
Our immune systems are meant to keep us healthy, but sometimes they turn their fire on us, with devastating results. Immunotherapies can help defend against this 鈥榝riendly fire鈥 鈥 and even weaponise it in our defence.
Our immune systems are meant to keep us healthy, but sometimes they turn their fire on us, with devastating results. Immunotherapies can help defend against this 鈥榝riendly fire鈥 鈥 and even weaponise it in our defence.
T-cells are the body鈥檚 serial killers, patrolling, identifying and destroying infected and cancer cells with remarkable precision and efficiency.
Gillian Griffiths
An army of cells constantly patrols within us, attacking anything it recognises as foreign, keeping us safe from invading pathogens. But sometimes things go wrong: the soldiers mistake benign cells for invaders, turning their friendly fire on us and declaring war.
探花直播consequences are diseases like multiple sclerosis (MS), asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, type 1 diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis 鈥 diseases that are increasing at an alarming rate in both the developed and developing worlds.
Cambridge will be ramping up the fight against immune-mediated and inflammatory diseases with the opening next year of the Cambridge Institute of Therapeutic Immunology and Infectious Disease, headed by Professor Ken Smith. 探花直播Institute will work at the interface between immunity, infection and the microbiome (the microorganisms that live naturally within us). 鈥淲e鈥檙e interested in discovering fundamental mechanisms that can turn the immune system on or off in different contexts, to modify, treat or prevent both inflammatory and infectious diseases,鈥 says Smith.
But while diseases such as Crohn鈥檚 and asthma have long been understood to be a consequence of friendly fire, scientists are starting to see this phenomenon give rise to more surprising conditions, particularly in mental health.
In 2009, Professor Belinda Lennox, then at Cambridge and now at Oxford, led a study that showed that 7% of patients with psychoses tested positive for antibodies that attacked a particular receptor in the brain, the NMDA receptor. This blocked a key neurotransmitter, affecting communication between nerve cells and causing the symptoms.
Professor Alasdair Coles from Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Clinical Neurosciences is working with Lennox on a trial to identify patients with this particular antibody and reverse its effects. One of their treatments involves harnessing the immune system 鈥 weaponising it, one might say 鈥 to attack rogue warriors using rituximab, a monoclonal antibody therapy that kills off B-cells, the cells that generate antibodies.
鈥淵ou can make monoclonal antibodies for experimental purposes against anything you like within a few days,鈥 explains Coles. 鈥淚n contrast, to come up with a small molecule 鈥 the alternative sort of drug 鈥 takes a long, long time.鈥
探花直播first monoclonal antibody to be made into a drug, created here in Cambridge, is called alemtuzumab. It targets both B- and T-cells and has been used in a variety of autoimmune diseases and cancers. Its biggest use is in MS, where it eliminates the rogue T- and B-cells that attack the protective insulation (myelin sheath) around nerve fibres. Licensed in Europe in 2013 and approved by NICE in 2014, it has now been used in tens of thousands of MS patients.
As well as treating diseases caused by the immune system, antibody therapies are now widely used to treat cancer. And, as Professor Gillian Griffiths, Director of the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, explains, antibody-producing cells are not the only immune cells that can be weaponised.
鈥淭-cells are also showing great promise,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey are the body鈥檚 serial killers, patrolling, identifying and destroying infected and cancer cells with remarkable precision and efficiency.鈥
But cancer cells are able to trick T-cells by sending out a 鈥榙on鈥檛 kill鈥 signal. Antibodies that block these signals, which have become known as 鈥榗heckpoint inhibitors鈥, are proving remarkably successful in cancer therapies. 鈥淢y lab focuses on what tells a T-cell to kill, and how you make it a really good killer, using imaging and genetic approaches to understand how these cells can be fine-tuned,鈥 Griffiths explains. 鈥淭his has revealed some novel mechanisms that play key roles in regulating killing.鈥
A second, more experimental, approach uses souped-up cells known as chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells programmed to recognise and attack a patient鈥檚 tumour.
Neither approach is perfect: antibody therapies can dampen down the entire immune system, causing secondary problems, while CAR T-cell therapies are prohibitively expensive as each CAR T-cell needs to be programmed to suit an individual. But, says Griffiths, 鈥渢he results to date from both approaches are really rather remarkable鈥.
One of the problems that鈥檚 dogged immunotherapy trials is that T-cells only have a short lifespan. Most of the T-cells transplanted during immunotherapy are gone within three days, nowhere near long enough to defeat the tumour.
This is where Professor Randall Johnson comes in. He鈥檚 been working with a molecule (2-hydroxyglutarate), which he says has 鈥渂ecome trendy of late鈥. It鈥檚 an 鈥榦ncometabolite鈥, believed to be responsible for making cells cancerous, which is why pharmaceutical companies are trying to inhibit its action. Johnson has taken the opposite approach.
He鈥檚 shown that a slightly different form of the molecule plays a critical role in T-cell function: it can turn them into renewable cells that hang around for a long time and can reactivate to combat cancer. Increasing the levels of this molecule in T-cells makes them stay around longer and be much better at destroying tumours. 鈥淩ather than creating killer T-cells that are active from the start, but burn out very quickly, we鈥檙e creating an army of cells that can stay quiet for a long time, but will go into action when necessary.鈥
This counterintuitive approach caught the attention of Apollo Therapeutics, who recognised the enormous promise and has invested in Johnson鈥檚 work, which he carried out in mice, to see if it can be applied to humans.
But T-cells face other problems, particularly in pancreatic cancer, explains Professor Duncan Jodrell from the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, which is why immunotherapy against these tumours has so far failed. 探花直播problem with pancreatic cancer is that 鈥榠slands鈥 of tumour cells sit in a 鈥榮ea鈥 of other material, known as stroma. As Jodrell and colleagues have shown, it鈥檚 possible for T-cells to get into the stroma, but they go no further. 鈥淵ou can rev up your T-cells, but they just can鈥檛 get at the tumour cells.鈥 They are running a study that tries to overcome this immune privilege and allow the T-cells to get to the tumour cells and attack them.
Tim Eisen, Professor of Medical Oncology at Cambridge and Head of the Oncology Translational Medicine Unit at AstraZeneca, believes we can expect great advances in cancer treatment from optimising and, in some cases, combining existing checkpoint inhibitor approaches.
Eisen is working with the Medical Research Council to trial checkpoint inhibitor antibody therapies as a complement 鈥 鈥榓djuvant鈥 鈥 to surgery for kidney cancer. Once the kidney is removed, the drug is used to destroy stray tumour cells that have remained behind. But even antibody therapies, which are now widely used within the NHS, are not universally effective and can cause serious complications. 鈥淥ne of the most important things for us to focus on now is which immunotherapeutic drug or particular combination of drugs might be effective in destroying tumour cells and be well tolerated by the patient.鈥
T-cell therapies 鈥 and, in particular, CAR T-cell therapies 鈥 are 鈥渧ery exciting, futuristic and experimental,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut they鈥檙e going to take some years to come in as standard therapy.鈥
探花直播problem is how to make them cost-effective. 鈥淚t鈥檚 never going to be easier to engineer an individual person鈥檚 T-cells than it is to take a drug off the shelf and give it to them,鈥 he says. 鈥 探花直播key is going to be whether you can industrialise production. But I鈥檓 very optimistic about our ability to re-engineer processes and make it available for people in general.鈥
We may soon see an era, then, when our immune systems become an unstoppable force for good.
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