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"Search" is our twice-yearly newsletter to supporters.

In our latest edition of Spring Search issue, we look at the latest research news including how our scientists are developing improved breast cancer tools that will help identify women at high risk and our pioneering trial to test multiple treatments for brain cancer.

We also introduce Dr Ben O'Leary, who is leading the newly formed Evolution and Translational Genomics Group. With his team, he is primarily investigating how head and neck cancers evolve and develop resistance to treatment.

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Newsletter archive

Search issue 50 - Autumn 2024

In our 50th edition of the Autumn Search issue, we look at the latest research news featuring a new breast cancer drug approval in the UK, for treating the most common type of advanced breast cancer.

Download issue 50 (PDF)

Search issue 49 – Spring 2024

Look at how our researchers received a prestigious Queen's Anniversary Prize on behalf of the ICR, in recognition of our transformational breast cancer research programme.

Download issue 49 (PDF)

Search issue 48 – Autumn 2023

Find out how we're transforming treatment for people with cancers of unmet need, and meet our family charity partner Siobhan's Superstar Legacy, whose generous donation is supporting the work of our new Team Leader in Developmental Oncology, Dr Sally George.

Download issue 48 (PDF)

Search issue 47 – Spring 2023

Meet Dr Stephen-John Sammut, whose research uses AI to forecast how cancer is likely to respond to treatment, and find out more about capivasertib, a new promising drug born from the ICR’s cutting-edge science and pioneering programme of clinical trials.

Download issue 47 (PDF)

Search issue 46 – Autumn 2022

Meet the Director of our Centre for Evolution and Cancer, Professor Trevor Graham, whose research uses evolutionary principles and computational modelling to reveal how cancer develops.

Download issue 46 (PDF)

Search issue 45 – Spring 2022

Meet our new Team Leader, Dr Alex Radzisheuskaya, whose research focusses on how proteins help to package up DNA in cells – and the role that this can play in cancer.

Download issue 45 (PDF)

 

06/03/25 - by

Scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, are partnering with Revolver Therapeutics to accelerate the development of pioneering drugs for treating incurable childhood brain tumours.

Through this new strategic research collaboration, an ICR team led by Professor Chris Jones will test Revolver’s potential new cancer drugs using our cutting-edge laboratory models of childhood gliomas – tumours that develop from glial or neuronal precursor cells in the central nervous system.

The partnership is supported by funding from the Innovate UK Cancer Therapeutics programme.

Professor Jones is at the forefront of research into understanding the biology of childhood brain tumours, and translating these insights into effective new treatments. His group focuses on paediatric high-grade (HGG) and diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) – rare, highly aggressive tumours with poor outcomes.

Revolver, a spin-out biotech company from the University of Bath, is pioneering the development of peptide drugs using its proprietary platform technology. These first-in-class inhibitors target transcription factors, which are proteins that act as ‘master switches’ of gene activity and play a key role in cancer development.

The company was supported by the UK Innovation and Science Seed Fund (UKI2S) to kickstart its seed round of fundraising.

‘Undruggable’ targets

Many transcription factors have long been considered ‘undruggable’ using conventional approaches, such as small molecule cancer drugs or antibodies. However, tiny proteins – or peptides – offer a promising alternative, potentially unlocking a new route to effective cancer treatments.

Revolver’s novel peptide inhibitors can penetrate cells and block the activity of transcription factors, potentially overcoming the traditional hurdles faced by small molecules and antibodies.

Over the next two years, Professor Jones’s group will evaluate the effectiveness of Revolver’s inhibitors in their laboratory models of childhood gliomas. These peptides specifically target key transcription factors involved in driving the growth of these tumours.

Professor Chris Jones, Professor of Childhood Brain Tumour Biology at the ICR, said:

“Childhood gliomas have their origins in brain development, and many of the novel therapeutic targets we’ve discovered are transcription factors that should switch off before birth but remain active in these tumours. Until now, these targets have proven extremely challenging to drug with conventional methods.

It’s really exciting to have this opportunity to explore Revolver’s peptide inhibitors as a potential new way of targeting these crucial cancer-driving proteins.”

Dr Mark Treherne, Director of Revolver Therapeutics, said:

“This collaboration with world-class scientists at the ICR strengthens Revolver’s potential to make a meaningful impact on cancer treatment.

We hope this partnership will help bring these innovative cancer drugs a step closer to helping children with aggressive brain tumours who desperately need more effective treatment options.”