Archive for April, 2009
BioFocus DPI to apply TET Technology in high-throughput screening campaigns
Last Updated on Sunday, 26 April 2009 05:10 Written by Editor Sunday, 26 April 2009 05:10
Saffron Walden, UK and Heidelberg, Germany; 24 April 2009 – BioFocus DPI, a leading provider of gene-to-candidate discovery services, and TET Systems Holding, a privately-held, German-based biotech company, announced today that they have entered into an agreement to apply TET System’s inducible gene technology in high-throughput screening campaigns performed for BioFocus DPI customers.
BioFocus DPI will offer TET Technology as part of its drug discovery screening service. Through this technology, the activity of individual genes can be controlled quantitatively and reversibly in cellular assays. This approach is particularly powerful in cases where the target is not well tolerated in the cells, since the protein will not be expressed until required for screening.
“The TET Technology allows us to build on the proven compound screening service that we offer clients. This powerful approach will benefit discovery programs that are hindered by difficult to express targets. Using this technology, we will be able to perform more efficient, extensive compound screening on these problematic targets,†commented Dr. Kate Hilyard, VP Biological Sciences, BioFocus DPI.
“We are very pleased to sign this agreement with BioFocus DPI, one of the leading drug discovery service providers worldwide. TET Technology has been used successfully for many years by most of the major pharmaceutical companies. Through this new partnership with BioFocus DPI, a broader range of pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies will gain access to TET System’s gene expression technology,†stated Dr. Ernst Boehnlein, CEO of TET Systems Holding and IP Merchandisers.
AEterna Zentaris Presents Two Posters on its PI3K Inhibitor Compound, AEZS-126, at AACR Annual Meeting
Last Updated on Sunday, 26 April 2009 05:09 Written by Editor Sunday, 26 April 2009 05:09
In Vitro and In Vivo Data Show AEZS-126 as Promising Oral Compound for
Future Clinical Development in Cancer
QUEBEC CITY, April 21 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ – AEterna Zentaris Inc. (TSX: AEZ; NASDAQ: AEZS), a global biopharmaceutical company focused on endocrine therapy and oncology, today presented two posters on AEZS-126, a promising compound for clinical intervention of the PI3K/ Akt pathway in human tumors. The posters were presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado.
Poster #3705
Entitled, “AEZS-126, a new orally bioavailable PI3K inhibitor with antitumor effects”, I. Seipelt, S. Baasner, M. Gerlach, M. Teifel, J. Fensterle, L. Blumenstein, G. Mueller and E. Guenther, the poster focuses on ADMET and safety profiling of the compound, as well as in vivo pharmacokinetic experiments and mouse xenograft antitumor studies.
Results
AEZS-126 was identified as a potent inhibitor of class I PI3Ks in biochemical and cellular assays and demonstrated favorable properties in early in vitro ADMET screening including microsomal stability, plasma stability and screening against a large safety profile composed of receptors, enzymes and cardiac ion-channels. During the course of in vivo pharmacokinetic experiments and mouse xenograft antitumor studies, the oral bioavailability in mice was determined to be about 60%, leading to micromolar plasma levels which are well above the nanomolar IC50 values in in vitro studies. Significant antitumor activity was observed at 30mg/kg daily oral administration in Hct116 and A549 models.
Conclusion
These data suggest that AEZS-126 is a promising compound for clinical intervention of the PI3K/Akt pathway in human tumors.
Poster #3706
Entitled, “In vitro profiling of the potent and selective PI3K inhibitor, AEZS-126″, I. Seipelt, M. Gerlach, L. Blumenstein, G. Mueller, M.Teifel, E. Polymeropoulos and E. Guenther, the poster outlines the key in vitro characteristics of this compound that led to its selection for in vivo development.
