Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kristina M. Ilieva is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kristina M. Ilieva.


Oncotarget | 2016

Targeting folate receptor alpha for cancer treatment

Anthony Cheung; Heather J. Bax; Debra H. Josephs; Kristina M. Ilieva; Giulia Pellizzari; James W. Opzoomer; Jacinta Bloomfield; Matthew Fittall; Anita Grigoriadis; Mariangela Figini; Silvana Canevari; James Spicer; Andrew Tutt; Sophia N. Karagiannis

Promising targeted treatments and immunotherapy strategies in oncology and advancements in our understanding of molecular pathways that underpin cancer development have reignited interest in the tumor-associated antigen Folate Receptor alpha (FRα). FRα is a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored membrane protein. Its overexpression in tumors such as ovarian, breast and lung cancers, low and restricted distribution in normal tissues, alongside emerging insights into tumor-promoting functions and association of expression with patient prognosis, together render FRα an attractive therapeutic target. In this review, we summarize the role of FRα in cancer development, we consider FRα as a potential diagnostic and prognostic tool, and we discuss different targeted treatment approaches with a specific focus on monoclonal antibodies. Renewed attention to FRα may point to novel individualized treatment approaches to improve the clinical management of patient groups that do not adequately benefit from current conventional therapies.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2014

Effects of BRAF mutations and BRAF inhibition on immune responses to melanoma.

Kristina M. Ilieva; Isabel Correa; Debra H. Josephs; Panagiotis Karagiannis; Isioma U. Egbuniwe; Michiala J. Cafferkey; James Spicer; Mark Harries; Frank O. Nestle; Katie E. Lacy; Sophia N. Karagiannis

Malignant melanoma is associated with poor clinical prognosis; however, novel molecular and immune therapies are now improving patient outcomes. Almost 50% of melanomas harbor targetable activating mutations of BRAF that promote RAS–RAF–MEK–ERK pathway activation and melanoma proliferation. Recent evidence also indicates that melanomas bearing mutant BRAF may also have altered immune responses, suggesting additional avenues for treatment of this patient group. The small molecule inhibitors selective for mutant BRAF induce significant but short-lived clinical responses in a proportion of patients, but also lead to immune stimulatory bystander events, which then subside with the emergence of resistance to inhibition. Simultaneous BRAF and MEK inhibition, and especially combination of BRAF inhibitors with new immunotherapies such as checkpoint blockade antibodies, may further enhance immune activation, or counteract immunosuppressive signals. Preclinical evaluation and ongoing clinical trials should provide novel insights into the role of immunity in the therapy of BRAF-mutant melanoma. Mol Cancer Ther; 13(12); 2769–83. ©2014 AACR.


OncoImmunology | 2015

Elevated IgG4 in patient circulation is associated with the risk of disease progression in melanoma.

Panagiotis Karagiannis; Federica Villanova; Debra H. Josephs; Isabel Correa; Mieke Van Hemelrijck; Carl Hobbs; Louise Saul; Isioma U. Egbuniwe; Isabella Tosi; Kristina M. Ilieva; Emma Kent; Eduardo Calonje; Mark Harries; Ian S. Fentiman; Joyce Taylor-Papadimitriou; Joy Burchell; James Spicer; Katie E. Lacy; Frank O. Nestle; Sophia N. Karagiannis

