Difference between revisions of "Team:Evry"
Knakiballz (Talk | contribs) m |
Knakiballz (Talk | contribs) (Trying a new homepage (inline style for the old stuff)) |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<html> | <html> | ||
<!-- Main Content --> | <!-- Main Content --> | ||
− | <div class='side-body hidden-xs' style="width: calc(100%-250px); height: 550px; "> | + | <div class='side-body hidden-xs parallax' style="width: calc(100%-250px); height: 550px; background-image: url('https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/5/5d/Homepage_header_background_optimized.jpg'); background-size: cover;"> |
− | <div> | + | <div style="position: relative; top: 50%; transform: translateY(-50%); -webkit-transform: translateY(-50%);"> |
− | <h1 class="text-center">Yeast cancer immunotherapy.</h1> | + | <h1 class="text-center" style=" font-size:4em; color: #ffffff; text-shadow: 0px 0px 8px #222222;">Yeast cancer immunotherapy.</h1> |
<p class="text-center">EVRY-GENOPOLE IGEM 2015 PROJECT</p> | <p class="text-center">EVRY-GENOPOLE IGEM 2015 PROJECT</p> | ||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 00:27, 31 August 2015
Welcome!
Abstract
Reshaping immunotherapy landscape.
Cancer thrives by preventing the immune system from targeting tumor cells. While current immunotherapies use dendritic cells to activate T-cells towards specific tumor antigens, they remain expensive and of variable efficiency against tumor immunosuppressive environment. To address these issues, our team mainly focused on engineering a S. cerevisiae yeast immunotherapy that was ultimately tested in vivo on mice presenting melanoma.
Three complementary strategies were combined: First, in order to modulate the tumor environment, yeast secreting immune modulators, GM-CSF and IFNgamma, were encapsulated into alginate beads and injected in tumors. Secondly, to break the immune tolerance against cancer cells, T4 and T8 lymphocytes were elicited by a yeast antigen display system. Last, to deliver cytotoxic compounds solely in the tumor environment, a yeast hypoxia bio-sensor was designed. A side project consisted in engineering E. coli to drive MAIT lymphocytes against cancer cells instead of their original targets, parasitized cells.