Results
AEterna Zentaris has identified a new generation of low molecular weight pyridopyrazine compounds as highly potent and selective inhibitors of class I PI3Ks. Presented here, are the key in vitro characteristics of AEZS-126 that led to its selection for in vivo development. AEZS-126 inhibits PI3Ka with an IC50 value of 10nM and proved to be a potent inhibitor of Akt phosphorylation in cellular assays. Mode-of-action studies showed that AEZS-126 acts as an ATP competitive compound. The in vitro antiproliferative activity against different human tumor cell lines (MDA-MB 468, U87, Hct116, PC-3, A549 and others) was determined, with EC50 values in the nanomolar range.
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Discovery of dual function acridones as a new antimalarial chemotype
Last Updated on Sunday, 26 April 2009 05:05 Written by Editor Sunday, 26 April 2009 05:05
Preventing and delaying the emergence of drug resistance is an essential goal of antimalarial drug development. Monotherapy and highly mutable drug targets have each facilitated resistance, and both are undesirable in effective long-term strategies against multi-drug-resistant malaria. Haem remains an immutable and vulnerable target, because it is not parasite-encoded and its detoxification during haemoglobin degradation, critical to parasite survival, can be subverted by drug–haem interaction as in the case of quinolines and many other drugs1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Here we describe a new antimalarial chemotype that combines the haem-targeting character of acridones, together with a chemosensitizing component that counteracts resistance to quinoline antimalarial drugs. Beyond the essential intrinsic characteristics common to deserving candidate antimalarials (high potency in vitro against pan-sensitive and multi-drug-resistant Plasmodium falciparum, efficacy and safety in vivo after oral administration, inexpensive synthesis and favourable physicochemical properties), our initial lead, T3.5 (3-chloro-6-(2-diethylamino-ethoxy)-10-(2-diethylamino-ethyl)-acridone), demonstrates unique synergistic properties. In addition to ‘verapamil-like’ chemosensitization to chloroquine and amodiaquine against quinoline-resistant parasites, T3.5 also results in an apparently mechanistically distinct synergism with quinine and with piperaquine. This synergy, evident in both quinoline-sensitive and quinoline-resistant parasites, has been demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo. In summary, this innovative acridone design merges intrinsic potency and resistance-counteracting functions in one molecule, and represents a new strategy to expand, enhance and sustain effective antimalarial drug combinations.
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Ligand and GlaxoSmithKline Collaboration Identifies New Lead Compound
Last Updated on Monday, 13 April 2009 10:29 Written by Editor Monday, 13 April 2009 10:29
SAN DIEGO, Mar 30, 2009 (BUSINESS WIRE) —-Ligand Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (NASDAQ: LGND: 2.98, -0.14, -4.49%) today
announced that it has identified a new lead for advancement in its
alliance with GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE:GSK). This newly identified lead
compound is from a program being evaluated as a potential treatment for
inflammatory indications identified through the collaboration. As a
result of this achievement, Ligand has earned a $500,000 milestone
payment from GSK.
Including this milestone, Ligand has received a total of $18.5 million
from GSK in connection with the alliance. Ligand is entitled to receive
success-based milestone payments from GSK, starting in the preclinical
research stage, for each drug development program and potentially up to
double-digit royalties on the sales of any product commercialized by GSK
under the multi-program alliance. The drug screening alliance with GSK
began in March 2006 with the goal of identifying and advancing novel
candidates in broad therapeutic areas.
“We are very pleased to see the continued progress with GSK under this
broad and productive discovery alliance,” said John L. Higgins,
President and Chief Executive Officer of Ligand Pharmaceuticals. “GSK
has been an excellent collaborator with Ligand through the years,
working initially on the discovery of PROMACTA(R: 24.08, -1.36, -5.35%), which was recently
approved, and now on multiple novel early-stage targets. These milestone
payments provide cash to fuel our business and represent the value and
caliber of the drug screening and research we provide our partners.”
Ligand and GlaxoSmithKline Collaboration Identifies New Lead Compound
Last Updated on Monday, 13 April 2009 10:29 Written by Editor Monday, 13 April 2009 10:29
SAN DIEGO, Mar 30, 2009 (BUSINESS WIRE) —-Ligand Pharmaceuticals Incorporated (NASDAQ: LGND: 2.98, -0.14, -4.49%) today announced that it has identified a new lead for advancement in its alliance with GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE:GSK). This newly identified lead compound is from a program being evaluated as a potential treatment for inflammatory indications identified through the collaboration. As a result of this achievement, Ligand has earned a $500,000 milestone payment from GSK.