Emerging evidence suggests pathological and immunoregulatory functions for IgG4 antibodies and IgG4+ B cells in inflammatory diseases and malignancies. We previously reported that IgG4 antibodies restrict activation of immune effector cell functions and impair humoral responses in melanoma. Here, we investigate IgG4 as a predictor of risk for disease progression in a study of human sera (n = 271: 167 melanoma patients; 104 healthy volunteers) and peripheral blood B cells (n = 71: 47 melanoma patients; 24 healthy volunteers). IgG4 (IgG4/IgGtotal) serum levels were elevated in melanoma. High relative IgG4 levels negatively correlated with progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival. In early stage (I–II) disease, serum IgG4 was independently negatively prognostic for progression-free survival, as was elevation of IgG4+ circulating B cells (CD45+CD22+CD19+CD3−CD14−). In human tissues (n = 256; 108 cutaneous melanomas; 56 involved lymph nodes; 60 distant metastases; 32 normal skin samples) IgG4+ cell infiltrates were found in 42.6% of melanomas, 21.4% of involved lymph nodes and 30% of metastases, suggesting inflammatory conditions that favor IgG4 at the peripheral and local levels. Consistent with emerging evidence for an immunosuppressive role for IgG4, these findings indicate association of elevated IgG4 with disease progression and less favorable clinical outcomes. Characterizing immunoglobulin and other humoral immune profiles in melanoma might identify valuable prognostic tools for patient stratification and in the future lead to more effective treatments less prone to tumor-induced blockade mechanisms.


Cancer Research | 2017

Anti-folate receptor-α IgE but not IgG recruits macrophages to attack tumors via TNFa/MCP-1 signaling

Debra H. Josephs; Heather J. Bax; Tihomir Dodev; Mirella Georgouli; Mano Nakamura; Giulia Pellizzari; Louise Saul; Panagiotis Karagiannis; Anthony Cheung; Cecilia Herraiz; Kristina M. Ilieva; Isabel Correa; Matthew Fittall; Silvia Crescioli; Patrycja Gazinska; Natalie Woodman; Silvia Mele; Giulia Chiaruttini; Amy E. Gilbert; Alexander Koers; Marguerite G. Bracher; Christopher Selkirk; Heike Lentfer; Claire Barton; Elliott Lever; Gareth Muirhead; Sophia Tsoka; Silvana Canevari; Mariangela Figini; Ana Montes

IgE antibodies are key mediators of antiparasitic immune responses, but their potential for cancer treatment via antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) has been little studied. Recently, tumor antigen-specific IgEs were reported to restrict cancer cell growth by engaging high-affinity Fc receptors on monocytes and macrophages; however, the underlying therapeutic mechanisms were undefined and in vivo proof of concept was limited. Here, an immunocompetent rat model was designed to recapitulate the human IgE-Fcε receptor system for cancer studies. We also generated rat IgE and IgG mAbs specific for the folate receptor (FRα), which is expressed widely on human ovarian tumors, along with a syngeneic rat tumor model expressing human FRα. Compared with IgG, anti-FRα IgE reduced lung metastases. This effect was associated with increased intratumoral infiltration by TNFα+ and CD80+ macrophages plus elevated TNFα and the macrophage chemoattractant MCP-1 in lung bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Increased levels of TNFα and MCP-1 correlated with IgE-mediated tumor cytotoxicity by human monocytes and with longer patient survival in clinical specimens of ovarian cancer. Monocytes responded to IgE but not IgG exposure by upregulating TNFα, which in turn induced MCP-1 production by monocytes and tumor cells to promote a monocyte chemotactic response. Conversely, blocking TNFα receptor signaling abrogated induction of MCP-1, implicating it in the antitumor effects of IgE. Overall, these findings show how antitumor IgE reprograms monocytes and macrophages in the tumor microenvironment, encouraging the clinical use of IgE antibody technology to attack cancer beyond the present exclusive reliance on IgG. Cancer Res; 77(5); 1127-41. ©2017 AACR.


Scientific Reports | 2016

IgG subclass switching and clonal expansion in cutaneous melanoma and normal skin.

