Preclinical Molecular Imaging Group

Dr Gabriela Kramer-Marek’s group uses cutting-edge biomedical imaging techniques to gain information about the way particular genes drive cancer progression.

Our group’s long-term goal is to develop specific biomarkers for detecting cancers and to evaluate these biomarkers in pre-clinical cancer models

Notwithstanding the remarkable clinical success of mAb-based treatment regimens, not all patients benefit from them. This can be attributed, at least in part, to the complexity of the tumour microenvironment and its considerable heterogeneity both in terms of the tumour and non-tumour cell components. These phenomena represent a huge challenge in identifying predictive biomarkers and stratifying patient populations for personalised therapy approaches.

Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop assays that will help in three ways:

  1. accurate patient selection
  2. understanding intrinsic resistance mechanisms or the emergence of acquired resistance following treatment initiation and
  3. choosing the most effective combination regimen in circumstances in which single-agent therapies are insufficiently effective.

Currently, the baseline expression level of antigens targeted by therapeutic mAbs can be analysed by methods such as: immunohistochemistry (IHC), flow cytometry, proteomics, or next-generation sequencing of tumour tissues acquired at diagnostic biopsy or intra-operatively. These techniques aid our understanding of how cancer cells adapt to treatment and become resistant, but such methods are inherently invasive, prone to sampling errors caused by inter- and intra-tumour heterogeneity of receptor expression within analysed biopsy specimens and do not lend themselves readily to repeated sampling.

Positron emission tomography (PET), using radiolabelled mAbs, antibody fragments or engineered protein scaffolds (immuno-PET), has the potential to acquire information non-invasively and can be highly complementary to analyses based on tissue acquisition. Accordingly, immuno-PET agents might accurately identify the presence and accessibility of the target and provide a rapid assessment of tumour response to a variety of treatments in a timely fashion (e.g. within 1-2 weeks of treatment initiation).

Furthermore, immuno-PET agents can provide information about the heterogeneity of both target expression and therapeutic response, which are increasingly recognised as key factors in treatment resistance. This especially relates to patients with advanced disease in whom target expression may vary from site to site and a biopsy of a single local or metastatic deposit may not accurately reflect the situation across the entire disease burden. Although introduction of immuno-PET into routine clinical practice may add complexity and increase costs, with appropriate use this imaging modality has the potential to identify patients likely to benefit from therapy and assess the efficacy of novel target-specific drugs.

Against this background, our research focuses on the development and characterisation of targeted-PET radiotracers, including protein-based theranostic agents that enable smart monitoring of immunotherapies and expand opportunities for personalised medicine approaches.

Early diagnosis and individualized therapy have been recognized as crucial for the improvement of cancer treatment outcome. While proper molecular characterization of individual tumour types facilitates choice of the right therapeutic strategies, early assessment of tumour response to therapy could allow the physicians to discontinue ineffective treatment and offer the patient a more promising alternative. Therefore, the role of molecular imaging in elucidating molecular pathways involved in cancer progression and the ability to select the most effective therapy based on the unique biologic characteristics of the patient and the molecular properties of a tumour are undoubtedly of paramount importance.

The mission of this group is to investigate innovative imaging probes and apply them to novel orthotopic or metastatic models that are target driven, to gain information of the way particular oncogenes drive cancer progression through signalling pathways that can be imaged in vivo and, correlate it with target level ex vivo. Such an approach enables non-invasive assessment of biochemical target levels, target modulation and provides opportunities to optimize the drug dosing for maximum therapeutic effect, which leads to the development of better strategies for the more precise delivery of medicine.

The long term goal of our research is to develop specific imaging cancer biomarkers, especially for positron emission tomography (PET) as well as optical imaging and, evaluate these biomarkers in pre-clinical cancer models. Significant efforts are directed towards validating biomarkers for early prediction of treatment response, with the focus on new targeted therapies (such as inhibition of cell signalling pathways).

Our initial portfolio of imaging agents include radiolabelled affibody molecules, TK inhibitors and, conventional tracers that monitor universal markers of tumour physiology.

We are actively supported by other groups from the Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging as well as the Division of Cancer Therapeutics. Moreover, our close association with The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust enables rapid translation of our research to early clinical studies and ensures a fast transition of know-how from the research laboratory to the patient bedside.

