Patent classifications
A61K2239/38
GM-CSF and IL-4 conjugates, compositions, and methods related thereto
In certain embodiments, this disclosure relates to conjugates comprising a polypeptide of GM-CSF and a polypeptide IL-4. Typically, the GM-CSF and IL-4 are connected by a linker, e.g., polypeptide. In certain embodiments, the disclosure relates to isolated nucleic acids encoding these polypeptide conjugates, vectors comprising nucleic acid encoding polypeptide conjugates, and protein expression systems comprising these vectors such as infectious viral particles and host cells comprising such nucleic acids.
Method of Controlling Administration of Cancer Antigen
The present invention is directed to mammalian bi-specific T cells and methods for using these bi-specific T cells. More specifically, the invention relates to a method of controlling administration of cancer antigen to a subject by providing bi-specific T cells that express a viral antigen T cell receptor and a cancer antigen-specific chimeric receptors and triggering their activation by also administering antigen-presenting T-cells which express viral antigen. These bi-specific T cell clones are a source of effector cells that persist in vivo in response to stimulation with viral antigen, leading to long-term function after their transfer to patients with cancer and autoimmune diseases.
CAR-EXPRESSING NK-92 CELLS AS CELL THERAPEUTIC AGENTS
The present invention relates to an ErbB2-specific NK-92 cell or cell line containing a lentiviral vector encoding a chimeric antigen receptor and preferably two vector integration loci in its cellular genome. The present invention further relates to the use of the ErbB2-specific NK-92 cell or cell line in the prevention and/or treatment of cancer, preferably ErhB2-expressing cancers. The present invention further relates to the use of the ErbB2-specific NK-92 cell or cell line as targeted cell therapeutic agent and/or for adoptive cancer immunotherapy. The present invention further relates to a method for generating an ErbB2-specific NK-92 cell or cell line as well as to a method for identifying au ErbB2-specific NK-92 cell or cell line and to the ErbB2-specific NK-92 cell or cell line obtained or identified by the methods as well as their uses.
METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR INFUSION OF TRANSIENTLY ENGRAFTING, SELECTED POPULATIONS OF ALLOGENEIC LYMPHOCYTES TO TREAT CANCER
The invention provides methods and compositions for administration of allogeneic lymphocytes as an exogenous source of CD4+ T cell help for endogenous, tumor-reactive CD8+ T cells. Depletion of CD8+ T cells from the donor lymphocyte infusion reduces the risk of sustained engraftment and graft-versus-host disease. Removal of regulatory T cells from the infused population may augment the ability of non-regulatory T cells to provide help for endogenous effectors of anti-tumor immunity. Allogeneic T cell therapy is typically given in the context of allogeneic stem cell transplantation, in which the patient receives highly immunosuppressive conditioning followed by an infusion of a stem cell graft containing unselected populations of mature T cells. In the treatment described here, the graft is engineered to minimize the possibility of sustained donor cell engraftment, and the anti-tumor effector T cells derive from the host.
Compositions and Methods for Treating Cancer with Anti-CD33 Immunotherapy
Chimeric antigen receptors containing CD33 antigen binding domains are disclosed. Nucleic acids, recombinant expression vectors, host cells, antigen binding fragments, and pharmaceutical compositions, relating to the chimeric antigen receptors are also disclosed. Methods of treating or preventing cancer in a subject, and methods of making chimeric antigen receptor T cells are also disclosed.
Methods To Protect Transplanted Tissue From Rejection
The present invention includes compositions and methods for an HLA-A2 specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR). In certain embodiments the HLA-A2 specific CAR is expressed on a T regulatory cell. In certain embodiments, the HLA-A2 specific CAR protects transplanted tissue from rejection.
CD8a AND T CELL RECEPTOR VARIANTS AND METHODS OF USING SAME IN MODULATING IMMUNE CELL RESPONSES
Novel costimulatory fusion proteins and DNA sequences that enhance T cell responses to weakly immunogenic and/or lowly expressed antigens and that confer T cell resistance against MDSC-mediated suppression are disclosed. The fusion proteins comprise portions of CD4, CD8? or the T cell receptor linked to a specific region of MyD88 or other signaling molecules. These fusion proteins and sequence variants thereof improve T cell activation and responsiveness. Also disclosed is the use of these molecules in host cells as a means to enhance and costimulate responses of immune cells including cytotoxic CD8.sup.+ T cells and the use of these cells to treat cancer, infectious agents and other diseases.
MODIFIED T-CELLS HAVING ANTI-FUGETACTIC PROPERTIES AND USES THEREOF
This invention provides ex vivo methods for making modified immune cell, e.g., T cell, compositions having overall anti-fugetactic properties for the effective and efficient treatment of tumors or cancers in a patient, and compositions and use thereof.
METHODS FOR INDUCING SELECTIVE APOPTOSIS
Provided herein are methods for cell therapy by modifying transfused cells to express an inducible caspase 9 protein, so that the cells may be selectively killed if the patient experiences dangerous side effects. Provided also within relates in part to methods for preventing or treating Graft versus Host Disease by modifying T cells before administration to a patient, so that they may be selectively killed if GvHD develops in the patient.
IMMUNE CELL COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS OF USE
Disclosed herein are cells that are immune cells or precursor cells thereof, which cells recombinantly express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR), and a dominant negative form of an inhibitor of a cell-mediated immune response of the immune cell, wherein the CAR binds to a cancer antigen. Also disclosed herein are T cells that recognize and are sensitized to a cancer antigen, which T cells recombinantly express a dominant negative form of an inhibitor of a T cell-mediated immune response. Additionally provided are methods of using such cells to treat cancer in a subject in need thereof.