Publications by authors named "Ruben Bill"

The share of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) used in cancer treatment has rapidly increased in recent years. Although ICIs have the potential to provide a durable survival benefit in a subset of patients, many patients do not respond to these costly and often toxic therapies.Recent retrospective clinical data indicate that the time of day of ICI infusion may be a powerful modulator of their efficacy.

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  • Induction chemotherapy (IC) may be a viable treatment for locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC), and this study investigates its impact on patient survival outcomes.
  • The study involved analyzing data from 48 patients at a cancer center, revealing that a significant portion responded positively to IC, with a 97% tumor control rate and a notable tumor reduction in many cases.
  • The findings indicate that the response to IC is a strong predictor of survival, especially for patients with laryngeal and hypopharyngeal tumors, highlighting the efficacy of IC in this patient population.
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The quality and quantity of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, particularly CD8 T cells, are important parameters for the control of tumor growth and response to immunotherapy. Here, we show in murine and human cancers that these parameters exhibit circadian oscillations, driven by both the endogenous circadian clock of leukocytes and rhythmic leukocyte infiltration, which depends on the circadian clock of endothelial cells in the tumor microenvironment. To harness these rhythms therapeutically, we demonstrate that efficacy of chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy and immune checkpoint blockade can be improved by adjusting the time of treatment during the day.

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Immune checkpoint inhibitors have improved the outcome of patients diagnosed with inoperable recurrent or metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. However, as only a subset of head and neck cancer patients benefit from this treatment, biomarkers predicting treatment response help guide physicians in their clinical decision-making. PD-L1 expression assessed by immunohistochemistry is the single most clinically relevant biomarker predicting response to PD-1-blocking antibodies.

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  • The study examines how variations in tumor microenvironments (TMEs) affect cancer progression by analyzing 52 head and neck squamous cell carcinomas.
  • It identifies macrophage polarity—determined by CS expression—as a significant factor for prognosis, rather than traditional M1 and M2 classifications.
  • The findings indicate that TMEs create organized networks of pro- and antitumor responses, emphasizing that CS macrophage polarity could simplify understanding complex cancer behaviors across different types of tumors.
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Background: Although immune checkpoint inhibitors have been a breakthrough in clinical oncology, these therapies fail to produce durable responses in a significant fraction of patients. This lack of long-term efficacy may be due to a poor pre-existing network linking innate and adaptive immunity. Here, we present an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)-based strategy that dually targets toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) and programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1), aiming to overcome resistance to anti-PD-L1 monoclonal therapy.

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  • Neutrophils are a type of white blood cell that gather in solid tumors and their numbers can be connected to how well a person does with cancer treatment.
  • Not all neutrophils are the same; some can help fight cancer while others might make it worse.
  • The study found that the right kind of neutrophils are important for successful cancer treatments, especially when they have a specific gene signature that helps them work better against tumors.
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The process of cancer immunosurveillance is a mechanism of tumour suppression that can protect the host from cancer development throughout its lifetime. However, it is unknown whether the effectiveness of cancer immunosurveillance fluctuates over a single day. Here we demonstrate that the initial time of day of tumour engraftment dictates the ensuing tumour size across mouse cancer models.

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Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a transient, reversible process of cell de-differentiation where cancer cells transit between various stages of an EMT continuum, including epithelial, partial EMT, and mesenchymal cell states. We have employed Tamoxifen-inducible dual recombinase lineage tracing systems combined with live imaging and 5-cell RNA sequencing to track cancer cells undergoing partial or full EMT in the MMTV-PyMT mouse model of metastatic breast cancer. In primary tumors, cancer cells infrequently undergo EMT and mostly transition between epithelial and partial EMT states but rarely reach full EMT.

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Macrophages often abound within tumors, express colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R), and are linked to adverse patient survival. Drugs blocking CSF1R signaling have been used to suppress tumor-promoting macrophage responses; however, their mechanisms of action remain incompletely understood. Here, we assessed the lung tumor immune microenvironment in mice treated with BLZ945, a prototypical small-molecule CSF1R inhibitor, using single-cell RNA sequencing and mechanistic validation approaches.

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  • Secretory carcinoma is a subtype of salivary gland cancer that can be hard to diagnose and often has genetic mutations (NTRK fusions) that can be targeted with specific treatments called TRK inhibitors.
  • A female patient with secretory carcinoma at the base of her tongue experienced persistent disease after surgery and chemoradiation, but instead of undergoing further surgery, she received a targeted therapy, larotrectinib, which was well-tolerated and led to a complete response.
  • This case emphasizes the need for accurate diagnosis of secretory carcinoma and the significance of molecular testing for personalized treatment options in advanced salivary gland cancers.
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Immunotherapy is revolutionizing cancer treatment but is often restricted by toxicities. What distinguishes adverse events from concomitant antitumor reactions is poorly understood. Here, using anti-CD40 treatment in mice as a model of T1-promoting immunotherapy, we showed that liver macrophages promoted local immune-related adverse events.

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Dendritic cells (DCs) contribute a small fraction of the tumor microenvironment but are emerging as an essential antitumor component based on their ability to foster T cell immunity and immunotherapy responses. Here, we discuss our expanding view of DC heterogeneity in human tumors, as revealed with meta-analysis of single-cell transcriptome profiling studies. We further examine tumor-infiltrating DC states that are conserved across patients, cancer types, and species and consider the fundamental and clinical relevance of these findings.

