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Informational Alert

Our new building on the hospital campus, Forest B, is open. Families and visitors can park in the new Forest B garage next to Emergency.

Replacing Cancer’s Brake With a T-cell Accelerator

Oda Lab

We develop engineering strategies that enable T cells to overcome obstacles in the tumor microenvironment and mount a more powerful, durable and sustained attack on cancer cells.

Cancer cells and the microenvironment they create can set up barriers that block effective immunotherapy treatment. They send out signals that interfere with the activation of T cells specifically recognizing cancer, as well as cause T cells to self-destruct before they can do their job.

Our research augments the efficacy of adoptive cell therapy (ACT), a promising immunotherapy treatment option that uses genetically modified immune cells (T cells) to eliminate tumors. To create cell therapies, a small number of T cells are removed from the patient’s blood, their genetic instructions are changed to more effectively fight cancer, and then the T cells are infused back into the patient to seek out and destroy tumor cells.

While encouraging results have been obtained by adoptive cell therapies, their efficacy is dampened by the protective behaviors of cancer tumors. Tumor cells send signals in the form of inhibitory proteins to T cells, which prevent them from becoming fully activated and, in many cases shut them down altogether.

Our laboratory focuses on making the next generation of immunotherapies more effective and applicable to patients. We have engineered new types of hybrid proteins called fusion proteins (FPs). When FPs are added to adoptive cell therapy, they boost T cells’ ability to respond aggressively to tumors and completely bypass what is normally an inhibitory or death signal from cancer cells.

Our research applies to tumor microenvironments that are present in many different kinds of cancers. We are developing our technology for blood tumors, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML), as well as solid tumors, including pancreatic, ovarian, brain, and lung cancers.

We are excited to discover that FPs give T cells a boost that impacts many different functions, such as enhanced metabolism, lowered threshold of activation, reduced exhaustion, and increased intratumoral concentration. This single addition may help immunotherapy treatments bypass multiple tumor barriers. Our research aims to dramatically improve cell therapies for multiple cancer types with intentionally engineered proteins.