The Antibody Society

the official website of the antibody society

An international non-profit supporting antibody-related research and development.

  • LOG IN
  • BECOME A MEMBER
  • About
    • Mission & Activities
    • Directors and Officers
    • The Antibody Society’s Committees
      • AIRR Community Committee
      • Communication & Membership Committee
      • Meetings Committee
    • Sponsors & Partners
  • Society meetings
    • Harnessing Cytokines for Cancer Immunotherapy Symposium
    • Biopharmaceutical Informatics Symposium
    • Emerging Cancer Therapies Leveraging Gamma-Delta Effector T cells Symposium
    • Emerging Immunotherapeutics for Ovarian Cancer Symposium
    • AIRR Community Meetings
    • Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics (US) 2023
      • 2022 Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics
      • 2020 Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics
      • 2019 Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics
      • 2018 Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics
      • What is INN a Name?
        • INN issue updates
    • Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics Europe 2023
    • FOCIS Symposia
  • AIRR Community
    • AIRR News
    • AIRR Publications
    • AIRR Meetings
      • AIRR Community Special Event 2023  – Zooming in to the Community II
      • AIRR Community Meeting VI: “Exploring New Frontiers”
      • AIRR Community Meeting V: “Zooming in to the AIRR Community”
      • AIRR Community Meeting V Pre-Meetings
        • AIRR-seq in the Pandemic
        • AIRR-seq Biological Standards and Workflows
      • AIRR Community Special Event: “Response to COVID-19”
      • AIRR Community Meeting IV: “Bridging the Gaps”
      • AIRR Community Meeting III
        • Day 1
        • Day 2
        • Day 3
        • Day 4
      • AIRR Community Meeting II
      • AIRR Community Meeting I
    • AIRR Community Working Groups
      • Biological Resources Working Group
      • Common Repository Working Group
      • Diagnostics Working Group
      • Germline Database Working Group
      • Legal and Ethics Working Group
      • Software Working Group
      • Standards Working Group
    • AIRR Community Sub-committees
      • Communications Sub-committee
      • Executive Sub-committee
      • Inferred Allele Review Committee
      • Meetings Sub-committee
    • AIRR Data Commons
    • AIRR Community Calendar
    • AIRR Community Webinar Series
    • On AIRR – An AIRR Community Podcast
    • AIRR Community Resources
    • AIRR Community Service Prize 2022
  • Members only
    • Login
    • Note to members
    • Member discount codes
    • 2023 Calendar of Events
    • James S. Huston Antibody Science Talent Award
      • 2021 James S. Huston Antibody Science Talent Award Recipient
      • 2020 James S. Huston Antibody Science Talent Award Recipient
      • JSH Award Criteria
    • Science Writing Competition
      • Science Writing Competition Winners
    • Imaging Competition
    • Research Competitions
      • Research Competition Winners
    • Antibodies in early-stage studies
    • Presentations
  • Upcoming meetings
  • Web Resources
    • Society Publications
    • Antibody News
    • Antibody therapeutics approved or in regulatory review in the EU or US
      • Antibody therapeutics product data
    • Antibodies in late-stage clinical studies
    • Research Resources
    • Education Resources
  • Career Center
    • Career Shorts
  • Learning Center
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Snakebite antivenoms: Global challenges and progress toward recombinant antibody therapeutics
    • Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoires
    • Antibody Discovery & Development
    • Commercializing Antibody Therapeutics
    • Antibodies to Watch
    • Antibody Validation
  • COVID-19
    • Guide to “Coronavirus in the Crosshairs”
    • COVID-19 Biologics Tracker
    • Meeting Report: The Diagnostic Landscape for COVID-19
You are here: Home / Archives for cytokine

Intratumorally Anchored Cytokine Therapy

February 16, 2023 by Janice Reichert

Summary written by Czeslaw Radziejewski, Ph.D.

Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics, held in December 2022, offered many opportunities to hear exciting and informative presentations by experts in the field, including K. Dane Wittrup, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Biological Engineering, Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who discussed “Intratumorally Anchored Cytokine Therapy”.

As a result of advances in interventional radiologic, endoscopic, and laparoscopic procedures, most cancer tissues can now be accessed for a local injection directly into the tumor, with the aim of triggering an immune response that will act globally against cancer. Because of their anti-tumor activity and synergistic behavior, cytokines such as IL-2, IL-12, and interferons are currently considered for intratumoral therapies. Cytokine exposure is spatiotemporally programmed during immune responses, which means cytokines are present at certain places at certain times and in a particular order. As therapeutic agents, optimally they should be supplied in particular tissues at particular times for a specific duration. Direct cytokine injection into tumors has been attempted, but this approach was previously unsuccessful because of leakages out of the target tissue and systemic toxicity.

In his presentation, Prof. Wittrup described two strategies to localize cytokines to the target tissue that could allow for efficacious levels to be reached without overall toxicity. Both methods take advantage of retaining cytokines at the site of injection through interaction with collagen. [1,2,3] One approach relies on anchoring cytokines to the collagen-binding extracellular protein Lumican and the other relies on anchoring cytokines to the vaccine adjuvant Alum (aluminum hydroxide). Alum forms clusters of nanocrystals that are positively charged, which, when injected, tend to stay at the injection site. Because phosphorylated proteins bind very strongly to Alum, cytokines are fused to a proprietary peptide called alum peptide. The construct is co-expressed with kinase Fam20C, which attaches multiple phosphates to the peptide. Phosphorylated cytokine is then mixed with Alum and injected into the tumor site. Lumican binds to collagen type 1 and type 4, and Alum binds to collagen type 1. Lumican anchored molecules stay in place for 2 to 3 days. Alum anchoring increases tumor exposure to more than three weeks.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: cytokine Tagged With: cytokine, IL-12, IL-2, melanoma

mabs

mabs

The Official Journal of The Antibody Society

Career Center

Our Career Center is a premier resource to connect highly qualified talent with matching career opportunities. Visit for details on over 800 jobs!

AIRR Community

AIRR Community

The Adaptive Immune Receptor Repertoire Community is a research-driven group organizing around the use of high-throughput sequencing technologies to study antibody/B-cell and T-cell receptor repertoires.

Recent Posts

  • FDA approves Zynyz™ (retifanlimab-dlwr) for Merkel cell carcinoma March 23, 2023
  • Ultralong CDR H3-based knobs: the smallest antibody fragment March 6, 2023
  • TRUST4 is now certified as AIRR-compliant March 1, 2023

Archives

Follow us online

  • Email
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Home
  • Privacy & Terms of Use
  • About
  • Directors and Officers
  • Advisors
  • Sponsors & Partners
  • Mission & Activities
  • Join the Society
  • Membership Levels
  • Members only
  • Login
  • Antibody therapeutics approved or in regulatory review in the EU or US
  • Meeting reports
  • Presentations
  • Contact

©2015 - scicomvisuals