Institut de Duve Avenue Hippocrate 75 - B1.74.03 1200 Bruxelles
The Van den Eynde Lab aims to improve cancer immunotherapy by leveraging new cancer vaccine approaches and understanding immunosuppressive mechanisms in the tumor microenvironment.
The Van den Eynde Lab studies how cancer immunotherapy can be improved by developing new vaccine approaches aimed at increasing the number of anti-tumor T lymphocytes. In collaboration with the twin Van den Eynde Lab in Oxford, new vaccine approaches are developed based on the Oxford vaccine platform using viral vectors (ChAdOX and MVA), which were used in the Oxford/AstraZeneca Covid vaccine. Based on their preclinical work, a vaccine targeting tumor antigens MAGEA3 and NY-ESO1 is being tested in lung cancer patients in the UK.
The Van den Eynde Lab also studies the role of mitochondria in antigen processing and presentation, based on their finding that synthetic long peptides, which are currently used as cancer vaccines, involve mitochondria in their mechanism of action.
In collaboration with the Zhu Lab, the Van den Eynde Lab also aims to characterize immunosuppressive mechanisms taking place in the tumor microenvironment, with the aim of finding new druggable targets that can be acted upon to improve tumor rejection. One focus is on tryptophan catabolism by IDO and TDO, two enzymes that degrade tryptophan in the tumor microenvironment and thereby suppress anti-tumor immunity.
The aim of the Van den Eynde Lab is to identify new targets against which drugs can be developed to increase the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy. Their work has already led to the creation of two biotech companies that are developing new drugs for cancer therapy.
Benoit Van den Eynde, MD, PhD, is Full Professor at UCLouvain, Professor of Tumour Immunology at Oxford University, Director of the de Duve Institute in Brussels, Member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, and Director of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Laboratories in Brussels. He leads research groups active in cancer immunotherapy, with a focus on the identification and study of tumour antigens, the development of cancer vaccines, the study of immunosuppressive mechanisms in the tumour micro-environment, and the preclinical development of new immuno-oncology drugs. He co-founded iTeos Therapeutics and sits on the scientific advisory board of several biotech and pharma companies.
He started his career at the de Duve Institute in Brussels under the mentorship of Thierry Boon, with whom he contributed to the discovery and molecular definition of tumor antigens recognized by T lymphocytes. These findings opened a molecular era in tumor immunology and established the foundation of current cancer immunotherapy. Van den Eynde has authored over 180 original publications in major international journals. He is recognized as an international leader in the field, and has obtained several prestigious prizes, including in 2010 the Quinquennial Prize of the FNRS for Biomedical Sciences (Joseph Maisin Prize).
Zhu J, Naulaerts S, Boudhan L, Martin M, Gatto L, Van den Eynde BJ
Nature (2023) 618(7965):607-615
Klaessens S, Stroobant V, Hoffmann D, Gyrd-Hansen M, Pilotte L, Vigneron N, De Plaen E, Van den Eynde BJ
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2021) 118(23):e2022447118
Zhu J, Powis de Tenbossche CG, Cané S, Colau D, van Baren N, Lurquin C, Schmitt-Verhulst AM, Liljeström P, Uyttenhove C, Van den Eynde BJ
Nat Commun (2017) 8(1):1404