DFM Platform
DFM Funding Monitor

Immune Synapse Engagement as a Novel Approach for Cancer Immunotherapycore

ImmuneSynapsEngagers · Horizon Europe grant · 2023-03-01–2028-02-29

EC contribution

€2,000,000

Total cost

€2,000,000

Beneficiaries

1
About the data

Source: CORDIS (official EU open data), Horizon Europe. Framework HORIZON · call ERC-2022-COG · scheme HORIZON-ERC · topic ERC-2022-COG. CORDIS record →

Objective

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) targeting immune checkpoints have revolutionized cancer treatment but exhibit several challenges, most notably, limited intratumor efficacy and relatively low patient response rates. Endowing these mAbs with immune-cell-recruitment capabilities may offer the solution to these drawbacks. This assumption is based on our recent findings that the effectivity of a given checkpoint mAb relies not only on its binding to its target T-cells receptor but also on the direct interaction of the targeted T-cell with dendritic cells (DCs). Our results suggest that the low-frequency or dysfunctionality of such stimulating immune synapses following checkpoint mAb treatments hinder their anti-tumor efficacy. Therefore, the outcome of not taking this T-cell-DC licensing loop mechanism into account in mAb design is suboptimal checkpoint mAbs. To overcome these limitations, we propose here to develop a series of bi- and muti-specific immune synapse engager antibodies as a new approach to enforce immune interactions for cancer immunotherapy. We will apply in-vivo genetic tools and high-dimensional analysis of the immune response on the spatial, cellular, proteomic and transcriptomic levels to provide critical insights into immune synapses that mediate effective T-cell anti-tumor activity. We will then harness this knowledge to apply antibody-engineering approaches and treatment regimens to maximize anti-tumor activity. We will explore and target T-cell-DC synapses that enable antagonistic (Aim 1) and agonistic (Aim 2) checkpoint mAbs and additional types of immune cell interactions underlying favourable immune surveillance of tumors (Aim 3). This study will introduce a novel approach for cancer immunotherapy using drugs that engage physical crosstalk between key immune cells. Ideally, this study will yield reagents with potent anti-tumor efficacy and well-characterized in-vivo activities that can be readily translated for evaluation in human patients.

Beneficiaries (1)

OrganisationCountryRoleEC contributionSME
WEIZMANN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE IL coordinator €2,000,000

Get the DFM funding briefing — free

New EU defence calls, tenders and awards in your inbox.

Countries
Sectors
Sources

We store your email only to send the DFM briefing/alerts and to add you to DFM Analysis. Unsubscribe anytime.

Defence Finance Monitor is an analytical and informational product. Grant data is official CORDIS; payment and subscription happen on DFM Analysis.