Dr Gabriela Kramer-Marek

Group Leader:

Preclinical Molecular Imaging Gabriela Kramer-Marek

Dr Gabriela Kramer-Marek is investigating new ways of molecular imaging in order to predict an individual patient’s response to treatment. Before moving to the ICR, she developed a new approach for non-invasive assessment of HER2 expression in breast cancer.

Researchers in this group

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Phone: 020 3437 6376

Email: Chiara.DaPieve@icr.ac.uk

Location: Sutton

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Phone: +44 20 3437 6785

Email: dawoud.dar@icr.ac.uk

Location: Sutton

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Phone: +44 20 3437 6857

Email: catarina.slobo@icr.ac.uk

Location: Sutton

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Phone: 020 3437 4549

Email: DavidRobert.Turton@icr.ac.uk

Location: Sutton

Dr Gabriela Kramer-Marek's group have written 63 publications

Most recent new publication 2/2025

See all their publications

Recent discoveries from this group

04/03/25

Scientists have developed a tool which helps them better understand cancer’s survival tactics and could eventually lead to new treatments for dozens of cancer types.

Some cancers are caused by mutations such as faults in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes, which make it harder for the body to repair damaged DNA.

Inhibitor drugs are used to target those tumours by blocking pathways that cancer cells rely on but which in normal cells are not as important.

Discovering new synthetic lethal pairings

However, this approach, called 'synthetic lethality', has so far mainly been successful in patients with BRCA-mutated breast, ovarian, prostate and pancreatic cancers.

Now, a new research paper published in the journal Nature Genetics suggests that many more types of cancer may contain similar pairs of “synthetic-lethal partner genes”, where cancer cells can survive if one process is disrupted but not two.

A team at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, has developed an algorithm called SYLVER (SYnthetic Lethal Vulnerabilities Exhibiting Reciprocation) designed to review swathes of data from more than 9,300 patients in order to identify more pathways that cancer cells with specific gene mutations rely on.

Potential new drug targets 

The researchers, funded by Cancer Research UK (CRUK), Breast Cancer Now and Walk the Walk, noticed that although many cancers have mutations in specific genes that normally prevent cancer (called tumour-suppressor genes) they also have higher levels of a different set of genes which must be present for the cancer cells to survive.

The findings reveal that although some gene mutations cause cancer, they also make cancer cells 'addicted' to a whole set of new genes.

The study, carried out in the Breast Cancer Now Toby Robins Research Centre at the ICR, has revealed a list of proteins that could become potential targets for new drugs that would exploit the 'addictions' found in cancers.

Dr Syed Haider, Head of the Breast Cancer Data Science Team at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said:

“This research tells us how some cancer cells survive despite having faulty mutations in key genes. 

“We’ve learned that when cancers lose a particular tumour-suppressor gene, which usually work to protect our cells from becoming cancerous, they ramp up the activity of back-up processes controlled by other genes to stay alive. 

“This is an effect known as buffering. Buffering in cells has been known about for a long time, but our large-scale analysis of over 9,300 patients with different cancers shows that buffering occurs in most cancers and the genes that are increased for the cancer to survive are different, depending upon which tumour suppressor gene is lost. This could mean more potential new treatments for even more types of cancer.”

Professor Chris Lord, Professor of Cancer Genomics at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said:

“In the short-to medium-term, our findings suggest there might be more precise ways to design cancer drugs for specific cancers. Our immediate plans are to now use these approaches to do just that.

“In the longer term, we hope that using the tools we have developed, we will eventually be able to design drugs that are effective for very specific types of cancer that are difficult to treat. “

Dr Simon Vincent, director of research, support and influencing at Breast Cancer Now, said:

“By identifying the genetic alterations that cancer cells rely on to survive, the researchers have discovered hundreds of potential targets for developing new drugs.

“This approach will help researchers develop more ‘synthetic lethal’ treatments, like PARP inhibitors. Drugs like these will treat breast cancer and other cancers in a way that largely leaves a patient’s healthy cells unharmed.

“We look forward to seeing results from future research and further insights into how this breakthrough may lead to new targeted treatments for this devastating disease.”

Dr Hattie Brooks, research information manager at Cancer Research UK, said: 

“We are living in a golden age of research where we can use patient data in new ways to help us better understand cancer and how to beat it.

“We were pleased to fund this research and look forward to seeing how this work might contribute to the development of new cancer drugs, which may help more people live longer, better lives, free from the fear of cancer.”

The study was supported by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network and the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and the ICR.