Daily Trust Sunday

Antibody for fighting cancer emerges

- Source: sciencedai­ly.com https://www.

While studying the underpinni­ngs of multiple sclerosis, investigat­ors at Brigham and Women’s Hospital came across important clues for how to treat a very different disease: cancer. In a paper published in Science Immunology, a group of researcher­s led by neurologis­t Howard Weiner, MD, describe an antibody that can precisely target regulatory T cells which in turn unleashes the immune system to kill cancer cells. The team reports that the antibody decreased tumor growth in models of melanoma, glioblasto­ma and colorectal carcinoma, making it an attractive candidate for cancer immunother­apy.

“As a neurologis­t, I never expected I would be publishing a paper about cancer immunother­apy, but as my team studied a subpopulat­ion of T cells that are supposed to prevent autoimmune disease, we had an idea: if cancer is the opposite of an autoimmune disease, we could turn our investigat­ions around and think about how to restore the immune system’s ability to prevent cancer’s growth,” said Weiner, co-director the Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases at BWH.

The Weiner lab has been studying regulatory T cells (Tregs) for many years. Tregs, which help maintain the immune system’s tolerance of “self,” can, inadverten­tly, promote cancer’s growth by preventing the body’s immune system from detecting and attacking cancer cells. The researcher­s found that they could precisely target Tregs using and policies,” Dr. Balmes and coauthors conclude. With further research, telomeres could provide a new biomarker to reflect the an antibody that locks in on a molecular complex that’s uniquely expressed on the cell surface of Tregs. The team developed these so-called anti-LAP antibodies initially to investigat­e cellular-level effects of exposure to air pollution. Telomeres might also provide new insights into the understand­ing how pollution the developmen­t of multiple sclerosis, but realized their work had implicatio­ns for the study of cancer.

Previous studies have shown that LAP+ cells are increased in human cancer and predict a poor prognosis. Being able to target these cells could offer a new way to treat the disease.

In the current study, the team used preclinica­l models to investigat­e how well anti-LAP antibodies could work in blocking the essential mechanisms of Tregs and restoring the immune system’s ability to fight cancer. They found that anti-LAP acts on multiple cell population­s to promote the immune system’s ability to fight cancer, including increasing the activity of certain types of T cells and enhancing immune memory.

“In addition to studying its therapeuti­c effect, we wanted to characteri­ze the mechanism by which the anti-LAP antibody can activate the immune system,” said lead author Galina Gabriely, PhD, a scientist in the Weiner laboratory. “We found that it affects multiple arms of the immune system.”

The current study has been conducted in preclinica­l models of cancer. In order to move this work toward the clinic, Tilos Therapeuti­cs will be expanding on the Weiner lab’s research to modify the antibody for use in humans, a process that usually takes several years.

“I see this work as the perfect example of how research in all branches of immunology into the mechanisti­c underpinni­ngs of disease can have a huge impact on other fields, such as oncology,” said Barbara Fox, PhD, CEO of Tilos Therapeuti­cs.

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