SBIR-STTR Award

Administrative Supplement: Functional Assessment of Variants in Organisms of Research (FAVOR) - Profiling Canonical Human Genes and Their Variants Through Disease Model Phenotyping.
Award last edited on: 2/12/2021

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NHGRI
Total Award Amount
$474,932
Award Phase
1
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Kathryn E Mccormick

Company Information

NemaMetrix LLC (AKA: NemaMetrix Inc)

44 West 7th Avenue
Eugene, OR 97403
   (541) 543-9984
   support@nemametrix.com
   www.nemametrix.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 04
County: Lane

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43HG010852-01A1
Start Date: 5/1/2020    Completed: 4/30/2021
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$350,000
Genome wide DNA sequencing is now being adopted in clinical practice and an increasing number of variants are identified in epilepsy-associated genes, yet the clinical interpretation of the new variants is challenging. Some of the variants are known to be either pathological or benign, yet a majority of the gene variations remain unknown for their functional consequence. A large number of Variant of Uncertain Significance (VUS) are becoming commonplace in genes for human diseases, providing a significant barrier in making diagnoses and implementing therapies. Bioinformatic approaches can provide some insight into pathogenic probability of VUS alleles, but functional studies in animal model systems are often needed to make definitive of pathogenicity assignments. The expense and long timelines of mouse model production make the use of alternative small animal models attractive. In this proposal, the ?C. elegans?nematode is used as an alternative model capable of fast high-throughput production and screening. Human genes are installed as gene-swap replacements of the native disease-gene homologs. In preliminary work, gene-swap humanization of STXBP1 in the ?unc-18?locus rescued severe locomotion and behavior defects present in the gene knock-out animals. Pathogenic variants into the STXBP1??gene-swap loci leads to significant disruption of activity. In this proposal, significant and novel improvements are made to our existing pipeline for the functional analysis of variants in vivo. In Aim 1, the relevance and extensibility of the C. elegans model system for studying human disease is improved through simultaneous humanization of multiple related loci. In Aim 2, new methods are developed for molecular phenotyping, improving the resolution of inputs pathogenicity determination algorithms, and yielding mechanism-of-action level readouts to variant manipulations. In Aim 3, the improvements to the pipeline are tested to quantify gains in pathogenicity determination on a test set of variants.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
Project Narrative Precision medicine holds great promise for better patient outcomes through a deeper understanding of genetic variation. In this project, we propose to create technology that can assist in the identification of pathogenic genetic variants in humans by accurately modeling the same variants in a research animal. Ultimately, these animals can act as an avatar for patient populations bearing the same genetic variant in determining a personalized course of treatment for disease.

Project Terms:
Address; Adopted; Algorithms; Alleles; Animal Experimentation; Animal Model; Animal Testing Alternatives; Animals; Behavior; Benchmarking; Benign; Bioinformatics; Biological Models; biological systems; Biology; Caenorhabditis elegans; Clinical; clinical practice; Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats; Code; Complementary DNA; dark matter; Data Set; Defect; Development; Diagnosis; Diagnostic; Disease; Disease model; Distant; DNA sequencing; Epilepsy; gene function; Genes; Genetic Diseases; Genetic Transcription; genetic variant; Genetic Variation; Genome; genome-wide; genomic locus; Genomics; Goals; Health; Human; human disease; Human Genetics; improved; in vivo; innovation; insight; knockout animal; Locomotion; Measures; Metabolic Pathway; Methodology; Methods; Modeling; Molecular; molecular phenotype; mouse model; Nematoda; Nerve Degeneration; new technology; novel; Organism; Orthologous Gene; Pathogenicity; Pathologic; Pathway interactions; patient population; Patient-Focused Outcomes; Patients; Phase; Phenotype; precision medicine; Presynaptic Terminals; prevent; Probability; Production; Proteins; Research; Resolution; screening; Signal Pathway; Small Business Innovation Research Grant; Structure; success; System; Technology; Testing; TimeLine; transcriptome; Transgenic Animals; Transgenic Organisms; Variant; variant of unknown significance; Work

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
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Phase II Amount
$124,932