Media releases

  • Brock-led immunotherapy research shows potential to extend healthy lifespan of humans

    MEDIA RELEASE: November 16 2023 – R0109

    A Brock-led international research team has discovered a groundbreaking immunotherapy method that could potentially add years to healthy aging.

    The research, published in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine, introduces an innovative method to address health issues arising from poor lifestyle choices, which can cause damage to biomolecules and contribute to the development of diseases later in life.

    Professor of Health Sciences Newman Sze and his team developed an approach that involves directing the immune system to clear out accumulated proteins damaged by inactive lifestyles, unhealthy diets, various stresses and genetic factors, root causes of aging and age-related diseases.

    “Age-related chronic diseases are a major health-care burden,” says Sze, the Canada Research Chair in Mechanisms of Health and Disease. “We therefore developed a first-of-its-kind monoclonal antibody drug that harnesses the immune system to target and remove these abnormal proteins, providing an effective treatment for age-related health problems.”

    As time passes, environmental stresses and physiological conditions cause biomolecular damages in tissues. One of these changes, called isoDGR, triggers chronic inflammation in the body and leads to tissue degeneration.

    Uncontrolled chronic inflammation, in turn, can lead to conditions such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, Type 2 diabetes, arthritis and Alzheimer’s disease.

    While the accumulation of isoDGR has been identified as a ‘molecular clock’ of aging, the new research paper says potential benefits of targeting these structures with specific immunotherapies remain largely unknown.

    Sze and his team created monoclonal antibodies called isoDGR-mAb. These lab-engineered proteins are designed to boost the immune system’s ability to attack unhealthy cells or abnormal molecules. Such immunotherapies are already being used to treat various cancers, autoimmune disorders and infectious diseases.

    Using animal models, the team found that these lab-engineered molecules stimulated the immune system to clear out the proteins in tissues that had been damaged by isoDGR. Treatment with isoDGR-mAb not only doubled lifespan but also preserved behaviour and co-ordination functions and reduced pro-inflammatory cytokine levels in the circulation and body tissues.

    Sze says the team’s findings could lead to the development of immunotherapy-based interventions to extend the healthy lifespan of humans.

    “The existing treatments for age-related diseases primarily address symptoms,” says Sze. “Our pioneering mAb, uniquely focused on targeting the root causes of chronic diseases, is anticipated to substantially extend human health span.”

    As Canada Research Chair, Sze studies diseases that occur as people age, specifically diseases related to the brain and the blood vessels becoming damaged. His lab has developed new research methods that investigate how body tissues deteriorate over time, and created new drugs to guide the immune system to eliminate abnormal biomolecules.

    This latest paper, “Immunotherapy targeting isoDGR-protein damage extends lifespan in a mouse model of protein deamidation,” involved researchers from Brock as well as universities in Singapore, China, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.

    The team’s Brock researchers include Health Sciences Professors Deborah O’Leary and Evangelia Tsiani, Health Sciences Associate Professors Adam MacNeil and Rebecca MacPherson, and graduate students Ranjith Iyappan, Evelin Melekh and SoFong Cam Ngan.

    Funders for this research include the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Canada Foundation for Innovation, Ontario Research Fund and Brock University.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock event to recount ‘worst gambling scandal in NHL history’

    MEDIA RELEASE: November 15 2023 – R0108

    An upcoming book launch and talk featuring sport historian and author Fred Addis will explore the life and hardships of Don Gallinger, a teenage hockey star from Port Colborne who rocketed to fame in the 1940s before his career was ended by scandal.

    Organized by Brock’s Centre for Sport Capacity and the Sport Oral History Archive, the public event takes place Wednesday, Nov. 22 from 7 to 9 p.m. in Pond Inlet at Brock’s main campus.

    Addis will speak about his new book, Gallinger, A Life Suspended, which tells the story of the gifted young hockey player’s rise to fame, jumping from Junior B level hockey in his hometown of Port Colborne to the National Hockey League’s (NHL) Boston Bruins at the age of 17.

    During his professional hockey career, Gallinger scored two overtime goals in the Stanley Cup playoffs and led the Bruins in scoring records after returning home from the Second World War.

    But his career in the NHL ended abruptly in 1948 when he became embroiled in a Detroit betting ring. He was suspended from the NHL for life for betting on league games. As a result, Gallinger struggled to make a home for himself and his family, ultimately leaving his life and health in shambles.

    “We are excited to host this unique book event that connects sport history to a very current and serious controversy: sport gambling,” said Brock Sport Management Professor Julie Stevens, Co-Director of the Sport Oral History Archive alongside Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak. “It’s a local story that touches upon a global issue facing those who play and lead sport.”

    As past president of the Society for International Hockey Research and a contributor to the Hockey Hall of Fame’s Legends magazine and Total Hockey: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Hockey League, Addis will share his expertise in hockey history offering insight into the world of sport.

    Guests will also have the opportunity to speak with Addis, who lived in Port Colborne for several years and knew Gallinger personally.

    More information about the event is available on the Centre for Sport Capacity website

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209 

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    Categories: Media releases