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Hunter Jonus Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2024
through 06-30-2027
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location:
Atlanta, GA
Institution: Emory University
affiliated with Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston, Aflac Cancer Center
Allogeneic cell therapy is a new approach to cancer treatment that harnesses living cells from healthy donors to fight tumors. To do so, immune cells are isolated from blood and incubated outside the body to expand subsets capable of killing cancer. Dr. Jonus and colleagues have shown that gamma delta (gd) T cells expanded from healthy adults help to eradicate neuroblastoma grown in models. Based on this,Dr. Jonus and team are performing a first-in-child clinical trial of gd T cells for patients with neuroblastoma. Going forward, Dr. Jonus's findings show an opportunity to make gd T cell therapy more effective by expanding a new type of gd T cell, Vd1, with unique properties that should improve both the cell therapy's fitness and its ability to infiltrate into solid tumors. In parallel for a potent second-generation therapy, Dr. Jonus will engineer Vd1 gd T cells to 1) express receptors that help them better recognize neuroblastoma and 2) evade immune recognition so that the therapy is not killed after being infused into a patient.
The first year of this grant is funded by and named for the Oliver Wells Fund for Neuroblastoma, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. From the moment he was born, Ollie was the center of the Wells family with a contagious smile and a sparkle in his eyes. As the youngest child, it was devastating when they learned the 15 year old toddler had cancer. Oliver was diagnosed with high risk neuroblastoma and spent the next 13 months bravely enduring chemotherapy and radiation, more than a dozen surgeries and a bone marrow transplant. But Ollie persevered and smiled through it all. It was an unfair fight from the beginning and in July 2018, Ollie passed away. The Oliver Wells Fund for Neuroblastoma was established in his memory to raise funds to find cures and give hope to other kids facing the same fight. In this way, the Wells family intends to share Oliver’s joy for life and use his story to help find a cure.