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IMUC, University of Pa. in deal for dendritic-cell production technology
March 2012
SHARING OPTIONS:
LOS ANGELES—ImmunoCellular Therapeutics (IMUC) announced in
late February that it has entered into an agreement with the University of
Pennsylvania under which the school has granted IMUC an exclusive, worldwide
license for a patent-pending technology for the production of high-activity
dendritic cells (DCs).
The license covers the application of this technology to the
development of therapeutics for all indications except breast cancer and ductal
carcinoma in situ. Financial terms of
the agreement were not disclosed.
The licensed technology underlies ICT-107, IMUC’s lead
DC-based cancer vaccine candidate for the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme.
Developed by Dr. Brian J. Czerniecki, co-director of the university’s Rena
Rowan Breast Cancer Center and surgical director of the immunotherapy program
at the Abramson Cancer Center, the technology enables the development of DCs
designed to trigger powerful and targeted immune responses to specific cancer
antigens.
In the natural human immune system, DCs are responsible for
capturing, processing and presenting antigens to T-cells, which in turn target
the antigens and destroy them. A key juncture in the process of immunity, the
DC’s conversion from antigen-capturing to antigen-presenting mode, known as
maturation, relies on the production of special messenger cells known as
cytokines. Czerniecki’s technology produces DCs that express very high levels
of the cytokines interleukin (IL) -12 and –IP-10, which have been shown to play
a key role in initiating T-cell response.
“This licensing agreement represents an expansion of our
intellectual property surrounding the technology underlying our lead product
candidate, ICT-107,” said Dr. Manish Singh, IMUC president and CEO, in a
statement. “In addition to contributing to the powerful immune responses to
ICT-107 we have observed to date, this technology also enables the manufacture
of multiple vaccine shots from a single production run, allowing us to
significantly reduce the cost of manufacturing the vaccine. As we continue
advancing our ongoing Phase II trial in glioblastoma, we are confident that
will continue to realize the benefits of the enhanced efficacy and efficiency
of this innovative dendritic-cell production method.”
ImmunoCellular Therapeutics (OTC.BB: IMUC) is a Los
Angeles-based clinical-stage company that is developing immune-based therapies
for the treatment of brain and other cancers.
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