A theoretical safety concern proposed in the influenza literature is that therapeutic antiviral antibodies could have the potential for antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) of infection and disease. ADE may occur when virus-specific antibodies at subtherapeutic, nonneutralizing concentrations facilitate virus uptake and, in some cases, enhance replication, which can lead to an exacerbation of virus-mediated disease. Alternatively, ADE may occur due to antibody-dependent complement activation exacerbating virus-mediated disease in the absence of increased replication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a major unmet medical need. Most patients have poor long-term survival, and treatment has not significantly changed in 40 years. Recently, bispecific antibodies that redirect the cytotoxic activity of effector T cells by binding to CD3, the signaling component of the T-cell receptor, and a tumor target have shown clinical activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe intent of cancer immunotherapy (CIT) is to generate and enhance T-cell responses against tumors. The tumor microenvironment establishes several inhibitory pathways that lead to suppression of the local immune response, which is permissive for tumor growth. The efficacy of different CITs, alone and in combination, stems from reinvigorating the tumor immune response via several mechanisms, including costimulatory agonists, checkpoint inhibitors, and vaccines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExtensive crosstalk among ErbB/HER receptors suggests that blocking signaling from more than one family member may be essential to effectively treat cancer and limit drug resistance. We generated a conventional IgG molecule MEHD7945A with dual HER3/EGFR specificity by phage display engineering and used structural and mutational studies to understand how a single antigen recognition surface binds two epitopes with high affinity. As a human IgG1, MEHD7945A exhibited dual action by inhibiting EGFR- and HER3-mediated signaling in vitro and in vivo and the ability to engage immune effector functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNK cells can identify and eliminate emerging tumors due to altered expression of activating and inhibitory ligands on aberrant cells, a process that is greatly enhanced following NK cell activation. As a principal site of both tumor metastases and immature NK cells, the liver represents a unique anatomic location in which activation of the innate immune system could provide substantial therapeutic benefit. We describe here the NK cell-dependent destruction of a primary hepatic tumor following infection with an attenuated intracellular bacterium derived from Listeria monocytogenes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDocetaxel has demonstrated therapeutic efficacy against breast, prostate, and ovarian cancer and other solid tumors. The tumoricidal activity of docetaxel is mainly attributed to its ability to block microtubule depolymerization, thus inducing G(2)-M arrest and apoptosis. Mounting evidence indicates that docetaxel also possesses immunomodulatory activity such as augmenting macrophage and lymphokine activated killer activity and inducing pro-inflammatory cytokines, suggesting that docetaxel may be a good chemotherapeutic agent to combine with cancer immunotherapies, assuming that it does not inhibit the vaccine-induced immune response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIFN-alpha is approved for the treatment of multiple cancers. Its pleiotropic properties include inhibition of proliferation and angiogenesis and induction of apoptosis. Type I IFNs also exert immunomodulatory effects, which make it an appropriate candidate to combine with cancer vaccines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOX40 (CD134), a membrane-bound member of the tumor necrosis factor-receptor superfamily, is expressed primarily on activated CD4(+) T cells. Following engagement on the cell surface, OX40 delivers a costimulatory signal that leads to potent, proinflammatory effects. Engagement of OX40 during antigen (Ag)-specific stimulation of T cells leads to increased production of memory T cells, increased migration of Ag-specific T cells, enhanced cytokine production by effector T cells, and the ability to break peripheral T cell tolerance in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 2 (TRAF2), an adapter protein that associates with the cytoplasmic tail of OX40, may play a critical role in OX40-mediated signal transduction. To investigate the in vivo role of TRAF2 in OX40-mediated generation of Ag-specific memory T cells, we bred OVA-specific TCR transgenic mice to TRAF2 dominant-negative (TRAF2 DN) mice. Following Ag stimulation and OX40 engagement of TRAF2 DN T cells in vivo, the number of long-lived OVA-specific T cells and effector T cell function was dramatically reduced when compared with wild-type T cells.
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