Targeted Cancer Therapy Using Monoclonal Antibodies
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Immunology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2023) | Viewed by 9253
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The discovery of murine monoclonal antibodies in 1975, followed by the Nobel prize in medicine in 1984 which was grated to Dr. Georges Koehler and Dr. Cesar Milstein and the enormous development of the field in the following decades, enabled the preparation and production of chimeric, humanized, and human monoclonal antibodies. Although the immune system was developed to protect us from invading pathogens, the first therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, approved by the FDA and EMA, were used to treat cancer. The Nobel prize in medicine was given to Prof. James P. Allison and Prof. Tasuku Honjo in 2018 for the development of immunotherapy, based on monoclonal antibodies, to treat cancer. Monoclonal antibodies (chimeric, humanized, and human) are also very successful in the treatment of autoimmune and dermatological diseases, among others. In the last decade, monoclonal antibodies, mainly human (isolated from patients or produced in transgenic mice), have also been developed to treat infectious diseases such as AIDS and COVID-19. Scientists have provided new technologies to prepare fully human antibodies, based on phage display—Prof. Sir Gregory Winter was awarded the Nobel prize in chemistry in 2018 for his pioneering work on this, for instance. We are still awaiting the first approved drug based on nanobodies (from camelid), and new doors have also opened for new targets for CAR-T therapy and for the preparation of monoclonal antibodies to these targets. All therapeutic monoclonal antibodies can be prepared as ADCs.
In this issue, we will cover the field of targeted cancer therapy using monoclonal antibodies as described above, and authors are encouraged and welcome to provide us with their topics of research (except pure clinical studies). Review articles are also welcome.
Prof. Dr. Vladka Čurin Šerbec
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- antibodies
- monoclonal antibodies
- recombinant antibodies
- immunological techniques
- use of antibodies in research, diagnostics, and therapy
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