Chimeric Antigen Receptor Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Chimeric Antigen Receptor stocks.

Chimeric Antigen Receptor Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 3 NTLA Why Intellia Therapeutics, Inc. (NTLA) Outpaced the Stock Market Today
May 3 NTLA IGM Biosciences, Inc. (IGMS) Expected to Beat Earnings Estimates: Can the Stock Move Higher?
May 3 PSTX Broker Revenue Forecasts For Poseida Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ:PSTX) Are Surging Higher
May 2 CLLS Cellectis announces CFO departure
May 2 CLLS Cellectis Appoints Arthur Stril as Interim Chief Financial Officer
May 2 MBIO Mustang Bio Announces Closing of $4 Million Public Offering
May 2 NTLA Intellia Therapeutics to Hold Conference Call to Discuss First Quarter 2024 Earnings and Company Updates
May 2 PSTX Xyphos and Poseida to develop allogeneic cell therapies for cancer
May 1 PSTX Poseida gains on cell therapy pact with Astellas
May 1 PSTX Astellas and Poseida Therapeutics Enter Into Research Collaboration and License Agreement to Develop Novel Allogeneic Cell Therapies in Oncology
May 1 PSTX Astellas adds to ‘off-the-shelf’ cell therapy capabilities with Poseida deal
Apr 30 ANIX Anixa Biosciences to Participate in the Sidoti Micro-Cap Virtual Conference on May 8 & 9, 2024
Apr 30 MBIO Mustang Bio Announces Pricing of $4 Million Public Offering
Apr 29 CLLS Cellectis GAAP EPS of -$0.64 misses by $0.43, revenue of $1.99M misses by $14.13M
Apr 29 CLLS Cellectis Reports Financial Results for the Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2023
Apr 29 NTLA Intellia Therapeutics to Present Updated Data from Phase 1/2 Study of NTLA-2002 for the Treatment of Hereditary Angioedema (HAE) at the EAACI Congress 2024
Chimeric Antigen Receptor

Chimeric antigen receptors (CARs, also known as chimeric immunoreceptors, chimeric T cell receptors or artificial T cell receptors) are receptor proteins that have been engineered to give T cells the new ability to target a specific protein. The receptors are chimeric because they combine both antigen-binding and T-cell activating functions into a single receptor.
CAR-T cell therapy uses T cells engineered with CARs for cancer therapy. The premise of CAR-T immunotherapy is to modify T cells to recognize cancer cells in order to more effectively target and destroy them. Scientists harvest T cells from people, genetically alter them, then infuse the resulting CAR-T cells into patients to attack their tumors. CAR-T cells can be either derived from T cells in a patient's own blood (autologous) or derived from the T cells of another healthy donor (allogenic). Once isolated from a person, these T cells are genetically engineered to express a specific CAR, which programs them to target an antigen that is present on the surface of tumors. For safety, CAR-T cells are engineered to be specific to an antigen expressed on a tumor that is not expressed on healthy cells.After CAR-T cells are infused into a patient, they act as a "living drug" against cancer cells. When they come in contact with their targeted antigen on a cell, CAR-T cells bind to it and become activated, then proceed to proliferate and become cytotoxic. CAR-T cells destroy cells through several mechanisms, including extensive stimulated cell proliferation, increasing the degree to which they are toxic to other living cells (cytotoxicity), and by causing the increased secretion of factors that can affect other cells such as cytokines, interleukins, and growth factors.

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