Mission
The Center for Cancer Immunotherapy aims to harness and amplify the cancer-fighting potential of a wide variety of immune cells to dramatically increase the number of cancer patients who benefit from cancer immunotherapy.
The Center for Cancer Immunotherapy at La Jolla Institute is at the forefront of exploring new and sometimes unexpected avenues for novel immune-based cancer treatments, as well as predicting and improving the effectiveness of existing immunotherapies. It brings together some of the world’s most innovative scientists, who are not afraid to leave the beaten path and tackle major questions in new ways: How to select the best targets for personalized cancer vaccines? How to predict which patients will respond to cancer immunotherapy and how to overcome tumor resistance? How to engage hitherto ignored types of immune cells in the fight against cancer?
Cancer immunotherapies rally a patient’s immune cells to attack tumor cells and are a source of great hope in cancer care. Several of them are specifically designed to supercharge T cells, which use receptors on their surface to scan anything they encounter to determine whether it is friend or foe. These game-changing treatments have brought cancer patients back from the brink and vanquished tumors resistant to conventional therapies. Despite being hailed as miracle cures, immune-based cancer therapies actually only benefit a minority of cancer patients. The problem is that tumors have developed a suite of molecular tools to thwart the ability of T cells to recognize and kill cancer cells. This challenge has prompted our scientists to look to different divisions of the immune system to overcome tumor cell defenses.
The Center for Cancer Immunotherapy aims to harness and amplify the cancer-fighting potential of a wide variety of immune cells to dramatically increase the number of cancer patients who benefit from cancer immunotherapy.
Cancer is the leading cause of disease-related death among children under the age of 19 in the United States. Scientists researching pediatric cancer are looking for the answers that will help us improve treatments and outcomes for childhood cancer patients, and ultimately save lives.
In September 2022, in honor of Pediatric Cancer Awareness Month, LJI partnered with the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation to create a fact-based resource guide which provides an overview of pediatric cancer, the funding landscape for current research efforts, and how LJI scientists are contributing to the fight.
With this new $300,000 grant, LJI Assistant Professor Miguel Reina-Campos, Ph.D., sets out to make scientific training more accessible
New research may help scientists hunt down solid tumors and better diagnose disease
Prebys Foundation celebrates ground-breaking female researchers
LJI scientists share a new, rapid method for studying phosphorylation and other post-translational modifications
LJI's Flow Cytometry Core brings cutting-edge technology to immune system researchers
The new Reina Lab aims to charge up killer T cells against tumors