Antibody-Based Therapeutics: Where Are We and Future Perspectives?

A special issue of Antibodies (ISSN 2073-4468).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2021) | Viewed by 538

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Rees Consulting AB, 75591 Uppsala, Sweden
Interests: antibody structure, analysis and design; human antibody repertoire; vaccines; therapeutic antibodies; history of immunology

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Guest Editor
Philochem AG, R&D unit of the Philogen Group, Otelfingen, Switzerland
Interests: monoclonal antibodies; antibody engineering; antibodies; phage display; recombinant protein expression; recombinant antibodies; tumor angiogenesis; immunohistochemistry; flow cytometry; immunofluorescence; cloning; cell culture; targeted therapeutics

E-Mail Website
Guest Editor
Philochem AG, R&D unit of the Philogen Group, Otelfingen, Switzerland
Interests: antibody isolation; phage display; therapeutic protein; upstrem process development; transgenic techniques; recombinant protein expression; cell line engineering; antibody discovery; protein engineering

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

There is a growing interest in the use of immunotherapy approaches for the treatment of cancer, which has been promoted by the clinical results obtained against various types of malignancies using anti-PD-1 and anti-PD-L1 antibodies.

The activation of the immune system for a selective removal of tumor cells is the goal of this therapeutic approach, which can be achieved by using two classes of bifunctional products: (i) antibody-based targeted therapeutics (e.g., antibody–cytokine fusions) and (ii) bispecific antibodies.

Antibody-based cytokine targeting represents a valuable strategy to increase the therapeutic index of active payloads, such as cytokines. On one hand, it allows the selective accumulation of the product at the site of the disease while sparing healthy organs; on the other hand, it may allow the conditional activation of multimeric payloads at the site of the disease.

Bispecific antibodies are an emerging class of potent anti-cancer therapeutics. These molecules often connect relevant tumor-associated antigens to a co-stimulatory receptor (such as CD3), thus aiming to facilitate T-cell activation in the presence of tumor cells expressing the target antigen.

In this Special Issue, we summarise the current state of the art and consider the future perspectives for these therapeutic approaches.

Prof. Anthony Rees
Dr. Alessandra Micaela Villa
Dr. Mattia Matasci
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • Cancer immunotherapy
  • Immunocytokine (antibody–cytokine fusion)
  • Bispecific antibodies
  • Conditional activation
  • Antibody engineering

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Published Papers

There is no accepted submissions to this special issue at this moment.
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