Publications by authors named "D Stewart Irvine"

Wound healing is a complex process that may result in healthy tissue regeneration, but problematic chronic wounds exhibit fibrosis and persistent inflammation. To improve wound outcomes, the application of pro-proliferative polymers as bioresorbable particles was investigated for the first time. The surface of bioresorbable poly(D,L-lactic acid) (PLA) microparticles is decorated with a pro- and anti-proliferative polymer that adheres to the surface for a minimum of 21 days.

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Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy targeting CD19 elicits remarkable clinical efficacy in B cell malignancies, but many patients relapse owing to failed expansion and/or progressive loss of CAR-T cells. We recently reported a strategy to potently restimulate CAR-T cells in vivo, enhancing their functionality by administration of a vaccine-like stimulus comprised of surrogate peptide ligands for a CAR linked to a lymph node-targeting amphiphilic PEG-lipid (amph-vax). Here we demonstrate a general strategy to discover and optimize peptide mimotopes enabling amph-vax generation for any CAR.

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An effective prophylactic HIV vaccine will likely need to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs). bnAbs to the Apex region of the HIV envelope glycoprotein (Env) are promising targets for vaccination because of their relatively low somatic hypermutation compared with other bnAbs. Most Apex bnAbs engage Env using an exceptionally long heavy-chain complementarity-determining region 3 (HCDR3) containing specific binding motifs, which reduces bnAb precursor frequency and makes priming of rare bnAb precursors a likely limiting step in the path to Apex bnAb induction.

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During infection, the fusion peptide (FP) of HIV envelope glycoprotein (Env) serves a central role in viral fusion with the host cell. As such, the FP is highly conserved and therefore an attractive epitope for vaccine design. Here, we describe a vaccination study in non-human primates (NHPs) where glycan deletions were made on soluble HIV Env to increase FP epitope exposure.

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Evaluation of recombinant HIV-1 surface glycoproteins (Env) as vaccine candidates for Phase I human experimental trials often requires production of cGMP-grade well-ordered Env trimers. Here, we report an accelerated cGMP compatible approach for expression and purification of a stabilized HIV clade C-derived trimer '16055 DG4 NFL' (for native flexibly linked). This recombinant trimer was expressed from CHO-S™ cells using a MaxCyte® VLX™ electroporation-based transient transfection process.

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