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Dive into the research topics where William L. Corwin is active.

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Featured researches published by William L. Corwin.


Immunotherapy | 2017

Neoepitopes as cancer immunotherapy targets: key challenges and opportunities

Cory A Brennick; Mariam M George; William L. Corwin; Pramod K. Srivastava; Hakimeh Ebrahimi-Nik

Over the last half century, it has become well established that cancers can elicit a host immune response that can target them with high specificity. Only within the last decade, with the advances in high-throughput gene sequencing and bioinformatics approaches, are we now on the forefront of harnessing the hosts immune system to treat cancer. Recently, some strides have been taken toward understanding effective tumor-specific MHC I restricted epitopes or neoepitopes. However, many fundamental questions still remain to be addressed before this therapy can live up to its full clinical potential. In this review, we discuss the major hurdles that lie ahead and the work being done to address them.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2016

Cryopreservation: Evolution of Molecular Based Strategies

John M. Baust; William L. Corwin; Kristi K. Snyder; Robert G. Van Buskirk; John G. Baust

Cryopreservation (CP) is an enabling process providing for on-demand access to biological material (cells and tissues) which serve as a starting, intermediate or even final product. While a critical tool, CP protocols, approaches and technologies have evolved little over the last several decades. A lack of conversion of discoveries from the CP sciences into mainstream utilization has resulted in a bottleneck in technological progression in areas such as stem cell research and cell therapy. While the adoption has been slow, discoveries including molecular control and buffering of cell stress response to CP as well as the development of new devices for improved sample freezing and thawing are providing for improved CP from both the processing and sample quality perspectives. Numerous studies have described the impact, mechanisms and points of control of cryopreservation-induced delayed-onset cell death (CIDOCD). In an effort to limit CIDOCD, efforts have focused on CP agent and freeze media formulation to provide a solution path and have yielded improvements in survival over traditional approaches. Importantly, each of these areas, new technologies and cell stress modulation, both individually and in combination, are now providing a new foundation to accelerate new research, technology and product development for which CP serves as an integral component. This chapter provides an overview of the molecular stress responses of cells to cryopreservation, the impact of the hypothermic and cell death continuums and the targeted modulation of common and/or cell specific responses to CP in providing a path to improving cell quality.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2017

Tumor Control Index as a new tool to assess tumor growth in experimental animals

William L. Corwin; Hakimeh Ebrahimi-Nik; Stephanie M. Floyd; Pouya Tavousi; Ion I. Mandoiu; Pramod K. Srivastava

Measurement of tumor diameters, tumor volumes, or area under the curve has been traditionally used to quantitate and compare tumor growth curves in immune competent as well as immune-compromised mice and rats. Here, using tumor growth data from a large number of mice challenged with live tumor cells, we describe the use of a new composite parameter, Tumor Control Index (TCI) as an alternative method to do the same. This index, comprised of three distinct values, the Tumor Inhibition Score, Tumor Rejection Score, and Tumor Stability Score, provides a complete picture of nearly every aspect of tumor growth in large numbers of animals, can be deduced automatically from tumor diameter or volume data, and can be used to compare several groups of animals in different experiments. This automatically derivable index also corresponds neatly to the use of complete and partial responses and tumor stability data generated in human tumors, and can be used to assess the efficacy of interventions to be used in clinical studies.


Biopreservation and Biobanking | 2013

Implications of differential stress response activation following non-frozen hepatocellular storage.

William L. Corwin; John M. Baust; John G. Baust; Robert G. Van Buskirk

Hepatocytes are critical for numerous cell therapies and in vitro investigations. A limiting factor for their use in these applications is the ability to process and preserve them without loss of viability or functionality. Normal rat hepatocytes (NHEPs) and human hepatoma (C3A) cells were stored at either 4°C or 37°C to examine post-processing stress responses. Resveratrol and salubrinal were used during storage to determine how targeted molecular stress pathway modulation would affect cell survival. This study revealed that storage outcome is dependent upon numerous factors including: cell type, storage media, storage length, storage temperature, and chemical modulator. These data implicate a molecular-based stress response that is not universal but is specific to the set of conditions under which cells are stored. Further, these findings allude to the potential for targeted protection or destruction of particular cell types for numerous applications, from diagnostic cell selection to cell-based therapy. Ultimately, this study demonstrates the need for further in-depth molecular investigations into the cellular stress response to bioprocessing and preservation.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2018

CD11c+ MHCIIlo GM-CSF-bone marrow-derived dendritic cells act as antigen donor cells and as antigen presenting cells in neoepitope-elicited tumor immunity against a mouse fibrosarcoma

Hakimeh Ebrahimi-Nik; William L. Corwin; Tatiana Shcheglova; Alok Das Mohapatra; Ion I. Mandoiu; Pramod K. Srivastava

Dendritic cells play a critical role in initiating T-cell responses. In spite of this recognition, they have not been used widely as adjuvants, nor is the mechanism of their adjuvanticity fully understood. Here, using a mutated neoepitope of a mouse fibrosarcoma as the antigen, and tumor rejection as the end point, we show that dendritic cells but not macrophages possess superior adjuvanticity. Several types of dendritic cells, such as bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (GM-CSF cultured or FLT3-ligand induced) or monocyte-derived ones, are powerful adjuvants, although GM-CSF-cultured cells show the highest activity. Among these, the CD11c+ MHCIIlo sub-set, distinguishable by a distinct transcriptional profile including a higher expression of heat shock protein receptors CD91 and LOX1, mannose receptors and TLRs, is significantly superior to the CD11c+ MHCIIhi sub-set. Finally, dendritic cells exert their adjuvanticity by acting as both antigen donor cells (i.e., antigen reservoirs) as well as antigen presenting cells.


Biopreservation and Biobanking | 2009

In Vitro Assessment of Apoptosis and Necrosis Following Cold Storage in a Human Airway Cell Model

William L. Corwin; John M. Baust; Robert G. VanBuskirk; John G. Baust


Archive | 2011

Cell Culture Media Supplement and Method of Molecular Stress Control

John M. Baust; John G. Baust; William L. Corwin; Robert G. Van Buskirk


Archive | 2017

TISSUE ENGINEERED MODEL

John G. Baust; Joshua T. Smith; Kimberly L. Santucci; Kristi K. Snyder; Anthony T. Robilotto; Robert G. Van Buskirk; John M. Baust; William L. Corwin; Jennie F. Mckain


Archive | 2016

SYSTEM FOR HEATING AND COOLING SAMPLES

John M. Baust; Joshua T. Smith; William L. Corwin; Kristi K. Snyder; Anthony T. Robilotto


BioProcessing Journal | 2016

Development and Assessment of a Novel Device for the Controlled, Dry Thawing of Cryopreserved Cell Products

John M. Baust; William L. Corwin; Kristi K. Snyder; John G. Baust; Robert G. Van Buskirk

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Ion I. Mandoiu

University of Connecticut

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Cory A Brennick

University of Connecticut

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