SBIR-STTR Award

Establishing A Neuroprotection Model In The Nonhuman Primate To Support Translati
Award last edited on: 9/9/14

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NEI
Total Award Amount
$203,038
Award Phase
1
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Matthew Swan Lawrence

Company Information

Virscio Inc (AKA: RxGen Inc)

4 Science Park 4th Floor
New Haven, CT 06511
   (203) 498-9706
   cstanley@rx-gen.com
   www.virscio.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 03
County: New Haven

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43EY023867-01
Start Date: 9/30/13    Completed: 8/31/14
Phase I year
2013
Phase I Amount
$203,038
Optic nerve and retinal diseases profoundly impact quality of life and overall health care burden. Demetrios Vavvas and colleagues at the Mass Eye and Ear Infirmary (MEEI) have revealed a critical redundant role of mediators of both apoptosis and necrosis in cell death in the neuroretina and optic nerve in multiple ophthalmic disease models, supporting their importance as possible drug targets. Most notably, blockade of RIP kinase 1, a regulator of necrosis, pharmacologically or by gene knockout, acts synergistically with the arrest of apoptosis by pan-caspase inhibition to achieve remarkable preservation of neuronal viability and function. Specifically, when treated with pan-caspase inhibitors, Rip3-/- mice, lacking activated RIP kinase 1, are highly resistant to photoreceptor cell loss in the setting of models of retinal detachment, retinitis pigmentosa and age related macular degeneration (AMD), and retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) loss in disease models specifically impacting inner retinal and optic nerve function. This synergistic protective effect has additionally been demonstrated in wild type mice co-dosed with RIP kinase 1 and pan-caspase inhibitors. Despite the promise of applying this newly defined dual pathway inhibition to prevalent conditions such as AMD and glaucoma, the challenges of sustained therapeutic delivery to the back of the eye, and the design of clinical trials for slowly progressing neurodegenerative diseases favors pursuit of early clinical applications to conditions with rapid onset secondary to acute, minimally progressing pathology with anticipated short treatment periods, and clear efficacy endpoints and subject recruitment criteria. One such condition is non-arteritic ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION), the most common cause of acute optic nerve related vision loss, for which there are limited therapeutic options. After an initial focal ischemia associated with reduced perfusion of the microvasculature of the optic disc, often in the setting of an anatomically susceptible disc and/or systemic hypotension, a cascade of events contributes to axonal injury and RCG endangerment, culminating in caspace-associated apoptosis. There is additional abundant corollary evidence to suggest a critical roll of RIP kinase as an ultimate contributor to RGC fate via the necrotic pathway. Vavvas et al. have demonstrated rescue of RGCs in rodents by the synergistic RIP kinase 1/pan-caspase inhibition in the setting of traumatic optic neuropathy and NMDA-associated excitotoxicity. They have further established a laser photoembolic model of NAION in the rodent, employing mesoporphyrin as a fluorophore to achieve focal microvessel disruption at the disc by targeted laser photoexcitation. In this proposal, we will characterize the mesopophyrin model in the nonhuman primate and apply robustly defined clinically relevant endpoints to evaluate the efficacy of intravitreal (IVT) co-injection of the inhibitor Nec-1 and IDN-6556, both of which have been demonstrated to be potent inhibitors of RIP kinase 1 and caspases, respectively, and to be well tolerated and bioavailable following IVT injection, with combined clinical application encompassed by MEEI intellectual property that we are partnering to advance. !

Public Health Relevance Statement:


Public Health Relevance:
Two different molecular pathways contribute to cell death - apoptosis, critically mediated by caspases, and necrosis, which more recently has been demonstrated to be critically mediated by RIP kinases. Members of our team have demonstrated that combined inhibition of caspases and RIP kinase 1 achieves dramatic neuroprotection in multiple ophthalmic disease models in rodents. We will establish a neuroprotection model in the nonhuman primate that closely mimics non-arteritic ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION; the most common cause of acute vision loss related to the optic nerve), and will apply this model to translational studies to develop a combined drug product for NAION, for which there are limited existing therapeutic options.

NIH Spending Category:
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision; Neurodegenerative; Neuropathy; Neurosciences; Orphan Drug; Rare Diseases

Project Terms:
Acute; Age related macular degeneration; Anatomy; Animal Model; Animals; Anterior; Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy; Apoptosis; Apoptotic; Aqueous Humor; Axon; Back; Bioavailable; Biological Preservation; Blindness; Blood Vessels; care burden; caspase; Caspase Inhibitor; Caspase-1; Cell Death; Cercopithecus pygerythrus; Cessation of life; Clinical; clinical application; Clinical Trials Design; clinically relevant; Data; Disease model; Dose; Drug Formulations; Drug Kinetics; Drug Targeting; Ear structure; efficacy evaluation; Electron Microscopy; Evaluation; Event; excitotoxicity; Exhibits; Eye; feeding; Flare; fluorophore; Foundations; Functional disorder; Ganglion Cell Layer; Glaucoma; Goals; Healthcare; Hemorrhage; Human; Hypotension; Image; Immune response; In Situ Nick-End Labeling; inhibitor/antagonist; Injection of therapeutic agent; Injury; Intellectual Property; Intervention; intravitreal injection; Ischemia; Ischemic Optic Neuropathy; knockout gene; Knockout Mice; Lasers; Life; macrophage; macula; Mediating; Mediator of activation protein; member; Mesoporphyrins; Modeling; Molecular; Mus; N-Methylaspartate; Necrosis; Nerve Fibers; Neurodegenerative Disorders; neuron loss; Neurons; neuroprotection; nonhuman primate; Optic Disk; Optic Nerve; Optic Nerve Injuries; Pathology; Pathway interactions; Patients; Perfusion; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Phase; phase 2 study; phase 3 study; Phosphotransferases; Photometry; Photoreceptors; Physiological; Physiology; pre-clinical; preclinical study; prevent; Primates; protective effect; public health relevance; Quality of life; Rattus; Research; Research Personnel; residence; Resistance; Retinal; Retinal Detachment; Retinal Diseases; Retinal Ganglion Cells; Retinitis Pigmentosa; Rodent; Rodent Model; Role; safety study; Secondary to; Shapes; Singlet Oxygen; Swelling; Therapeutic; Time; tonometry; Translating; translational study; Translations; treatment duration; Vision; Visual Acuity; Visual Fields; Wild Type Mouse

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
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Phase II Amount
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