SBIR-STTR Award

Commercial Cell-Free Technology for Insulin-Like Growth Factor I (IGF-I) Production
Award last edited on: 3/26/2024

Sponsored Program
STTR
Awarding Agency
NSF
Total Award Amount
$1,096,559
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
BT
Principal Investigator
Gang Yin

Company Information

Fundamental Applied Biology Inc

1455 Adams Drive Suite 1015
Menlo Park, CA 94025
   (650) 329-9374
   N/A
   www.f-a-b-inc.com

Research Institution

0522337

Phase I

Contract Number: 2008
Start Date: Stanford University    Completed: 7/1/2004
Phase I year
2004
Phase I Amount
$96,559
This Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Phase I project proposes to develop a cell free protein synthesis procedure for the manufacture of IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor-1). The commercial application of this project will be in the area of bio-pharmaceuticals. The proposed work is expected to result in reduced production costs and time for a number of protein drug candidates.

Phase II

Contract Number: 0420208
Start Date: 6/30/2005    Completed: 7/1/2004
Phase II year
2005
(last award dollars: 1711472174)
Phase II Amount
$1,000,000

This Small Technology Transfer Innovation Research (STTR) Phase II project proposes to develop a cell-free process to produce insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-1). Prior Phase I work showed production of IGF-1 in very high yields (i.e. 800 ug/L) by a careful control of the environmental conditions and the catalysts that were used. These results show that not only the cell-free production of IGF-1 is technically feasible, but also that cell-free technology may be an important method for the production of any disulfide-containing protein that is difficult to produce in bacterial systems. The Phase II project will focus on quality control (that is, product characterization and optimization), reaction scale-up, and cost reduction. The cell-free process potentially offers high capital productivity along with unprecedented control over the conditions present during protein expression and folding. Both attributes are especially important for molecules such as IGF-1 that are intended for price-sensitive markets and that are both difficult to fold and are also subject to a variety of deleterious product modifications. The commercial application of this project will be in the area of biopharmaceuticals, for the cell-free production of an important protein drug, IGF-1, and potentially for the production of other important therapeutic proteins. The cell-free process is a low-cost, rapid, flexible protein-manufacturing platform that is capable of scaling up from development through to final manufacturing and would remove critical manufacturing and production bottlenecks in protein based drug development efforts.