PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Blocking an immune molecule reduces tumor growth and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer

Spanish researchers from Cima and Clínica Universidad de Navarra together with the international cooperative group Diffuse Midline Glioma (DMG-ACT) demonstrate that TIM-3 inhibition promotes immune memory in diffuse intrinsic stem glioma (DIPG)

Blocking an immune molecule reduces tumor growth and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer
2023-10-11
(Press-News.org)

Researchers from Cima and the Clínica Universidad de Navarra, together with the international cooperative group Diffuse Midline Glioma (DMG-ACT), have confirmed that blocking an immune checkpoint molecule reduces the tumor and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer. This research, carried out at the Cancer Center Clínica Universidad de Navarra, shows that inhibition of TIM-3 promotes the immune memory of diffuse intrinsic stem glioma (DIPG) and improves the prognosis of the disease.

DIPG is an aggressive brain stem tumor and the leading cause of death related to pediatric cancer. Due to its location therapeutic options are limited, so it is essential to study effective treatments. "In recent years, immunotherapy has proven to be an alternative for many types of cancer. In particular, immune checkpoint inhibitors (key regulators of the immune system) have shown good results in various solid tumors. But due to the unique tumor microenvironment of DIPGs, classical inhibitors have not been effective in these pediatric patients," explains Iker Ausejo-Mauleon, predoctoral researcher at the Cima Cancer Division and first author of the paper.

Antitumor immune response

Recently, the presence of the TIM-3 checkpoint in tumor cells has been linked to the proliferation and metastatic capacity of different types of cancer. "In this study, we show that TIM-3 is also highly expressed in both tumor cells and cells in the DIPG microenvironment," explains Dr. Marta Alonso, co-director of the Cima Solid Tumor Program and director of the study. The results have been published in the latest issue of the scientific journal Cancer Cell.

The next step was to block this molecule and the researchers found that its inhibition promotes a proinflammatory tumor microenvironment that favors a potent antitumor immune response. "As a consequence, long-term survival of experimental models is increased. Therefore, TIM-3 is presented as a therapeutic target that can guide the development of clinical trials for these patients," say the researchers.

This work has been carried out thanks to funding from the European Research Council (ERC), ChadTough-Defeat DIPG Foundation, the Spanish Association Against Cancer, Vicky's Dream, Adey Foundation, ACS Foundation and the Pablo Ugarte Association, among other public and private organizations.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Blocking an immune molecule reduces tumor growth and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer Blocking an immune molecule reduces tumor growth and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer 2 Blocking an immune molecule reduces tumor growth and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mummified poop reveals pre-Columbian cultures of the Caribbean consumed a diversity of plants, with peanuts, papaya, maize, and even cotton and tobacco detected

Mummified poop reveals pre-Columbian cultures of the Caribbean consumed a diversity of plants, with peanuts, papaya, maize, and even cotton and tobacco detected
2023-10-11
DNA analysis of mummified poop reveals two pre-Columbian Caribbean cultures ate a wide variety of plants, like maize, sweet potato, and peanuts—and tobacco and cotton traces were detected too, according to a study published October 11, 2023 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Jelissa Reynoso-García from the University of Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico, and colleagues. Mummified poop, or coprolites, can reveal clues to diet and lifestyle. In this study, Reynoso-García and colleagues analyzed plant DNA isolated from coprolites sampled from archeological sites of two pre-Columbian cultures (Huecoid and Saladoid) to see what these peoples ate ...

Risk factors for dementia vary by ethnicity, study finds

Risk factors for dementia vary by ethnicity, study finds
2023-10-11
Modifiable risk factors—including hypertension, obesity, diabetes, low HDL cholesterol and sleep disorders—confer a higher risk of dementia for people in some minority ethnic groups compared to White people, according to a new study published this week in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Naaheed Mukadam of University College London, UK, and colleagues. The number of people with dementia is on the rise around the world. There has been increasing interest in potentially modifiable risk factors, ...

Study links selfies to higher ratings of slimness

Study links selfies to higher ratings of slimness
2023-10-11
In a new study, participants tended to rate women’s bodies as slimmer when viewed in selfie photographs than in photographs taken from other angles. Ruth Knight of York St John University, UK, and Catherine Preston of the University of York, UK, present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on October 11. Popular on social media, selfies are portraits taken by the photo’s subject, who positions the camera away from their body but pointed back at themself. Prior research has suggested that viewing selfies might affect viewers’ judgments of the photo subjects’ attractiveness and could, in some cases, lead to ...

Groundbreaking achievement as bionic hand merges with user’s nervous and skeletal systems, remaining functional after years of daily use

Groundbreaking achievement as bionic hand merges with user’s nervous and skeletal systems, remaining functional after years of daily use
2023-10-11
Karin's life took a dramatic turn when a farming accident claimed her right arm over 20 years ago. Since then, she endured excruciating phantom limb pain. “It felt like I constantly had my hand in a meat grinder, which created a high level of stress and I had to take high doses of various painkillers.” In addition to her intractable pain, she found that conventional prostheses were uncomfortable and unreliable, and thus of little help in daily life. All this changed when she received groundbreaking bionic technology that allowed her to wear a much more functional ...

Drug-filled nanocapsule helps make immunotherapy more effective in mice

2023-10-11
UCLA researchers have developed a new treatment method using a tiny nanocapsule to help boost the immune response, making it easier for the immune system to fight and kill solid tumors. The investigators found the approach, described in the journal Science Translational Medicine, increased the number and activity of immune cells that attack the cancer, making cancer immunotherapies work better. “Cancer immunotherapy has reshaped the landscape of cancer treatment,” said senior author of the ...

