A Novel, Human-Derived HER2 Antibody for Cancer Therapeutics and Diagnostics

Description:

Summary

Vanderbilt researchers have discovered a human-derived antibody that recognizes HER2, a protein overexpressed in various cancers. These antibodies offer potential novel cancer therapeutics and diagnostic tools with improved immunological compatibility compared to humanized antibody alternatives.

Addressed Need

The HER2 protein is overexpressed in 20-30% of breast cancers and is a well-established treatment target. While HER2-targeted antibodies have proven effective cancer therapies, those currently on the market are derived from non-human sources and routinely elicit adverse immune responses. This technology directly addresses this challenge by using a novel, human-derived HER2 antibody for more tolerable applications.

Key Benefits

· Reduced adverse immune response

· Novel antibody overcomes acquired resistance and broadens therapeutic landscape

· Dual applicability for therapeutics and diagnostics

Technology Features

· Antibody is derived from human clonal B cells

· Light and heavy chain variable sequences are novel

· Functionally like trastuzumab, the gold standard for HER2 antibodies

 

Figure: Dose-response ELISA curve showing that the binding of the novel human-derived antibody

(purple) is similar to Trastuzumab (pink).

 

Other Details

Intellectual Property Status: Provisional patent filed.

Stage of Development: Antibody sequenced and characterized, in vitro efficacy assays performed in breast cancer cells.

Patent Information:
Category(s):
Diagnostics
Therapeutics
For Information, Contact:
Cameron Sargent
Licensing Officer, Associate
Vanderbilt University Center for Technology Transfer and Commercialization
cameron.sargent@vanderbilt.edu
Inventors:
Keywords:
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