Physical sciences
SRI platforms
Senior scientist
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
2075 Bayview Ave., Room M7 434
Toronto, ON
M4N 3M5
Administrative Assistant: Kim Allen
Phone: 416-480-6100 ext. 65718
Email: kimberly.allen@sunnybrook.ca
Education:
- B.Sc., 1978, biochemistry specialization, Concordia University, Canada
- PhD, 1983, biochemistry, University of Alberta, Canada
- Postdoctoral fellow, 1986, medical microbiology, Stanford University, U.S.
Appointments and Affiliations:
- Senior scientist, Physical Sciences, Odette Cancer Research Program, Sunnybrook Research Institute
- SRI Research Chair in Biomolecular Engineering
- Professor, department of medical biophysics, University of Toronto
- Professor (cross-appointment), department of pharmaceutical sciences, University of Toronto
Research Foci:
- Aptamers as therapeutics
- Protein therapeutics
- Cancer vaccines
- Immune checkpoint therapies
- Anti-inflammatory agents
- Immune checkpoint inhibitors for cancer therapy
- Designing novel diagnostic approaches
Research Summary:
Biotherapies including immunotherapies have had a dramatic impact in terms of patient survival and enhanced quality of life in the areas of inflammatory diseases and cancer. Dr. Gariépy’s laboratory is interested in the design and engineering of protein- and oligonucleotide-based therapeutics aimed at modulating immune responses to either selectively dampen them (anti-inflammatory agents) or release such responses (to target and kill cancer cells). His lab creates and tests such agents by combining synthetic, combinatorial and genetic approaches with cellular assays and animal studies. The team also designs probes and devises new methods that can serve as new diagnostic or discovery tools. Additionally, they collaborate with clinicians and scientists at Sunnybrook Research Institute and elsewhere in the world as what they do is applicable to any disease.
Selected Publications:
See current publications list at PubMed.
- Prodeus A, Abdul-Wahid A, Sparkes A, Fischer NW, Cydzik M, Chiang N, Alwash M, Ferzoco A, Vacaresse N, Julius M, Gorczysnki RM, and Gariépy J. VISTA.COMP: an engineered checkpoint receptor agonist that potently suppresses T-cell mediated immune responses. JCI Insight 2017 (in press).
- Fischer NW, Prodeus A, Malkin D, Gariépy J. p53 oligomerization status modulates cell fate decisions between growth, arrest and apoptosis. Cell Cycle. 2016 Dec;15(23):3210–3219.
- Abdul-Wahid A, Cydzik M, Prodeus A, Alwash M, Stanojcic M, Thompson M, Huang EH, Shively JE, Gray-Owen SD, Gariépy J.Induction of antigen-specific TH 9 immunity accompanied by mast cell activation blocks tumor cell engraftment. Int J Cancer. 2016 Aug 15;139(4):841–53
- Cydzik M, Abdul-Wahid A, Park S, Bourdeau A, Bowden K, Prodeus A, Kollara A, Brown TJ, Ringuette MJ, Gariépy J. Slow binding kinetics of secreted protein, acidic, rich in cysteine-VEGF interaction limit VEGF activation of VEGF receptor 2 and attenuate angiogenesis. FASEB J. 2015 Aug;29(8):3493–505.
- Prodeus A, Abdul-Wahid A, Fischer NW, Huang EH, Cydzik M, Gariépy J. Targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 Immune Evasion Axis With DNA Aptamers as a Novel Therapeutic Strategy for the Treatment of Disseminated Cancers. Mol Ther Nucleic Acids. 2015 Apr 28;4:e237.
Related News and Stories:
- Mutations in tumour-halting gene may be useful markers for prognosis: More active forms of gene linked to longer survival of people with cancer (SRI Magazine, 2018)
- Researchers discover that mutations in tumour-halting gene may be useful markers for prognosis: more active p53 gene linked to longer survival in certain cancer patients (Aug. 17, 2018)
- Resounding approval: Sunnybrook Research Institute's success rate in CIHR competition soars past national average (Jan. 25, 2018)
- Sending the right signal: Researchers design new molecule to counter inflammation by restraining T cells (Nov. 2, 2017)
- CIHR responds to revolt while releasing results: Peer rebellion brings promise of change to granting agency (July 18, 2016)
- Ask a scientist: "Talk about tough days: Your results didn’t pan out. You didn’t get the grant. What do you do to decompress after days like this?" (SRI Magazine, 2016)
- Immunotherapy: Engineering a vaccine to thwart cancer (SRI Magazine, 2015)
- Undeterred: Today’s science trainees and their supervisors say their postgraduate education is worth it, despite a changed and challenging job terrain (SRI Magazine, 2015)
- Tool kit: GE T200 surface plasmon resonance system: Scientist uses optical detection method to develop therapies and imaging tools for diseases (Sept. 26, 2013)
- Writing a PhD thesis: Getting it done and enjoying the process (July 5, 2013)
- Making the cut: Amid fiscal challenges, SRI researchers get funded (Feb. 7, 2013)
- Happy hour: SRI scientists talk cancer vaccines at café scientifique (June 27, 2012)
- Cancer researcher moves to Sunnybrook with sights set on novel therapies (May 4, 2010)
- Vaccine could delay bowel inflammation and colon cancer: An experimental vaccine against an abnormal protein found in some tumors has the potential to delay the onset of IBD and in turn prevent progression to colon cancer (ScienceDaily, March 25, 2010)
- Vaccine could delay bowel inflammation and colon cancer (HealthNewsDigest.com, March 24, 2010)
- Researcher of the month: New skin cancer treatment may come from E. Coli (Canadian Cancer Society, June 2009)
- Merchant Scientists: How commercialization is changing research in Canada (Walrus Magazine, May 2008)
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