Publications by authors named "Jannes Govaerts"

Dendritic cells (DCs) are critical players at the intersection of innate and adaptive immunity, making them ideal candidates for anticancer vaccine development. DC-based immunotherapies typically involve isolating patient-derived DCs, pulsing them with tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) or tumor-specific antigens (TSAs), and utilizing maturation cocktails to ensure their effective activation. These matured DCs are then reinfused to elicit tumor-specific T-cell responses.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists found a group of special immune cells in tumors called TIM3VISTA tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) that make it hard for cancer treatments to work.
  • These cells thrive in tumors that don't have many visible markers for the immune system to recognize and fight, which helps the cancer escape being attacked.
  • By blocking these TIM3VISTA TAMs and combining the treatment with a type of chemotherapy, they could change these cells to be more aggressive against cancer, making the treatments more effective.
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An important challenge in the real-world management of patients with advanced clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (aRCC) is determining who might benefit from immune checkpoint blockade (ICB). Here we performed a comprehensive multiomics mapping of aRCC in the context of ICB treatment, involving discovery analyses in a real-world data cohort followed by validation in independent cohorts. We cross-connected bulk-tumor transcriptomes across >1,000 patients with validations at single-cell and spatial resolutions, revealing a patient-specific crosstalk between proinflammatory tumor-associated macrophages and (pre-)exhausted CD8 T cells that was distinguished by a human leukocyte antigen repertoire with higher preference for tumoral neoantigens.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Research suggests that dendritic cell (DC) vaccines can trigger a beneficial type I interferon response, but preclinical trials show these vaccines don't work well in T cell-depleted environments.
  • * Combining DC vaccines with PD-L1 blockade can effectively reduce tumor growth by targeting immunosuppressive macrophages, suggesting a need for comprehensive strategies in treating T cell-depleted tumors.
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CD8 T cell activation via immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is successful in microsatellite instable (MSI) colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. By comparison, the success of immunotherapy against microsatellite stable (MSS) CRC is limited. Little is known about the most critical features of CRC CD8 T cells that together determine the diverse immune landscapes and contrasting ICB responses.

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Article Synopsis
  • The cellular stress and immunity cycle helps our bodies respond to stress and keeps everything balanced.
  • When stress happens, cells communicate to fix the problem, but if they can't, they call for help from the immune system.
  • In cancer, this cycle gets messed up because cancer cells ignore normal stress responses to keep growing and weaken the immune system, making it harder to fight the disease.
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There is an urgent need for new and better biomarker modalities to estimate the risk of recurrence within the luminal-like breast cancer (BC) population. Molecular diagnostic tests used in the clinic lack accuracy in identifying patients with early luminal BC who are likely to develop metastases. This study provides proof of concept that various liquid biopsy read-outs could serve as valuable candidates to build a multi-modal biomarker model distinguishing, already at diagnosis, between early metastasizing and non-metastasizing patients.

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Immunogenic cell death (ICD) refers to an immunologically distinct process of regulated cell death that activates, rather than suppresses, innate and adaptive immune responses. Such responses culminate into T cell-driven immunity against antigens derived from dying cancer cells. The potency of ICD is dependent on the immunogenicity of dying cells as defined by the antigenicity of these cells and their ability to expose immunostimulatory molecules like damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) and cytokines like type I interferons (IFNs).

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Clinically relevant immunological biomarkers that discriminate between diverse hypofunctional states of tumor-associated CD8 T cells remain disputed. Using multiomics analysis of CD8 T cell features across multiple patient cohorts and tumor types, we identified tumor niche-dependent exhausted and other types of hypofunctional CD8 T cell states. CD8 T cells in "supportive" niches, like melanoma or lung cancer, exhibited features of tumor reactivity-driven exhaustion (CD8 T).

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Tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) are essential players in the tumour microenvironment (TME) and modulate various pro-tumorigenic functions such as immunosuppression, angiogenesis, cancer cell proliferation, invasion and metastasis, along with resistance to anti-cancer therapies. TAMs also mediate important anti-tumour functions and can clear dying cancer cells via efferocytosis. Thus, not surprisingly, TAMs exhibit heterogeneous activities and functional plasticity depending on the type and context of cancer cell death that they are faced with.

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Dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccination for cancer treatment has seen considerable development over recent decades. However, this field is currently in a state of flux toward niche-applications, owing to recent paradigm-shifts in immuno-oncology mobilized by T cell-targeting immunotherapies. DC vaccines are typically generated using autologous (patient-derived) DCs exposed to tumor-associated or -specific antigens (TAAs or TSAs), in the presence of immunostimulatory molecules to induce DC maturation, followed by reinfusion into patients.

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