You are here

Anticancer therapies

Shutterstock
04.11.2024

A newly developed antibody-based treatment for the most aggressive type of breast cancer might also be used to treat many other cancers

Shutterstock
09.09.2024

A new Weizmann Institute approach promises to advance cancer immunotherapy; it increases the proliferation rate of cancer-targeting immune...

Combat team: A dendritic cell (right) and a T cell, both from a mouse with skin cancer, combined using the BiCE antibody (yellow)
18.01.2024

A new kind of immunotherapy, based on crosstalk between different immune cells, could pave the way for innovative treatments of cancer and...

Tissue sample of a particularly aggressive skin cancer reveals immune cells (yellow) that express on their surfaces a “brake pedal” receptor called FcgIIb (purple); cell nuclei are in blue
05.03.2023

Sometimes anticancer antibodies press on the gas and the brakes at the same time. New research might help them accelerate better

Collagen fibers deposited by fibroblasts in the tumor microenvironment, viewed under a microscope. The fibers form an orderly pattern in tumors with an unmutated BRCA gene (top); in contrast, in tumors of patients harboring BRCA mutations (bottom), the collagen structure is disordered
08.02.2023

Weizmann Institute scientists have discovered how mutations in the BRCA genes, particularly prevalent among Ashkenazi Jews, lead to...

Shutterstock
31.08.2022

How tumors mutate their way out of a crisis – and become drug resistant in the process

Natural anticancer antibodies (green) bound to a single ovarian tumor cell; the cell’s nucleus is in blue. Viewed with confocal microscopy
23.03.2022

Natural antibodies found in tumors could point the way toward improved immunotherapy 

Sulfopin
28.11.2021

A particularly “sticky” molecule could lead to the development of an effective treatment for cancer

Prof. Yardena Samuels
15.10.2021

Off-the-shelf therapies to be developed for entire groups of patients

Soma Ghosh
16.09.2019

"We attain higher achievement, better results and the opportunity to advance our scientific careers"

Pages