USC scientists create renewable supply of cancer-fighting cells

Researchers at USC Stem Cell have developed a method to produce large numbers of immune cell precursors that can be engineered to target cancer. The approach, published in the journal Cell, uses granulocyte-monocyte progenitors that self-renew in the laboratory.

The team, led by Qi-Long Ying, showed that these progenitors can be expanded extensively while retaining their ability to generate functional macrophages and other immune cells. In mouse studies, the cells settled in bone marrow and continuously produced engineered immune cells that slowed progression of blood cancers and solid tumors.

Scientists equipped the progenitors with a chimeric antigen receptor to recognize cancer markers and added a second signal to activate surrounding immune cells. This combination worked even when donor and recipient cells were mismatched, raising the possibility of off-the-shelf therapies.

The method was independently confirmed by a laboratory at Stanford University. Researchers also tested the cells in mice with an inherited immune disorder and found they restored the ability to fight bacterial infections.

"The study establishes a scalable and engineerable GMP platform for cellular immunotherapy," Ying said.

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Microscopic view of enhanced natural killer cells attacking cancer cells due to a drug developed by McGill researchers.
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McGill researchers use reversible drug approach to boost natural killer cells against hard-to-treat cancers

በAI የተዘገበ በ AI የተሰራ ምስል እውነት ተፈትሸ

Researchers at McGill University report a drug-based method to temporarily enhance natural killer (NK) cells—an immune cell type—by inhibiting two proteins, improving the cells’ ability to attack several aggressive cancers in preclinical experiments.

Researchers in Sweden have created insulin-producing cells from human stem cells that reversed diabetes symptoms when transplanted into mice. The cells matured after placement in the eye and maintained glucose regulation for months. The work was published in Stem Cell Reports.

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Researchers at UCLA have identified senescent immune cells, dubbed 'zombie' cells, that accumulate in aging livers and contribute to fatty liver disease. By eliminating these cells in mice, the team reversed liver damage and reduced body weight, even on an unhealthy diet. The findings, published in Nature Aging, suggest similar mechanisms may drive human liver conditions.

A small study has found that CAR-T cell therapy may offer a new way to manage HIV over the long term. The approach, already used to treat certain cancers, involves engineering a patient’s own immune cells.

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A protein called NFIL3 has been identified as a key factor in reducing the long-term performance of CAR T cells used in cancer treatment. Researchers showed that disabling this protein allows the engineered cells to remain active longer and fight tumors more effectively in laboratory models.

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