Cell Surface Molecules, Cancer, & Immunotherapy - The Lieping Chen Lab at Yale School of Medicine
December 10, 2025Information
- ID
- 13692
- To Cite
- DCA Citation Guide
Transcript
- 00:04When cancer or immune cells
- 00:06need to operate,
- 00:08they need a larger cell
- 00:09work together. So then the
- 00:11cell surface molecule is a
- 00:13communicating molecule.
- 00:15When cell get into contact,
- 00:17and then they deliver signal
- 00:19together, and then they tell
- 00:21others to do what.
- 00:22If this signal goes wrong,
- 00:24then the immune system go
- 00:25to chaos.
- 00:29Our early study, actually, in
- 00:31the early nineties, we found
- 00:33there's quite a bit of
- 00:34cancer cells.
- 00:36They do display
- 00:37a series of molecule on
- 00:39the cell surface, which
- 00:41deliver signal to the immune
- 00:43cell in the wrong way.
- 00:45So that cancer cell is
- 00:46not just sitting there and
- 00:47it just keeps growing.
- 00:50They actively actually deliver signal
- 00:52to our body's immune system
- 00:54and to shut them down,
- 00:56basically.
- 00:58So we are interested in
- 01:00two kind of areas. One
- 01:02is the basic immunology.
- 01:05The second area is to
- 01:06use that discovery to treat
- 01:09diseases,
- 01:10especially cancer.
- 01:14We have developed a receptor
- 01:17array which allow us
- 01:18to
- 01:19study
- 01:21more than fifteen thousand cell
- 01:23surface molecules
- 01:24at the same time and
- 01:26to see how they interact
- 01:27each other, how they signal
- 01:29each other.
- 01:30Now later, single cell technology
- 01:34can pick the cells, basically.
- 01:35You can pick a thousand
- 01:36or ten thousand cells and
- 01:37to study them in detail,
- 01:39especially what kind of molecule
- 01:41you express in particular cell,
- 01:43how they interact with other
- 01:45cells.
- 01:46So the purpose is to
- 01:48understand how
- 01:50these cells communicate
- 01:51and then how cancer cell
- 01:53communicate with immune cells. They
- 01:55become very useful tools.
- 02:00For basic science, whole purpose
- 02:02actually is to move them
- 02:04to clinic.
- 02:05PDR1, for example, which we
- 02:07discovered twenty five plus years
- 02:09ago. We found many cancer
- 02:11cells display this molecule.
- 02:13They will bind to a
- 02:15molecule called PD1 on the
- 02:17T cells and then deliver
- 02:19a shutdown signal.
- 02:21So that is basic science
- 02:23finding. You identify the molecule,
- 02:25you understand the signaling,
- 02:27you understand how T cell
- 02:28get disabled,
- 02:30that dysfunctional.
- 02:32With that knowledge, then we
- 02:35started to think about how
- 02:36to
- 02:38develop the drug.
- 02:39So the idea then is
- 02:41to develop an antibody
- 02:43to selectively
- 02:44block this PD L1 and
- 02:46PD-one communication.
- 02:51Eventually, you bring the antibody
- 02:53to clinic and it shows,
- 02:54oh, suddenly, immune system, like,
- 02:56recover. Okay? And it's not
- 02:58active to kill the the
- 03:00tumor cell. So now this
- 03:01therapy, based on this principle
- 03:03we found twenty five plus
- 03:05years ago,
- 03:07and become a standard of
- 03:08cancer care now in clinic.
- 03:11So all these integrate together,
- 03:14which is really to bring
- 03:16the basic science
- 03:18knowledge
- 03:19to treat diseases.