • Antibodies that block cell-surface receptor interactions can inhibit signaling for various diseases, but they don't stop all forms of intracellular signaling that can occur after receptor engagement.
  • The new method, called receptor inhibition by phosphatase recruitment (RIPR), leverages a phosphatase called CD45 to directly dephosphorylate tyrosine residues on activated receptors, effectively reducing their signaling.
  • The RIPR-PD1 variant demonstrated superior efficacy in preclinical models compared to traditional antibody treatments, and this strategy can be applied to other immune receptors, enhancing therapeutic outcomes in immune responses.
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