Including this milestone, Ligand has received a total of $18.5 million from GSK in connection with the alliance. Ligand is entitled to receive success-based milestone payments from GSK, starting in the preclinical research stage, for each drug development program and potentially up to double-digit royalties on the sales of any product commercialized by GSK under the multi-program alliance. The drug screening alliance with GSK began in March 2006 with the goal of identifying and advancing novel candidates in broad therapeutic areas.
“We are very pleased to see the continued progress with GSK under this broad and productive discovery alliance,” said John L. Higgins, President and Chief Executive Officer of Ligand Pharmaceuticals. “GSK has been an excellent collaborator with Ligand through the years, working initially on the discovery of PROMACTA(R: 24.08, -1.36, -5.35%), which was recently approved, and now on multiple novel early-stage targets. These milestone payments provide cash to fuel our business and represent the value and caliber of the drug screening and research we provide our partners.”
New Model For Drug Discovery With Fluorescent Anesthetic Demonstrated
Last Updated on Monday, 13 April 2009 10:28 Written by Editor Monday, 13 April 2009 10:28
ScienceDaily (Apr. 8, 2009) — A collaboration of University of Pennsylvania and University of Wisconsin chemists and anesthesiologists have identified a fluorescent anesthetic compound that will assist researchers in obtaining more precise information about how anesthetics work in the body and will provide a means to more rapidly test new anesthetic compounds in the search for safer and more effective drugs.
The study is published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Using the fluorescing compound 1-aminoanthracene, or 1-AMA, the team developed a high-throughput assay to test for new anesthetic compounds. The assay will allow researchers to search for new anesthetic drugs and new molecular targets for anesthetics while at the same time creating high-resolution images of the compounds in action, a missing component that has hindered anesthetic research.
Researchers confirmed the compound as anesthetic after testing it successfully in tadpoles. By using transparent, albino tadpoles in the study, researchers were able to follow the fluorophore tag and image it in the brain of the immobilized, living animal.
Because the compound is fluorescent, researchers are able to image the compound in vivo in order to study its physiological effects. Where and how an anesthetic compound travels in an organism when administered and to what cells and concentrations are unknown in anesthetic administration and a key to improving efficacy and to reducing side effects. Because anesthetics bind weakly to their chemical targets, which may play a role in some of the unintended side effects, searching for new targets in the central nervous system is difficult.
“We don’t know much about how anesthetics work at a molecular level,†said Roderic G. Eckenhoff, vice chair for research and the Austin Lamont Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care at Penn’s School of Medicine. “Thus, the development of new anesthetics has become a stagnant field. This new tool will allow for the high-throughput screening of novel drugs.â€
Researchers from the School of Medicine and School of Arts and Sciences at Penn initiated the study in response to the health-care industry’s need for new and more powerful tools to discover and test new anesthetics and to learn more about how they work. The authors identified 1-AMA in a screen for compounds that bind to a cavity in horse spleen apoferritin, HSAF, that Eckenhoff and co-workers have shown to bind clinical anesthetics.
Researchers noticed a resemblance in the crystal structure of the apoferritin protein to that of the transmembrane region of the superfamily of ligand-gated channels that includes the GABA receptor. Anesthetics are known to positively modulate GABA signaling.
Because 1-AMA competes with other anesthetics to bind to apoferritin, researchers surmised that the protein likely binds to the same region of apoferritin as traditional anesthetics and thus shares their mechanism of action. Fluorescence of 1-AMA is enhanced when bound to apoferritin. Thus, displacement of 1-AMA by other anesthetics attenuates the fluorescence signal and allows determination of anesthetic affinity, that is, the drugs that bind tightly to the ferritin anesthetic site. In this way, 1-AMA fluorescence could be used to discover new anesthetics. This provides a unique fluorescence assay for compound screening and anesthetic discovery.
