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Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy Volume editor Abhishek Garg

Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy By Volume editor Abhishek Garg

Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy by Volume editor Abhishek Garg


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Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy Summary

Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy: Volume 183 by Volume editor Abhishek Garg

Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy, Volume 183 provides the latest progress concerning research on anticancer cellular immunotherapies and their immunological, translation, or clinical aspects. Topics covered in this volume include Methods behind clinical DC vaccine products against glioblastoma, Fully closed and automated isolation of natural blood dendritic cells for cancer immunotherapy, Methods behind Oncolytic virus-based DC vaccines in cancer: towards a multiphase combined treatment strategy for Glioblastoma (GBM) patients, Identification of TCR repertoire patterns linked with anti-cancer immunotherapy, Training of epitope-TCR prediction models with healthy donor-derived cancer-specific T cells, Methods behind neoantigen predictions for anticancer vaccines, Methods behind CD137L-DC-EBV-VAX anticancer vaccine, and much more. Additional sections cover Gold Standard Assessment of Immunogenic Cell Death Induced by Photodynamic Therapy: From In Vitro to Tumor Mouse Models and Anti-Cancer Vaccination Strategies, Methods behind TCR analyses for colorectal cancer-associated TILs, The use of xCELLigence, Incucyte, and/or Cr/LDH/maker-release assays, Humanized mouse models for anti-cancer therapy, In vitro re-challenge of CAR T cells, Methods behind adoptively transferred tumor draining lymphocytes? for anticancer immunotherapy, and A murine glioblastoma platform to test cellular therapies with the standard of care.

About Volume editor Abhishek Garg

Prof. Abhishek D. Garg is currently Assistant Professor at Department of Cellular & Molecular Medicine (KU Leuven, Belgium) and head of the Laboratory for Cell Stress & Immunity also at KU Leuven. Dr. Garg did his post-doctoral training at KU Leuven, combined with research visitations at University of Helsinki, Finland, and De Duve Institute, Belgium, after receiving his PhD from KU Leuven. During his PhD-postdoc stints, Dr. Garg played an instrumental role in elucidating novel mechanisms that make cancer cell death immunogenic in the context of anticancer therapy. He worked on uncovering the links between endoplasmic reticulum stress, autophagy, apoptosis/necroptosis, and damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) or danger signals in dying cancer cells. This work resulted in creation of innovative dendritic cell (DC) vaccines against glioblastoma. His lab focuses on applying novel reverse translational approaches (i.e. human data to pre-clinical validation) to create innovative immunotherapy or biomarker solutions against hard-to-treat immunotherapy resistant tumors and eventually pave way for the forward translation of these solutions toward the clinic. His lab is working closely with oncologists (at home & abroad) for translation toward early-stage clinical trials. His >100 publications have been cited >20,000 times (h-index >50). He has delivered >40 lectures at various (inter)national conferences or institutional/company seminars. Dr. Gargs contributions have been recognized by the 41st Prix Galien award for Pharmacological Research (Belgium, 2023), KU Leuven Research Council Award (2016), European Society of Photobiology (ESP) Young Investigator Award (2013), and FWO-McKinsey & Company Scientific Prize (2012). Lorenzo Galluzzi is Assistant Professor of Cell Biology in Radiation Oncology at the Department of Radiation Oncology of the Weill Cornell Medical College, Honorary Assistant Professor Adjunct with the Department of Dermatology of the Yale School of Medicine, Honorary Associate Professor with the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Paris, and Faculty Member with the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and Biotechnology of the University of Ferrara, the Graduate School of Pharmacological Sciences of the University of Padova, and the Graduate School of Network Oncology and Precision Medicine of the University of Rome La Sapienza. Moreover, he is Associate Director of the European Academy for Tumor Immunology and Founding Member of the European Research Institute for Integrated Cellular Pathology. Galluzzi is best known for major experimental and conceptual contributions to the fields of cell death, autophagy, tumor metabolism and tumor immunology. He has published over 450 articles in international peer-reviewed journals and is the Editor-in-Chief of four journals: OncoImmunology (which he co-founded in 2011), International Review of Cell and Molecular Biology, Methods in Cell biology, and Molecular and Cellular Oncology (which he co-founded in 2013). Additionally, he serves as Founding Editor for Microbial Cell and Cell Stress, and Associate Editor for Cell Death and Disease, Pharmacological Research and iScience.

Table of Contents

1. Methods behind clinical DC vaccine products against glioblastoma Rudiger V. Sorg 2. Fully closed and automated isolation of natural blood dendritic cells for cancer immunotherapy Jolanda de Vries and Gerty Schreibelt 3. Methods behind Oncolytic virus-based DC vaccines in cancer: towards a multiphase combined treatment strategy for Glioblastoma (GBM) patients Stefaan W. Van Gool 4. Identification of TCR repertoire patterns linked with anti-cancer immunotherapy Kris Laukens and Romi Vandoren 5. Training of epitope-TCR prediction models with healthy donor-derived cancer-specific T cells Eva Lion and Kris Laukens 6. Methods behind neoantigen predictions for anticancer vaccines Cedric Bogaert 7. Methods behind CD137L-DC-EBV-VAX anticancer vaccine Herbert Schwarz 8. Gold Standard Assessment of Immunogenic Cell Death Induced by Photodynamic Therapy: From In Vitro to Tumor Mouse Models and Anti-Cancer Vaccination Strategies Dmitri Krysko 9. Methods behind TCR analyses for colorectal cancer-associated TILs Sara Verbandt, Ting Pu and Sabine Tejpar 10. The use of xCELLigence, Incucyte, and/or Cr/LDH/maker-release assays Adam Snook 11. Humanized mouse models for anti-cancer therapy Eleonora Leucci 12. In vitro re-challenge of CAR T cells Sebastien Walchli and Alicia Villatoro 13. Methods behind adoptively transferred tumor draining lymphocytes? for anticancer immunotherapy Harry D. Bear and Carolyn Haynes 14. A murine glioblastoma platform to test cellular therapies with the standard of care An Coosemans and Aaron Ziani Zeryouh Jr.

Additional information

NGR9780443139956
9780443139956
0443139954
Cell-based Cancer Immunotherapy: Volume 183 by Volume editor Abhishek Garg
New
Hardback
Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
2024-03-05
318
N/A
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