Louise Saul; Kristina M. Ilieva; Heather J. Bax; Panagiotis Karagiannis; Isabel Correa; Irene Rodriguez-Hernandez; Debra H. Josephs; Isabella Tosi; Isioma U. Egbuniwe; Sara Lombardi; Silvia Crescioli; Carl Hobbs; Federica Villanova; Anthony Cheung; Jenny Geh; Ciaran Healy; Mark Harries; Victoria Sanz-Moreno; David J. Fear; James Spicer; Katie E. Lacy; Frank O. Nestle; Sophia N. Karagiannis

B cells participate in immune surveillance in human circulation and tissues, including tumors such as melanoma. By contrast, the role of humoral responses in cutaneous immunity is underappreciated. We report circulating skin-homing CD22+CLA+B cells in healthy volunteers and melanoma patients (n = 73) and CD22+ cells in melanoma and normal skin samples (n = 189). Normal and malignant skin featured mature IgG and CD22 mRNA, alongside mRNA for the transiently-expressed enzyme Activation-induced cytidine Deaminase (AID). Gene expression analyses of publically-available data (n = 234 GEO, n = 384 TCGA) confirmed heightened humoral responses (CD20, CD22, AID) in melanoma. Analyses of 51 melanoma-associated and 29 normal skin-derived IgG sequence repertoires revealed lower IgG1/IgGtotal representation compared with antibodies from circulating B cells. Consistent with AID, comparable somatic hypermutation frequencies and class-switching indicated affinity-matured antibodies in normal and malignant skin. A melanoma-associated antibody subset featured shorter complementarity-determining (CDR3) regions relative to those from circulating B cells. Clonal amplification in melanoma-associated antibodies and homology modeling indicated differential potential antigen recognition profiles between normal skin and melanoma sequences, suggesting distinct antibody repertoires. Evidence for IgG-expressing B cells, class switching and antibody maturation in normal and malignant skin and clonally-expanded antibodies in melanoma, support the involvement of mature B cells in cutaneous immunity.


OncoImmunology | 2017

B cells and the humoral response in melanoma: The overlooked players of the tumor microenvironment

Giulia Chiaruttini; Silvia Mele; James W. Opzoomer; Silvia Crescioli; Kristina M. Ilieva; K. Lacy; Sophia N. Karagiannis

ABSTRACT Evidence of tumor-resident mature B cell and antibody compartments and reports of associations with favorable prognosis in malignant melanoma suggest that humoral immunity could participate in antitumor defense. Likely striving to confer immunological protection while being subjected to tumor-promoting immune tolerance, B cells may engender multiple functions, including antigen processing and presentation, cytokine-mediated signaling, antibody class switching, expression and secretion. We review key evidence in support of multifaceted immunological mechanisms by which B cells may counter or contribute to malignant melanoma, and we discuss their potential translational implications. Dissecting the contributions of tumor-associated humoral responses can inform future treatment avenues.


Oncotarget | 2017

BRAF inhibitors: resistance and the promise of combination treatments for melanoma

Merope Griffin; Daniele Scotto; Debra H. Josephs; Silvia Mele; Silvia Crescioli; Heather J. Bax; Giulia Pellizzari; Matthew D. Wynne; Mano Nakamura; Ricarda M. Hoffmann; Kristina M. Ilieva; Anthony Cheung; James Spicer; Sophie Papa; Katie E. Lacy; Sophia N. Karagiannis

Identification of mutations in the gene encoding the serine/threonine-protein kinase, BRAF, and constitutive activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway in around 50% of malignant melanomas have led to the development and regulatory approval of targeted pathway inhibitor drugs. A proportion of patients are intrinsically resistant to BRAF inhibitors, and most patients who initially respond, acquire resistance within months. In this review, we discuss pathway inhibitors and their mechanisms of resistance, and we focus on numerous efforts to improve clinical benefits through combining agents with disparate modes of action, including combinations with checkpoint inhibitor antibodies. We discuss the merits of combination strategies based on enhancing immune responses or overcoming tumor-associated immune escape mechanisms. Emerging insights into mechanisms of action, resistance pathways and their impact on host-tumor relationships will inform the design of optimal combinations therapies to improve outcomes for patients who currently do not benefit from recent treatment breakthroughs.