Using confocal microscopy to image the distribution of the protein, the team found that 1-AMA localizes largely in the brain and olfactory regions, unlike some general anesthetics which spread widely throughout the body. Ideally, clinical anesthetics would have a very focused target area in order to minimize systemic toxicity.
The Penn team will now collaborate with the National Chemical Genomics Center in Rockville, Md., to screen rapidly for novel anesthetic compounds, allowing for the screening of hundreds of thousands of new compounds per week.
“The 1-AMA compound opens up new avenues for identifying the relevant biomolecular targets of general anesthetics,†Ivan J. Dmochowski, assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry at Penn, said. “1-AMA appears to be specific in its binding to proteins and also in its in vivo localization, which should give us the opportunity to determine its mechanism of action,†he said. “We hope to be able to extend our findings to learn how current general anesthetics, such as propofol, work in human patients. There are many different and challenging aspects of trying to learn how anesthetics work that involve medicinal chemistry, biochemistry, molecular modeling, imaging, cell electrophysiology, pharmacology, neurobiology and animal physiology.â€
According to the study, 1-AMA increases the transmission potential of the body’s main neurotransmitter inhibitor, GABA. The compound also gives an appropriate dissociation constant, Kd 0.1 mM, for binding to the general anesthetic site in horse spleen apoferritin, meaning the compound is behaving as traditional general anesthetics would in humans.
In use for more than 150 years, general anesthetics are one of medicine’s greatest advances and yet there is still much to be learned about them. For many of the most commonly used anesthetic compounds, the molecular mechanisms behind their numbing effects and the way these compounds travel the pathways of the body remain poorly understood or altogether unknown.
According to the study team, anesthetics can bring on potentially harmful, even deadly, side effects for patients including rapid drops in blood pressure and heart rate, nausea and potentially irreversible cognitive problems, especially in older patients.
The study was funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Center for Research Resources, a Henry and Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, the National Institutes of Health and a University of Pennsylvania Institute for Medicine and Engineering Seed Grant.
The study was performed by Dmochowski and Christopher A. Butts of the Department of Chemistry at Penn, Eckenhoff and Jin Xib of the Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care at Penn, Grace Brannigan and Michael L. Klein of Penn’s Center for Molecular Modeling and Abdalla A. Saad, Srinivasan P. Venkatachalan and Robert A. Pearce of the departments of Anesthesiology, Anatomy and Physiology at the University of Wisconsin.
New Drug Shows Promise In Treating Drug-resistant Prostate Cancer
Last Updated on Monday, 13 April 2009 10:26 Written by Editor Monday, 13 April 2009 10:26
ScienceDaily (Apr. 11, 2009) — A new therapy for metastatic prostate cancer has shown considerable promise in early clinical trials involving patients whose disease has become resistant to current drugs.
Chemists and biologists at UCLA and colleagues at several other institutions, including Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, have created a new drug to treat a particularly lethal form of the disease, known as castration-resistant prostate cancer, or CRPC. Also referred to as hormone-refractory prostate cancer, CRPC is resistant to further treatment by anti-hormone drugs such as Casodex and Eulexin.
In an article published April 9 in the advanced online edition of the journal Science, the scientists describe the development and testing of two novel compounds, MDV3100 and RD162, which block the androgen receptor (AR) in CRPC cells, and report results from clinical trials in which MDV3100 was found to lower prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels — a marker for tumor growth — in men with CRPC.
The new, small organic molecule MDV3100 was “designed as a very strong antagonist of the androgen receptor to stop the growth of any prostate cancer that requires the AR for propagation, which includes most forms of prostate cancer,” said Michael Jung, UCLA professor of chemistry and biochemistry and a researcher at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, whose research group synthesized both MDV3100 and RD162.
The biology research was carried out in the UCLA departments of medicine, urology and pharmacology by Charles Sawyers and his research group; Sawyers has since moved to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, where he serves as chair of the human oncology and pathogenesis program. The UCLA patents for both compounds were licensed by the pharmaceutical company Medivation Inc., which chose to test MDV3100 in clinical trials.
