Publications by authors named "Saskia Schmitt"

Topoisomerase I (TOP1) Inhibitors constitute an emerging payload class to engineer antibody-drug conjugates (ADC) as next-generation biopharmaceutical for cancer treatment. Existing ADCs are using camptothecin payloads with lower potency and suffer from limited stability in circulation. With this study, we introduce a novel camptothecin-based linker-payload platform based on the highly potent camptothecin derivative exatecan.

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Article Synopsis
  • FLT3 is a protein that is often overexpressed or mutated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), making treatment challenging, even with existing therapies like receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs).
  • Researchers developed a new antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) called 20D9-ADC, which effectively targets FLT3 and shows significant cytotoxic effects against various AML cells in lab tests and promising results in animal models.
  • The combination of 20D9-ADC with the TKI midostaurin demonstrated strong effectiveness, suggesting a powerful new treatment strategy for FLT3-ITD-positive AML with reduced side effects.
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Background: Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) stem cells (LSCs) cause disease relapse. The CD47 "don't eat me signal" is upregulated on LSCs and contributes to immune evasion by inhibiting phagocytosis through interacting with myeloid-specific signal regulatory protein alpha (SIRPα). Activation of macrophages by blocking CD47 has been successful, but the ubiquitous expression of CD47 on healthy cells poses potential limitations for such therapies.

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Targeted T cell therapy is highly effective in disease settings where tumor antigens are uniformly expressed on malignant cells and where off-tumor on-target-associated toxicity is manageable. Although acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has in principle been shown to be a T cell-sensitive disease by the graft-versus-leukemia activity of allogeneic stem cell transplantation, T cell therapy has so far failed in this setting. This is largely due to the lack of target structures both sufficiently selective and uniformly expressed on AML, causing unacceptable myeloid cell toxicity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Conventional dendritic cell (DC) vaccine strategies face challenges like poor DC migration and complex production processes.
  • A new approach involves creating multifunctional antibody constructs that target DCs with viral or tumor antigens while also activating them using toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists combined in a single molecule.
  • In testing, the fusion of a CMV peptide with the flagellin domain significantly enhanced DC maturation and improved T cell activation, indicating this method could also be effective for delivering tumor-specific neoantigens like those found in acute myeloid leukemia.
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