Technologies for Personalizing Cancer Immunotherapies
James Heath, Elizabeth W. Gilloon Professor of Chemistry, California Institute of Technology (CalTech); Co-Director, Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy
Cancer immunotherapy, which has taken virtually all aspects of oncology
by storm over the past few years, is based upon using cellular or
molecular therapies to promote tumor cell/immune cell interactions. At
the heart of this therapy are the T cells that actually do the tumor
cell killing, and the tumor antigens that are recognized by those T
cells. Recent work has shown that neoantigens play critical roles in
many immunotherapy successes. Neoantigens are tumor antigens that are
fragments of mutated proteins expressed by the cancer cells, and contain
those point mutations. They are presented in the clefts of major
histocompatibility molecules (MHCs) by many of the cells in the tumor,
where they may be recognized by neoantigen-specific T cell populations.
In this presentation, I will discuss how various micro and
nanotechnologies are being harnessed to identify, for a given patient
which neoantigens are actively recruiting T cells into the tumor, and to
carry out a deep molecular analysis of those neoantigen-specific T
cells. I will further discuss how that information can then be
harnessed for personalized cancer immunotherapies in the form of
neoantigen-based vaccines, or engineered T cell receptor adoptive cell
transfer therapies.
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