The drug has successfully completed Phase 1 and Phase 2 clinical trials, and the Food and Drug Administration has agreed to allow Medivation to begin what Jung described as “the pivotal Phase 3 clinical trials.”
The results of clinical studies with MDV3100 were described at the 2009 ASCO Genitourinary Cancer Symposium in February by the trials’ principal investigator, Dr. Howard Scher of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. In general, the drug, at 240 mg once a day, was very effective at lowering PSA levels and also in reducing the number of circulating tumor cells, without any significant toxicity.
“I think it is quite likely that the exciting results seen in the smaller population will also be evident in the larger Phase 3 trial and that the drug could be approved for use in the next few years,” said Jung, who is also a member of the California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI) at UCLA.
Of 30 men with anti-androgen–resistant prostate cancer who received low doses of MDV3100 in the multisite Phase 1/2 trial designed to evaluate safety, 22 showed a sustained decline in PSA levels, an indication that their cancer was responding favorably to the drug. This trial is still underway, and results from a total of 140 patients receiving higher doses of the drug will be reported within the next year, Sawyer said.
The Phase 3 clinical trial will evaluate the drug’s effect on survival in a large group of patients with metastatic prostate cancer.
MDV3100 and RD162 are second-generation anti-androgen therapies that prevent male hormones from stimulating the growth of prostate cancer cells. These new compounds appear to work well even in prostate cells that have a heightened sensitivity to hormones; that heightened sensitivity makes prostate cancer cells resistant to existing anti-androgen therapies.
Approximately 186,000 new cases of prostate cancer are diagnosed each year in the United States. The male hormones testosterone and dihydrotestosterone, which are also known as androgens, spur the growth of prostate cells, and drugs that block the receptors for these hormones are the most common treatment for the disease in its advanced, metastatic stage. Anti-androgen drugs, such as bicalutamide (Casodex), suppress the growth of cancer cells temporarily, but in most patients, the cancer ultimately develops resistance to drugs. Approximately 29,000 men in the United States die each year from the disease.
Prostate cancer becomes resistant to anti-androgen drugs when cancer cells begin to increase production of the androgen receptor, Sawyers said. When the level of androgen receptors on the cells’ surface reaches a certain level, the drugs that originally suppressed the cancer actually begin to stimulate cancer growth.
Because of this backlash effect, many scientists have questioned whether blocking the androgen receptor is a wise course of action. Sawyers and his colleagues, however, believe that blocking the receptor is critical to successful treatment. They set out to design a new generation of drugs that can block the androgen receptor without unwanted side effects, even when levels of the receptor are high.
Researchers in Jung’s and Sawyers’ laboratories based their designs on a drug that tightly attaches to the site on the androgen receptor that binds with testosterone. If that site is blocked, the hormone cannot bind to prostate cells and tell the receptor to stimulate growth. Using this initial drug as a chemical scaffold, the researchers synthesized nearly 200 slightly different versions of the drug. They tested each one in the laboratory on prostate cancer cells that had been engineered to produce high levels of androgen receptor.
This screening yielded MDV3100 and RD162, molecules which tightly bind to the androgen receptor and do not show the cancer-stimulating effect of bicalutamide and other current anti-androgen drugs. The molecules were good candidates for drugs, because they are readily absorbed into the blood when taken orally and they persist in the bloodstream. The researchers tested the new drugs’ effectiveness in mice with tumors derived from drug-resistant prostate cancer cells.
“To our delight, we found that these compounds caused very dramatic shrinkage of tumors in the mice,” Sawyers said. “While treating these animals with bicalutamide produced a modest effect on their tumors, the new drugs caused the tumors to shrink dramatically, and in some animals almost completely.”
Sawyers said the new drugs bind tightly enough to the natural hormone-binding site on androgen receptors to prevent most of them from functioning, even in cells with many androgen receptors.
The promising laboratory studies led Medivation to license the drugs for commercial development.
