On December 19, 2017 Atreca, Inc., a biotechnology company focused on developing novel therapeutics based on a deep understanding of the human immune response, reported publication of noteworthy results in preclinical cancer research enabled by Atreca’s Immune Repertoire Capture (IRC) technology (Press release, Atreca, DEC 19, 2017, View Source [SID1234522717]). As reported in Clinical Immunology (DOI: 10.1016/j.clim.2017.10.002), Atreca scientists, collaborating with researchers at Stanford University and California Pacific Medical Center, demonstrated that patients with non-progressing, metastatic cancer generate antibodies directed against public tumor antigens (epitopes present in tumors of more than one patient) in a manner having the hallmarks of a typical antigen-driven humoral immune response. In preclinical in vivo models, certain of these antibodies also induce tumor regression and durable anti-tumor immunity. The research involved the sequencing and analysis of native antibodies accessed from single B cells in the active, ongoing anti-tumor immune responses of non-progressing patients with metastatic melanoma, lung adenocarcinoma, or renal cell carcinoma.
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"This published research further confirms our ability to use IRC technology to validate B cell responses as a vital window for understanding effective patient immune responses in cancer, including the discovery of patient antibodies serving as the foundation for therapeutic discovery," commented William H. Robinson, M.D., Ph.D., Atreca board member, Co-Founder, and Associate Professor of Medicine in the Division of Immunology and Rheumatology of the Department of Medicine at Stanford University, as well as co-author on the published research. "By measuring key features of the immune response from non-progressing patients, including patient antibodies’ targeting of antigens expressed across multiple cancer types, we now have important new evidence of the role of B cells in mounting effective immune responses to cancer."
"We are proud of this seminal work, having discovered key features of patient immune responses to cancer. By examining single patient B cells, Atreca has a unique opportunity to understand productive anti-tumor responses and develop effective, next-generation cancer immunotherapies," said Tito A. Serafini, Ph.D., Atreca’s President, Chief Executive Officer, and Co-Founder. "Based on these and other compelling research findings, Atreca is executing on its goals of both identifying the widest range of antibodies targeting public tumor antigens and advancing a robust therapeutic pipeline using that information."