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APC Activator
Type of immunotherapy From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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APC Activators (or Antigen-presenting cell activators) are a type of immunotherapy which leverages antigen-presenting cells (APCs) to drive an adaptive immune response.[1][2][3][4] APC Activators are agonists to APC surface-expressed ligands that, when bound, induce the maturation and activation of APCs. Professional antigen-presenting cells – including dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells – serve an indispensable role in the adaptive immune response through their unique ability to phagocytose, digest, and present exogenous (circulating) antigens to T cells, facilitating antigen-specific immune responses.[5]
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Background
Professional APCs express MHC class II and CD40 molecules as surface receptors, and can be activated through direct interactions with T cells expressing these receptors' corresponding ligands, LAG-3 and CD40-L, respectively.[5] A third class of receptors that can activate APCs are called toll-like receptors (TLRs); these receptors bind foreign ligands which are structurally conserved molecules from microbes, called pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs).[6]
Therapeutic potential
Combinatorial approaches that target multiple aspects of the cancer immunity cycle, including APC activation, are promising strategies for the treatment of diseases, including numerous types of cancer.[7] Interest in the clinical use of TLR and CD40 agonistic antibodies in immuno-oncology wavered in the past decade.[6][8] The APC Activator IMP321 (Eftilagimod alpha), a soluble LAG-3 fusion protein, is currently undergoing clinical trials in combination with chemotherapy (paclitaxel), or immune checkpoint inhibitors, including the PD-1 monoclonal antibody pembrolizumab, to accelerate the adaptive immune response in several tumor indications.[9][2][4]
References
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