Medivation has received permission from the FDA for a large Phase 3 clinical trial of MDV3100 on about 1,200 patients with anti-androgen-resistant disease. This study will assess MDV3100′s effect on cancer survival and will take several years.
While the preliminary results are promising, Sawyers said his laboratory will continue to seek further improvements in drug therapy for prostate cancer.
“There were some men in the initial trial in which the drug didn’t work at all, and we want to find out why,” he said. “It may be because the drug is not potent enough to overcome resistance due to androgen receptor over-expression. Or it may be that the cancers in these men are not driven by the androgen receptor anymore. Also, there were men who initially received benefit from the drug but then relapsed, and their PSA levels came back up. We want to understand the mechanism of that relapse and to try to develop drugs that prevent that renewed resistance.”
For years, no treatment was available for CRPC; recently paclitaxel — a strongly cytotoxic drug — was approved.
In addition to Sawyers’ and Jung’s teams, researchers from the Oregon Health and Science University, the University of Washington and Medivation contributed to the research.
This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, the Prostate Cancer Foundation and Medivation and was conducted through the Prostate Cancer Clinical Trials Consortium.
Institute of Microbiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and TB Alliance Announce Partnership to Develop New Tuberculosis Drugs from Natural Sources
Last Updated on Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:44 Written by Editor Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:44
BEIJING & NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The Institute of Microbiology (IMCAS), a member institute of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development (TB Alliance), a not-for-profit product development partnership accelerating the discovery and development of new TB drugs, today announced a partnership to discover and develop promising, novel anti-tuberculosis agents from natural sources, including microbial metabolites and traditional Chinese medicines.
A pilot screen conducted by IMCAS identified 24 natural product extracts as having potential anti-tubercular activity. IMCAS and the TB Alliance will collaborate to further test these extracts, purify and identify the active components, and develop those that prove most promising. Additionally, IMCAS and the TB Alliance will work together to investigate traditional Chinese herbal medicines and purified compounds for biological activity against the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) organism. Scientists in China have made significant contributions in developing new drugs from natural sources, as exemplified by the identification of Artemisinin, one of the most effective anti-malarial drugs, first isolated from a traditional Chinese medicinal plant. The deficiency in natural product screening directly against M.tb combined with China’s strong track record of successfully developing new drugs from traditional Chinese medicines, suggests such screenings are likely to yield novel active compounds.
Previously, a group of scientists including Professors Lixin Zhang, Deborah Hung and Eric Rubin of IMCAS, Broad Institute and Harvard University, respectively, worked together to investigate underlying mechanisms of M.tb, the bacterium that causes TB, with the intent to develop new TB drugs from natural sources to treat both drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB. Modern technologies including high-throughput chemical screening, total genome sequencing, and the construction of systematic, comprehensive arrayed bacterial libraries were utilized in this process.
“This partnership reflects China’s increasing commitment to address the deadly TB epidemic, which has had such a devastating effect on so much of the world for so many years,†said Dr. Mel Spigelman, President and CEO, TB Alliance. “Bringing the best science in China together with the expertise of the TB Alliance is an example of the pooling of global resources necessary to save the millions of lives needlessly lost to TB every year.â€
Novel drugs are needed to work against drug-resistant TB, the more deadly and difficult-to-treat form of TB that is on the rise across the globe, including Asia. Drug resistance oftentimes emerges as a result of patients not completing the burdensome regimen currently used to treat drug-susceptible TB. The last class of new TB drugs was developed and approved in the 1960s. While the current treatment regimen for drug-susceptible TB is effective when administered properly, it must be administered over six to nine months. Treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) usually takes a minimum of 18 months and only cures approximately half of those infected. New, faster-acting TB treatments can improve treatment of both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB, enhance compliance, lower relapse rates, reduce the growth of drug resistant TB, reduce health care costs and save millions of lives. The partnership between IMCAS and the TB Alliance is a fitting precursor to the three-day ministerial meeting of high MDR-/XDR-TB burden countries beginning tomorrow in Beijing.