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Cancer immunotherapies are increasingly combined with targeted therapies to improve therapeutic outcomes. We show that combination of agonistic anti-CD40 with antiangiogenic antibodies targeting 2 proangiogenic factors, vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) and angiopoietin 2 (Ang2/ANGPT2), induces pleiotropic immune mechanisms that facilitate tumor rejection in several tumor models. On the one hand, VEGFA/Ang2 blockade induced regression of the tumor microvasculature while decreasing the proportion of nonperfused vessels and reducing leakiness of the remaining vessels.

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Immunotherapies - Overview, mode of action and clinical implications The introduction of immunotherapies has led to major advances in the treatment of cancer patients. The mainstays of immunotherapies in clinical routine are immune checkpoint inhibitors. Immune checkpoints like CTLA-4 or the PD-1 / PD-L1 axis are important contributors to the immune homeostasis by preventing overshooting immune responses against pathogens and thus preventing collateral damage to normal tissue, or by preventing autoimmunity.

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Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase that regulates a plethora of downstream signaling pathways essential for cell migration, proliferation and death, processes that are exploited by cancer cells during malignant progression. These well-established tumorigenic activities, together with its high expression and activity in different cancer types, highlight FAK as an attractive target for cancer therapy. We have assessed and characterized the therapeutic potential and the biological effects of BI 853520, a novel small chemical inhibitor of FAK, in several preclinical mouse models of breast cancer.

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Genetically engineered mouse models have become an indispensable tool for breast cancer research. Combination of multiple site-specific recombination systems such as Cre/loxP and Flippase (Flp)/Frt allows for engineering of sophisticated, multi-layered conditional mouse models. Here, we report the generation and characterization of a novel transgenic mouse line expressing a mouse codon-optimized Flp under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter.

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Increasing the efficacy of approved systemic treatments in metastasized pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PanNET) is an unmet medical need. The antiangiogenic tyrosine kinase inhibitor sunitinib is approved for PanNET treatment. In addition, sunitinib is a lysosomotropic drug and such drugs can induce lysosomal membrane permeabilization as well as autophagy.

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The Rip1Tag2 transgenic mouse model of β-cell carcinogenesis has been instrumental in studying various aspects of tumor angiogenesis and in investigating the response to anti-angiogenic therapeutics. Thereby, the in-depth assessment of blood and lymphatic vessel phenotypes and functionality represents key experimental analyses. In this chapter, we describe basic protocols to assess tumor blood vessel morphology (pericyte coverage), functionality (perfusion, leakiness, and hypoxia), lymphatic tumor coverage, and tumor cell proliferation and apoptosis based on immunofluorescence microscopy analysis.

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Despite the approval of several anti-angiogenic therapies, clinical results remain unsatisfactory, and transient benefits are followed by rapid tumor recurrence. Here, we demonstrate potent anti-angiogenic efficacy of the multi-kinase inhibitors nintedanib and sunitinib in a mouse model of breast cancer. However, after an initial regression, tumors resume growth in the absence of active tumor angiogenesis.

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Unlabelled: Viral VEGF-E (ovVEGF-E), a homolog of VEGF-A, was discovered in the genome of Orf virus. Together with VEGF-A, B, C, D, placental growth factor (PlGF) and snake venom VEGF (svVEGF), ovVEGF-E is a member of the VEGF family of potent angiogenesis factors with a bioactivity similar to

Vegf-a: it induces proliferation, migration and sprouting of cultured vascular endothelial cells and proliferative lesions in the skin of sheep, goat and man that are characterized by massive capillary proliferation and dilation. These biological functions are mediated exclusively via its interaction with VEGF receptor-2 (VEGFR-2).

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Article Synopsis
  • An epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) allows tumor cells to leave the primary tumor and spread to other parts of the body, making it a key process in cancer metastasis.
  • Researchers developed a high-content microscopy assay to screen over 3,400 chemical compounds to find potential drugs that could inhibit EMT, identifying 19 effective ones that block TGFβ-induced EMT in normal mammary cells.
  • Among these, several multi-kinase inhibitors were found to target TGFβ receptors, revealing new "off-target" effects that could enhance therapeutic strategies in cancer treatment.
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Purpose: Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNET) represent a rare but challenging heterogeneous group of cancers with an increasing incidence over the last number of decades. Herein, we report an in-depth evaluation of the new antiangiogenic small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) nintedanib in the preclinical Rip1Tag2 transgenic mouse model of neuroendocrine carcinoma of the pancreas (insulinoma).

Experimental Design: We have assessed the antiangiogenic and antitumor activity of nintedanib, in comparison with other antiangiogenic TKI, by treating Rip1Tag2 transgenic mice with different treatment schedules complemented with histopathologic, cell biologic, and biochemical analyses.

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Tumor growth depends on the formation of new blood vessels (tumor angiogenesis) either from preexisting vessels or by the recruitment of bone marrow-derived cells. Despite encouraging results obtained with preclinical cancer models, the therapeutic targeting of tumor angiogenesis has thus far failed to deliver an enduring clinical response in cancer patients. One major obstacle for improving anti-angiogenic therapy is the lack of validated biomarkers, which allow patient stratification for suitable treatment and a rapid assessment of therapy response.

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