Patents Assigned to T Cell Sciences, Inc.
  • Patent number: 5173499
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to compounds which suppress immune responses and/or selectively inhibit complement. These compounds contain an aromatic ring and are substituted dihydrobenzofurans, spirobenzofuran-2(3H)-cycloalkanes, and their open chain intermediates. The compounds of the present invention, and the pharmaceutically acceptable salts thereof, interrupt the proteolytic processing of C5 to bioactive components, exhibit immunosuppressive activities, and have therapeutic utility in the amelioration of disease and disorders mediated by complement and/or immune activity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 15, 1988
    Date of Patent: December 22, 1992
    Assignees: T Cell Sciences, Inc., The University of Mississippi
    Inventors: Robert D. Sindelar, Barton J. Bradbury, Teodoro Kaufman, Stephen H. Ip, Henry C. Marsh, Jr.
  • Patent number: 5024940
    Abstract: The present invention provides purified polypeptides which comprises at least a portion of a a .delta.T cell receptor polypeptide, a .gamma.T cell receptor polypeptide, a .gamma..delta.T cell receptor complex or a .gamma..delta.T cell receptor complex. Substances capable of forming complexes with these polypeptides are also provided.Additonally, methods for detecting T cells which have within them or on their surfaces a polypeptide of the present invention are provided. Moreover, methods for diagnosing immune system abnormalities are provided which comprise measuring in a sample from a subject the number of T cells which have within them or on their surfaces a polypeptide of the present invention.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 29, 1987
    Date of Patent: June 18, 1991
    Assignees: T Cell Sciences, Inc., Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, President & Fellows of Harvard College
    Inventors: Michael B. Brenner, Jack L. Strominger, Jonathan Seidman, Stephen H. Ip, Michael S. Krangel
  • Patent number: 5006459
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to the measurement of soluble T cell growth factor receptors, soluble T cell differentiation antigens, or related soluble molecules or fragments thereof, and the use of such measurements in the diagnosis and therapy of diseases and disorders. The measurement of such molecules can be valuable in monitoring the effect of a therapeutic treatment on a subject, detecting and/or staging a disease in a subject, and in differential diagnosis of a physiological condition in a subject. These measurements can also aid in predicting therapeutic outcome and in evaluating and monitoring the immune status of patients.In specific embodiments, measurements of serum or plasma interleukin-2 receptor levels can be made, to detect or stage leukemia or lymphoma. In other embodiments, IL2R levels, or CD8 levels, can be used to differentially diagnose renal allograft rejection, as distinguished from Cyclosporin A nephrotoxicity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 2, 1987
    Date of Patent: April 9, 1991
    Assignee: T Cell Sciences, Inc.
    Inventors: Patrick C. Kung, Stephen Ip, Michael Brown, Linda A. McKeen
  • Patent number: 4845026
    Abstract: Methods are provided for detecting and determining the amount in a sample of an antigenic determinant from an antigen receptor derived and released from a T cell or NK cell. Methods are also provided for detecting and determining the amount in a sample of an antigenic determinant from a complex of at least a portion of an antigen receptor derived from and released from a T cell or NK cell and a protein complex. These methods form the bases for methods of diagnosing and monitoring in a subject a disease characterized by the presence or an amount different from a normal subject of one of these antigenic determinants in a body fluid. A soluble antigen receptor or complex thereof derived from a T cell or a NK cell but free of such T cell or NK cell is also provided.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 3, 1985
    Date of Patent: July 4, 1989
    Assignee: T Cell Sciences, Inc.
    Inventors: Patrick C. Kung, Michael C. Brown, Stephen H. Ip