“The fight against tuberculosis is a global endeavor. This partnership represents joint efforts by IMCAS and the TB Alliance in the development of new TB drugs from natural resources,†said Prof. Li Huang, Executive Deputy Director-General of the IMCAS. “Natural products have long been an important source of drugs for human medicine. The rich functionality and stereochemistry of natural products is without doubt one of their great strengths, providing both potency and selectivity. Taking advantage of its expertise in the exploitation of microbial resources, IMCAS has recently set up the Drug Discovery Center for Tuberculosis. The aim of the Center, led by Prof. Lixin Zhang, is to develop and deliver novel TB drugs that work quickly and can help prevent the problems of today’s drugs relating to compliance, drug resistance and TB-HIV co-infection.â€
The TB Alliance is leading the development of the most comprehensive portfolio of TB drugs in history, and is accelerating discovery, preclinical and clinical research of known and novel classes of antibiotics to shorten and simplify the treatment of tuberculosis, including MDR- and XDR-TB. The TB Alliance is committed to making all drugs developed by its research partnerships affordable and available to all who need them.
DiscoveryBioMed, Inc. Engaged in Multiple Drug Discovery Projects on Behalf of Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Its Office of Technology and Business Development
Last Updated on Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:43 Written by Editor Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:43
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. & NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–DiscoveryBioMed, Inc. (DBM) and Mount Sinai School of Medicine (MSSM) have agreed to move forward on multiple “fee for service†contracts in human cell optimization, assay optimization and pilot drug discovery bioassays on behalf of the Mount Sinai Office of Technology and Business Development (OTBD) and MSSM investigators.
“DiscoveryBioMed is very pleased that MSSM has chosen our company and its novel approaches to the drug discovery process to begin work on these initial projects,†said DBM’s CEO Dr. Erik Schwiebert. “We seek to provide access to drug discovery infrastructure at a reasonable cost to academic clients. We also see our academic clients as partners in the process.â€
Experiments have already commenced on assay optimization and pilot drug screening will begin shortly. DiscoveryBioMed has developed several commercial-academic partnerships over its first 15 months of formal operation. DBM’s particular expertise is the development and/or engineering of human cell cultures and lines from normal or diseased tissue that serve as relevant platforms on which to accelerate this drug discovery process. It is the early formative steps of a drug discovery program that are critical, even before the first small molecule is screened.
“As part of this joint effort, DBM is using a particular human cell model that is especially relevant to one of these projects and is building assays around other relevant human cell lines that will serve as the drug discovery platforms,†explained Dr. Eric Seales, DBM’s Chief Laboratory Officer. CEO Dr. Erik Schwiebert explains DBM’s novel core principle in a simple way: “One is going to eventually treat a human with the best discovered lead compounds going forward so why not screen on a human cell background.â€
â€We are pleased to have a partner in DBM who provides us with drug discovery services consistent with our academic needs and capabilities,†said Patrick McGrath, Executive Director of MSSM’s OTBD. “We have been expanding our resources and capabilities in the area of technology development in order to further typical academic early stage technologies to a point that they are more attractive to partners who can translate the technology into products and service that can benefit the public. We anticipate that our partnership with DBM will help us meet this goal by identifying lead compounds against new disease relevant pathways some of which will hopefully lead to new therapeutics. In the absence of these technology development resources academic technologies often are not further developed in a commercial direction and as a result potentially useful products and services go unexplored.â€
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AsisChem and Apredica Announce Strategic Alliance to Combine Complementary Drug Discovery Support Services
Last Updated on Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:39 Written by Editor Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:39
Watertown, Mass. (PRWEB) March 30, 2009 — AsisChem, Inc., a custom chemical synthesis and medicinal chemistry services provider, and Apredica, an ADME-Tox contract research laboratory, today announced a strategic alliance to provide drug-discovery support services to biotech, pharmaceutical, and non-profit research organizations around the world. The alliance provides Apredica and AsisChem’s clients immediate and convenient access to both companies’ core services: Apredica’s ADME-Tox services and AsisChem’s powerful, cost-effective small-molecule synthesis and analog library development.
