鶹ҳ

Skip to main content
Back to Top
Apply Giving
Resources for:
Students
Students Faculty & Staff Parents & Family Alumni Community
鶹ҳ Logo
  • Academics

    Academics Home

    Colleges & Schools

    Programs of Study
    • Degrees & Programs
    • Program Pathways
    • Academic Calendar
    • Online Programs
    Resources
    • Academic Success Center
    • Advising
    • Counseling Services
    • Honors Program
    • Libraries
    • Testing & Disability Services
    • Writing Center
    Outside the Classroom
    • Army ROTC
    • Study Abroad
    • Experiential Learning
    • First Year Experience
    • Center for Undergraduate Research
    • Career Services
    • Jags Live Well
  • Admissions

    Admissions Home

    Visit Campus

    Request Information

    Apply to AU
    • First-Year Freshmen
    • Transfer Students
    • Dual Enrollment
    • Graduate Students
    • Medical College of Georgia
    • Dental College of Georgia
    Opportunities
    • Degree & Programs
    • Honors Program
    • Program Pathways
    • Military-Affiliated Students
    • New Student & Family Transistions
    • On-Campus Housing
    Financial Aid
    • Student Financial Aid
    • Net Price Calculator
    • Scholarships
    • Cost of Attendance
    • Apply for Federal Aid
  • Campus Life

    Campus Life Home

    Community
    • Army ROTC
    • Living-Learning Communities
    • Military & Veteran Services
    • Mentorship
    • New Student & Family Transistions
    • Jags 4 Jags Mentoring Program
    Campus Services
    • Dining Services
    • Roarstore
    • Housing
    • Student Health
    • Parking & Transportation
    • Jagcard
    Get Involved
    • Clubs & Organizations
    • Greek Life
    • Campus Recreation
    • Student Government
    • Jaguar Production Crew
    • Intramural Sports
  • Research

    Research Home

    Opportunities
    • Undergraduate Research
    • Graduate & Postdoctoral Research
    • Clinical Trials
    • Core Laboratories
    • Innovation Commercialization
    Initiatives
    • Cancer
    • Cardiovascular
    • Immunology
    • Neuroscience
    • Aging
    Resources
    • Centers & Institutes
    • Ethics & Compliance
    • Institutional Review Board
    • Sponsored Programs
    • Tools for Researchers
  • About AU

    About AU

    Leadership
    • President
    • Provost
    • Administration
    • Enrollment Student Affairs
    • Faculty Senate
    We are AU!
    • Our Mission
    • Working at AU
    • Traditions
    • History
    • 鶹ҳ, GA
    Resources
    • Portals
    • Faculty Directory
Resources For
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Parents & Family
  • Alumni & Friends
Apply
Giving
Trending Search Terms
  • Registrar
  • Housing
  • Academic Calendar
  • Financial Aid
  • Parking
  • Library
  • Human Resources
  • Information Technology
Medical College of GeorgiaImmunology Center of Georgia
Immunology Center of Georgia
  • Home
  • Our Story
  • Research
    • Pure Research
    • Areas of Focus
    • Core Facilities
    • Ignite Grant Initiative
  • Scientists
    • IMMCG Team
    • Scientific Advisory Board
    • Catherine "Lynn" Hedrick
    • Klaus Ley
    • Hossam Abdelsamed 
    • Redouane Aherrahrou
    • Austin Chiang
    • Rafael Czepielewski
    • Kunzhe Dong
    • Nicholas R.J. Gascoigne
    • Marco Orecchioni
    • Adil Rasheed
    • Peipei Zhu
  • Trainees
    • Postdoctoral Fellows
    • Graduate Students
  • News
  • Get Involved
    • Support Our Work
    • Seminars
    • Campus Conversations
    • Join Our Team
Promo for Gascoigne's lab
  • 鶹ҳ
  • Centers & Institutes
  • Immunology Center of Georgia
  • IMMCG

Nicholas R.J. Gascoigne, PhD, FRSB 

Nicholas Gascoigne, PhD

Nicholas R.J. Gascoigne, PhD, FRSB
Professor, Immunology Center of Georgia
Lamar B. Peacock, M.D. Distinguished Chair for the Study of Immunological Disease
Professor, Department of Medicine, Medical College of Georgia, 鶹ҳ
Member of Cancer Immunology, Inflammation, & Tolerance (CIIT), Georgia Cancer Center

 

Cellular immunotherapy using chimeric antigen receptor-bearing T cells (CAR-T) has made enormous advances in the treatment of liquid cancers over the last 10-15 years.

However, CAR-T are not very effective against solid tumors and the nature of the treatment, where T cells from the patient are removed, made to express the CAR through gene transfer, expanded in tissue culture, and then reinfused into the patient, is very time consuming and expensive. Many patients are unable to access the treatment either due to the costs or to the fact that they do not have sufficient healthy T cells to turn into CAR-T cells.

The Gascoigne lab recently discovered that CAR-T cells can be made more effective by using a fundamental difference in signal transduction between the natural T cell receptor (TCR) and the CAR. TCR signaling requires a protein tyrosine kinase called LCK for the T cells to become activated and kill tumor cells. Certain kinds of CAR that are currently in use in the clinic — very surprisingly — do not need LCK. Instead they can use another, related, kinase called FYN. Not only did knocking out LCK allow the CAR-T to be more specific and effective than regular CAR-T cells where LCK was active, but they even had stronger effectiveness against solid tumor (Wu et al. Cell Rep Med 4: 100917, 2023).

The fact that LCK-deficient CAR-T cells can function without the ability to be stimulated though the natural endogenous TCR means that they are suitable for allogeneic therapy. An allogeneic CAR-T would be able to be used as an off-the-shelf therapy, where a single healthy donor could provide therapy for hundreds of individual unrelated patients. The fact that TCR cannot signal means that they cannot cause graft versus host disease (GVHD). The lab is trying to develop this as a therapy. In addition, the lab has screened CRISPR libraries for novel genes that will enhance CAR-T function, and indeed, normal T cell function. A number of strong “hits” are being developed as potential therapeutic targets.

In addition, the lab identified and characterized Themis, a protein that controls thymocyte positive selection through regulation of TCR signaling strength. It also has an important role in coordinating TCR and cytokine signals in mature T cells. The lab is currently interested in the role of Themis in T cell signaling in the thymus and in formation of memory cells. Using 3D imaging of the thymus, the lab identified a single major lymphatic duct that appears to be a site of egress from the thymus, and that egress is not solely through blood vessels. How this works is under active study.

Research

  • The Gascoigne Lab focuses on T cell signaling, activation, and development, including signaling pathways in CAR-T cells and how they can be manipulated to improve CAR-T function in cancer immunotherapy.

 

Visit Dr. Gascoigne's Lab Page  

University Shield

鶹ҳ

1120 15th Street, 鶹ҳ, GA 30912

  •   Campus Maps
  •   Campus Contacts
  • A-Z Directory
  • Degrees & Programs
  • Employment
  • Accessibility
  • Accreditation
  • Campus Safety
  • Compliance Hotline
  • Privacy Notices
  • Title IX / Sexual Misconduct
Apply Now Give Now

© 2025 鶹ҳ