Trial results indicate potential for organ transplantation without long-term immunosuppression

Trial results indicate potential for organ transplantation without long-term immunosuppression
2023-10-11
Giving living donor liver transplant recipients an infusion of immune cells derived from their donor a week before transplantation is feasible, safe – and may lead to recipients being successfully weaned off immunosuppressant medications without rejecting the transplanted organ. The early-stage clinical trial results by University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine scientists, reported today in Science Translational Medicine, point to a path that may spare organ transplant recipients from the serious side effects of long-term immunosuppressant use, which can include cancer, diabetes, kidney failure and susceptibility to infections. “These trial results are very encouraging,” ...

Evolutionary secrets of ‘Old Tom’ and the killer whales of Eden revealed by genetic study

Evolutionary secrets of ‘Old Tom’ and the killer whales of Eden revealed by genetic study
2023-10-11
Evolutionary biologists have for the first time decoded the genetic lineage of a famous killer whale and a pod that once worked alongside whale hunters off the coast of New South Wales. In the Australian tradition of claiming New Zealand’s celebrities as its own, Old Tom, the leader of a pod of killer whales that famously helped whalers hunt baleen whales in the 20th century, has ancestral links to modern-day killer whales in New Zealand, according to new DNA research. Old Tom also shared a common ancestor with killer whales from Australasia, the North Pacific, and North Atlantic Oceans, but is most similar to modern New Zealand killer whales. However, most of Tom’s ...

Fruit fly serenade: Princeton neuroscientists decode their tiny mating song

Fruit fly serenade: Princeton neuroscientists decode their tiny mating song
2023-10-11
Love songs are at least as popular in the animal kingdom as on the radio. The importance of musically serenading your true love has driven plotlines from Twelfth Night to The Trumpet of the Swan to Happy Feet.  The latest exploration of music in the natural world is taking place in Mala Murthy’s lab at the Princeton Neuroscience Institute, where Murthy and her research group have used neural imaging, optogenetics, motion capture, modeling and artificial intelligence to pinpoint precisely where and how a fruit fly’s brain toggles between its standard solo and its mating serenade. Their research ...

Experiencing record-breaking heat days affects perception of weather trends

2023-10-11
PHILADELPHIA -- New research published by a team at the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania finds that experiencing days in which the temperature exceeds previous highs for that time of year affects people’s perception of weather trends. Published in Scientific Reports, the study “Record-breaking Heat Days Disproportionately Influence Heat Perceptions” finds that living in an area with record-breaking heat effectively increases perceptions that the weather is getting hotter. The research was co-authored by economist Timothy Hyde, a postdoctoral fellow in APPC’s Science of Science Communication Division, and psychologist and communication ...

Aston University researcher named in Photonics top 100

Aston University researcher named in Photonics top 100
2023-10-11
  Aston University professor named in international Top 100 of Photonics Professor Igor Meglinski’s research overlaps engineering and health sciences He applies his photonics knowledge to develop methods to detect diseases such as dementia and cancer.   An Aston University professor has been named in an international Top 100 of Photonics key players.   Igor Meglinski, professor in quantum bio-photonics and biomedical engineering was elected by fellow experts as one of the Top 100 in the field of photonics – the science and technology of light.   Although he is based in the College ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

 Strategic river sensors could have forewarned of Texas Camp flood disaster

Drone sampling of whale breath reveals first evidence of potentially deadly virus in Arctic

Roman soldiers defending Hadrian’s Wall infected by parasites, study finds

Pinochet’s prisoners were tormented with music but still found solace in it, a new book reveals

Fertility remains high in rural Tanzania despite access to family planning

AI-assisted device can improve autism care access

Kinetic careers

Uncovering how parasitic plants avoid attacking themselves to improve crop resistance

Nanoparticle vaccine strategy could protect against Ebola and other deadly filoviruses

Study finds brain care score can predict risk of stroke across racial groups

Key lung immune cells can intensify allergic reactions

Do hormones explain why women experience more gut pain?

New materials conduct ions in solids as easily as in liquids

Breakthrough of the Year: Renewable energy begins to eclipse fossil fuel-based sources

LLM use is reshaping scientific enterprise by increasing output, reducing quality and more

Introducing LightGen, a chip for ultra-fast, ultra-efficient generative AI

Astronomers see fireworks from violent collisions around nearby star

ACC/AHA issue new guideline on managing congenital heart disease in adults

Cosmic crash caught on camera

Is talented youth nurtured the wrong way? New study shows: top performers develop differently than assumed

Ants: An untapped resource in the development of antibiotics?

Archaeologists use AI to create prehistoric video game

Mitochondria migrate toward the cell membrane in response to high glucose levels

Tiny viral switch offers hope against drug-resistant bacteria

Most parents aware of early peanut introduction guidelines, but confused about details

HPV vaccine can protect against severe lesions of the vulva and vagina

Virtual care provision and emergency department use among children and youth

Quadrivalent HPV vaccine and high-grade vulvovaginal lesions

Insights into dry eyes gained from stem cell-derived tear glands 

Researchers identify 166 human pluripotent stem cell lines available for use in clinical applications

[Press-News.org] Blocking an immune molecule reduces tumor growth and prolongs survival in animal models of the most aggressive childhood cancer
Spanish researchers from Cima and Clínica Universidad de Navarra together with the international cooperative group Diffuse Midline Glioma (DMG-ACT) demonstrate that TIM-3 inhibition promotes immune memory in diffuse intrinsic stem glioma (DIPG)