“Our firms excel in our respective areas of expertise” said Grigoriy Rublev, AsisChem’s Chief Executive Officer. “The joint effort establishes an expanded menu of coordinated, complementary, high-value services that drug discovery teams can engage to accelerate drug development, improve cost efficiency, and increase program success rates,” he added.
“The combination of Apredica’s ADME-Tox services and AsisChem’s synthesis and medicinal chemistry capabilities means that now our customers can increase their cycle speeds,” said Katya Tsaioun, Ph.D., President of Apredica. “Direct communication of our ADME-Tox data back to AsisChem’s chemists means that discovery teams can develop their best lead compounds faster and submit their IND applications sooner.”
Chemical Synthesis in Drug Discovery
Organizations that advance their discovery programs beyond the identification of viable screening hits require synthesis and testing of up to hundreds of analogs during the hit-to-lead and lead-optimization stages to identify a viable clinical development candidate. Success often depends on testing a sufficiently large array of carefully selected analogs in an iterative process that is usually constrained by cycle times and budgets. AsisChem relies on its experienced pool of Ph.D.-level chemists and a low-cost infrastructure to deliver high-quality synthetic analogs with lower budgets and shorter timelines than its leading competitors can achieve. “We were able to synthesize more compounds than we expected based on offers from other custom synthesis companies” said Dr. Carlos E. Pedraza, a postdoctoral fellow at the Cleveland Clinic. “This gave us the opportunity to successfully explore more research avenues than we originally thought possible.”
ADME-Tox Profiling in Drug Discovery
Drug discovery and development programs see many drug candidates fail in clinical-trial stages. Many of these failures could have been avoided through the application of early ADME testing and toxicity profiling, which can quickly identify drug candidates with characteristics that would preclude regulatory approval. Early identification of these sure-to-fail candidates saves not only millions of dollars, but also months or years of research time that could have gone towards producing a successful drug candidate. Apredica works closely with clients to provide the data needed to reduce the risk of expensive, later stage failure, to increase the likelihood of drug development program success, and to accelerate the program towards IND. “More than any other CRO I have worked with, Apredica acts as a true collaborative partner and not simply a for-hire service provider. I have on many, many occasions benefited from Apredica’s guidance, help and advice, something I have generally not seen in other CROs” said Dr. Donald Kirsch, Vice President of Drug Discovery at Cambria Pharmaceuticals.
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GTCbio Announces its 4th Annual Assay Development and Screening Technologies Conference taking place
Last Updated on Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:38 Written by Editor Wednesday, 1 April 2009 12:38
The goal of the 4th annual Assay and Screening Technologies Conference is to provide a forum for academics and professionals in the drug discovery industry to stay abreast of exciting new developments in assay technologies while exchanging ideas and developing more efficient approaches to the drug discovery and development process.
[USPRwire, Thu Mar 26 2009] GTCbio Announces its 4th Annual Assay Development and Screening Conference taking place June 8-9, 2009. As compounds derived from high throughput screening increasingly find their way into clinical trials, drug screening has become widely accepted as a critical step in the drug discovery process. After more than a decade of rapid growth, tremendous progress has been made in assay technology, laboratory automation, and informatics. These technological developments have not only facilitated a drastic increase in throughput and efficiency in drug screening, but have also provided novel solutions in other areas of drug discovery and development. As screening has also become prominent in biological research, screening facilities have become increasingly popular in academic institutions.
As the pharmaceutical industry continues to face the challenges of developing more new chemical entities and reducing the cost of R&D, the demand for novel technologies and creative approaches for improving the efficiency of screening has intensified. Cell-based assays used in compound screening and high-content screening technologies have gained popularity in the industry. Years of intensive research have finally resulted in label-free technologies in the drug screening market place. These technologies provide new ways of interrogating cellular and molecular binding events and enable orthogonal screening approaches to drug targets.
The goal of the 4th annual Assay and Screening Technologies Conference is to provide a forum for academics and professionals in the drug discovery industry to stay abreast of exciting new developments in assay technologies while exchanging ideas and developing more efficient approaches to the drug discovery and development process.
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