
Reimagining T Cell Therapy: An Unconventional Path to Universal CAR-T Cells
Sanford Stem Cell Institute Seminar Series
University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego
March 24, 202659m 32s
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Show Notes
Off-the-shelf immune cell therapies using engineered T cells represent an important direction in cancer treatment. Lili Yang, Ph.D., at UCLA develops an off-the-shelf platform based on invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells generated from hematopoietic stem cells, often sourced from cord blood. Yang programs these stem cells with iNKT cell receptors, chimeric antigen receptors (CARs), and genes such as IL-15 to create pure, expandable iNKT products that recognize lipid antigens presented by non polymorphic CD1d molecules. These cells combine multiple killing mechanisms, infiltrate tissues, target tumor cells and immunosuppressive myeloid cells, and show reduced risk of graft versus host disease and cytokine release syndrome in preclinical models. Yang’s group tests this strategy in models of blood cancers and solid tumors, aiming to generate many therapeutic doses from a single donor. Series: "Stem Cell Channel" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 40846]
Topics
off the shelf immunotherapyiNKT cell therapyCAR iNKT cellsstem cell iNKTcord blood stem cellscancer immunotherapy UCLAoff the shelf cancer treatmentengineered immune cellsblood cancer immunotherapysolid tumor immunotherapytumor infil