OncoImmunology | 2018

Antibody structure and engineering considerations for the design and function of Antibody Drug Conjugates (ADCs)

Ricarda M. Hoffmann; Ben G. T. Coumbe; Debra H. Josephs; Silvia Mele; Kristina M. Ilieva; Anthony Cheung; Andrew Tutt; James Spicer; David E. Thurston; Silvia Crescioli; Sophia N. Karagiannis

ABSTRACT Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are emerging as effective tools in cancer therapy, combining the antibodys exquisite specificity for the target antigen-expressing cancer cell together with the cytotoxic potency of the payload. Much success stems from the rational design of “toxic warheads”, chemically linked to antibodies, and from fine-tuning the intricate properties of chemical linkers. Here, we focus on the antibody moiety of ADCs, dissecting the impact of Fab, linkers, isotype and Fc structure on the anti-tumoral and immune-activating functions of ADCs. Novel design approaches informed by antibody structural attributes present opportunities that may contribute to the success of next generation ADCs.


Journal of Proteomics | 2017

Recombinant plant-derived human IgE glycoproteomics

Laura Montero-Morales; Daniel Maresch; Alexandra Castilho; Aysegül Turupcu; Kristina M. Ilieva; Silvia Crescioli; Sophia N. Karagiannis; Christian Lupinek; Chris Oostenbrink; Friedrich Altmann; Herta Steinkellner

The increasing biotechnological interest in human IgE antibodies demands advanced systems which allow their proper expression. However, this is still a challenge due to the complexity of the molecule, particularly regarding the diverse N-glycosylation pattern. Here, we present the expression of recombinant IgE in wild type and glycan-engineered Nicotiana benthamiana plants and in-depth N-glycosylation analyses. Mass spectrometric profiling revealed that plant IgE has a site occupancy rate that ranges from non-occupied at glycosite 6 (GS6) to 100% occupancy at GS1 and 2. Similarly to human cell-derived IgE, plant versions carry complex N-glycans at GS1-5 and oligomannosidic structures at GS7. Computational modelling suggests that spatial position (or orientation) of glycans can impair processing or site occupancy on adjacent glycosites. IgE expressed in glycoengineered and wild type plants carry, respectively, GnGn and plant-typical GnGnXF structures at large homogeneity. This contrasts with the glycan diversity of HEK cell-derived IgE, carrying at least 20 different glycoforms. Importantly, IgE glycoengineering allows the control of its glycosylation, a so far unmet need when using well-established expression systems. This enables the elucidation of possible carbohydrate-dependent IgE functions. SIGNIFICANCE Targeted glycosylation of recombinant proteins may provide an advantage in therapeutic applications. Despite increasing biotechnological interest in IgE antibodies, knowledge and impact of glycosylation on this antibody class are scarce. With the ability to glyco-engineer recombinant IgE, we provide an important step towards the generation of IgE with other targeted N-glycans. This will facilitate detailed structure-function studies and may lead to the production of IgE with optimized activities.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2018

Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan 4 and its potential as an antibody immunotherapy target across different tumor types

Kristina M. Ilieva; Anthony Cheung; Silvia Mele; Giulia Chiaruttini; Silvia Crescioli; Merope Griffin; Mano Nakamura; James Spicer; Sophia Tsoka; Katie E. Lacy; Andrew Tutt; Sophia N. Karagiannis

Overexpression of the chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan 4 (CSPG4) has been associated with the pathology of multiple types of such as melanoma, breast cancer, squamous cell carcinoma, mesothelioma, neuroblastoma, adult and pediatric sarcomas, and some hematological cancers. CSPG4 has been reported to exhibit a role in the growth and survival as well as in the spreading and metastasis of tumor cells. CSPG4 is overexpressed in several malignant diseases, while it is thought to have restricted and low expression in normal tissues. Thus, CSPG4 has become the target of numerous anticancer treatment approaches, including monoclonal antibody-based therapies. This study reviews key potential anti-CSPG4 antibody and immune-based therapies and examines their direct antiproliferative/metastatic and immune activating mechanisms of action.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kristina M. Ilieva's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge