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Dive into the research topics where Terry Hermiston is active.

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Featured researches published by Terry Hermiston.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2014

Armed therapeutic viruses - a disruptive therapy on the horizon of cancer immunotherapy

Maxine Bauzon; Terry Hermiston

For the past 150 years cancer immunotherapy has been largely a theoretical hope that recently has begun to show potential as a highly impactful treatment for various cancers. In particular, the identification and targeting of immune checkpoints have given rise to exciting data suggesting that this strategy has the potential to activate sustained antitumor immunity. It is likely that this approach, like other anti-cancer strategies before it, will benefit from co-administration with an additional therapeutic and that it is this combination therapy that may generate the greatest clinical outcome for the patient. In this regard, oncolytic viruses are a therapeutic moiety that is well suited to deliver and augment these immune-modulating therapies in a highly targeted and economically advantageous way over current treatment. In this review, we discuss the blockade of immune checkpoints, how oncolytic viruses complement and extend these therapies, and speculate on how this combination will uniquely impact the future of cancer immunotherapy.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2008

A rapid and efficient branched DNA hybridization assay to titer lentiviral vectors.

Ayyappan Nair; Jinger Xie; Sarasijam Joshi; Paul Harden; Joan Davies; Terry Hermiston

A robust assay to titer lentiviral vectors is imperative to qualifying their use in drug discovery, target validation and clinical applications. In this study, a novel branched DNA based hybridization assay was developed to titer lentiviral vectors by quantifying viral RNA genome copy numbers from viral lysates without having to purify viral RNA, and this approach was compared with other non-functional (p24 protein ELISA and viral RT-qPCR) and a functional method (reporter gene expression) used commonly. The RT-qPCR method requires purification of viral RNA and the accuracy of titration therefore depends on the efficiency of purification; this requirement is ameliorated in the hybridization assay as RNA is measured directly in viral lysates. The present study indicates that the hybridization based titration assay performed on viral lysates was more accurate and has additional advantages of being rapid, robust and not dependent on transduction efficiency in different cell types.


Molecular Therapy - Oncolytics | 2017

OvAd1, a Novel, Potent, and Selective Chimeric Oncolytic Virus Developed for Ovarian Cancer by 3D-Directed Evolution

Irene Kuhn; Maxine Bauzon; Nicola K. Green; Len Seymour; Kerry D. Fisher; Terry Hermiston

Effective therapeutics for ovarian cancer continue to be urgently needed, particularly for chemotherapy-resistant cases. Here we present both a 3D-Matrigel culture-based expansion of our directed evolution method for generation of oncolytic virotherapies and two promising ovarian-cancer targeted oncolytic viruses, OvAd1 and OvAd2. OvAd1 was developed using Matrigel cell cultures, whereas OvAd2 was developed in parallel using traditional monolayer tissue culture methods. Both viruses are potent against a panel of platinum-resistant ovarian cancer cell lines and are attenuated on normal cells in vitro, resulting in therapeutic windows of ∼200-fold. We observed two benefits of the use of Matrigel-based cultures for directed evolution of these oncolytics: (1) use of Matrigel generated a bioselected pool that was more strongly attenuated on normal cells while retaining its potency against ovarian cancer cells, and (2) in an ovarian carcinomatosis model, the Matrigel-derived virus OvAd1 suppressed all tumor growth while the non-Matrigel-derived virus was 50% effective. Neither virus stimulated formation of peritoneal adhesions as seen for Ad5-based therapies. Consequently, these viruses are novel candidates for development as new effective treatments for aggressive ovarian cancer.


Archive | 2014

PRO-DRUG ANTIBODIES AGAINST TISSUE FACTOR PATHWAY INHIBITOR

Zhuozhi Wang; John E. Murphy; Terry Hermiston; Ying Zhu; Ruth Winter


Archive | 2014

GLA DOMAINS AS TARGETING AGENTS

Maxine Bauzon; Terry Hermiston


Archive | 2013

SHORT-ACTING FACTOR VII POLYPEPTIDES

Maxine Bauzon; Terry Hermiston


Archive | 2008

New modulating molecules for an improved regulated expression system

Maxine Bauzon; Peter Droescher; Richard N. Harkins; Terry Hermiston; Peter Kretschmer; Konstantin Levitsky; Paul Szymanski


Archive | 2017

COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS FOR TREATMENT WITH HEMOPEXIN

Kirk Mclean; Terry Hermiston; Alan Brooks; Richard I. Feldman


Archive | 2014

Substrate profiling of proteases in neutrophil extracellular traps

Ye Jin; John E. Murphy; Terry Hermiston


Archive | 2014

Application of N-terminomics to NETosis in inflammation

Ye Jin; Terry Hermiston; John E. Murphy

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