Team

Matthias Kleinz, DVM, PhD

Dr. Kleinz is Senior Vice President and Head of Translational Sciences at UPMC Enterprises. Matthias joined UPMC Enterprises in July 2017 to help the ITTC invest and commercialize innovative translational science by defining the true potential of new life science technologies, exploring optimal business models and strategies, and helping to form companies with a clear path to success. Matthias sits on the board of other UPMC Enterprises portfolio companies Generian and Cerevance. He is also a member of the executive committee for the UPMC Genome Center. Prior to UPMC Enterprises, Matthias spent nine years in management consulting at L.E.K. Consulting in its life sciences practice in Boston and London leading teams on over 70 strategic assignments for clients in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. 

Dr. Kleinz completed his PhD in the Clinical Pharmacology Unit of the University of Cambridge (UK), working on early stage discovery of G-protein-coupled receptor targets for hypertension, heart disease, and metabolic syndrome and graduated from Justus Liebig University in Giessen (GER) with a doctorate in clinical veterinary medicine.

Robert L. Ferris, MD, PhD

Dr. Ferris is a co-Founder and scientific advisor for Novasenta.   He is Lineberger Distinguished Professor and Executive Director of the UNC Lineberger Cancer Center at the University of North Carolina.  Dr. Ferris currently serves on the Editorial Boards.   He serves on multiple scientific advisory boards for early phase biotech companies.

Dr. Ferris has published over 400 peer-reviewed manuscripts, which have been cited over 45,000 times producing an h-index over 100.   He served as co-chair of the NCI Steering Committee for 6 years to facilitate prospective cancer clinical trials.   Dr. Ferris has been lead investigator of several practice-changing, prospective randomized trials, including Checkmate-141 which led to the FDA approval of nivolumab immunotherapy for head and neck cancer in 2016; ECOG 3311, testing radiation dose-deintensification for HPV+ oropharynx cancer; and ECOG-ACRIN 3132, using disruptive p53 mutation for molecular staging of high-risk cancer.   The Ferris Lab has been continuously funded by the NCI since 2005, focused on neoadjuvant “window” trials of immune-oncology agents, and developing single-cell RNA sequencing and proteomic technologies for novel therapeutics and biomarkers of response in the tumor microenvironment, collaborating with many early phase biotech companies to develop new therapeutic agents.

Dario Vignali, PhD

Dr. Vignali, is a co-Founder of Novasenta. Dr. Vignali is also the Frank Dixon Chair in Cancer Immunology, a Distinguished Professor and Vice Chair of the Immunology Department at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.  He is also Associate Director for Scientific Strategy, co-leader of the Cancer Immunology and Immunotherapy Program and co-director of the Tumor Microenvironment Center in the UPMC Hillman Cancer Center.  His research focuses on molecular and cellular aspects of negative regulatory immune mechanisms including regulatory T cells, inhibitory receptors, and inhibitory cytokines.  His lab was instrumental in uncovering the role of LAG3 in mouse models of cancer, tolerance, autoimmunity and immune regulation.  His lab discovered the inhibitory cytokine IL35 and the NRP1:SEMA4A axis, which are key regulators of intratumoral Treg stability and function.  

His current research extensively uses systems immunology approaches to understand transcriptional regulation of effector T cell exhaustion and regulatory T cell function and fate in murine models of cancer and autoimmunity, and numerous human tumors.  He has been a Highly Cited Researcher (top 1% by citations; Clarivate Analytics) for the last five years (2016-2020) and has published over 200 papers with over 38 as senior or co-author in high impact journals (IF>10). He has a strong record of extramural funding, which currently includes an NIH P01, R35 and three R01 grants. He is Director of the Cancer Immunology Training Program (NCI T32), and has trained, or currently training, 50 postdoctoral research or clinical fellows and 14 graduate students, with several successfully obtaining extramural fellowships (14 total), emphasizing his commitment to train the next generation of immunologists.  

Dr. Vignali’s innovative, discovery-based research has led to 15 patent awards (11 in the US) and 11 pending patent applications worldwide, and he is a co-founding scientist of several companies including Potenza Therapeutics [sold to Astellas] and Tizona Therapeutics [sold to Gilead]).