Source: NeuBase Therapeutics, Inc. 3/31/2020
Demonstrates broad
biodistribution, including across the blood-brain barrier into the
central nervous system, and into skeletal muscle, in non-human primates
(“NHPs”) after systemic administration
Durable and therapeutically relevant drug concentrations achieved in NHPs after single intravenous dose
Potent cell-based activity and allele-specific enrichment in patient-derived cell lines
Platform
validation data supports expansion of the therapeutic pipeline into new
organ systems previously unreachable with first-generation antisense
oligonucleotide technology
NeuBase
Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: NBSE) (“NeuBase” or the “Company”), a
biotechnology company developing next-generation antisense
oligonucleotide (“ASO”) therapies to address genetic diseases, today
announced positive preclinical data from its pharmacokinetics studies in
non-human primates (“NHPs”) and in vitro pharmacodynamics data
in patient-derived cell lines. NeuBase believes these data validate the
key advantages of the proprietary NeuBase peptide-nucleic acid (“PNA”)
antisense oligonucleotide (PATrOL™) platform and support the Company’s
decision to advance the development of its Huntington’s disease (“HD”)
and myotonic dystrophy type 1 (“DM1”) programs, as well as the potential
expansion of its therapeutic pipeline into other indications.
Non-Human Primate Pharmacokinetic Study
Quantitative
whole-body autoradiography was performed on NHPs. A PATrOL™-enabled
compound was radio-labeled, and the resulting material was injected into
NHPs at 5 mg/kg via a bolus tail vein injection. At four hours, twelve
hours, and seven days post-dosing, NHPs were sacrificed and sectioned
into 40 µm slices. Slices were exposed to autoradiography imaging plates
alongside a dilution series of radioactive PNA in whole blood. Upon
imaging, the dilution series enabled an analysis of the amount of
compound in each of the tissues. In addition, prior to sacrifice, whole
blood, urine, and feces were collected from the NHPs at specified
timepoints. The major conclusions from this study include:
- Rapid uptake of compound out of the body’s circulation after systemic intravenous administration, with a half-life in circulation of approximately 1.5 hours;
- Compound penetrates every organ system studied, including the central nervous system and skeletal muscle;
° Compound
crosses the blood-brain barrier and into the key deep brain structures,
including the caudate, supporting a key capability for the development
of the Company’s lead program in HD;
° Delivery of the compound to skeletal muscle, the primary organ system that is affected in DM1;
° Because both HD and DM1 have manifestations outside of the primary affected organ, the broad biodistribution of the compounds may enable a potential whole-body therapeutic solution in both indications.
° Delivery of the compound to skeletal muscle, the primary organ system that is affected in DM1;
° Because both HD and DM1 have manifestations outside of the primary affected organ, the broad biodistribution of the compounds may enable a potential whole-body therapeutic solution in both indications.
- Therapeutically relevant doses persist for greater than one week in NHPs after single-dose injection;
° 96% of administered compound remained in vivo after a one-week period (latest timepoint tested);
° Redistribution over one week after administration between organ systems enriches concentrations in key brain regions up to two-fold, including in those deep brain structures most relevant for HD;
° Retention of ~90% of compound concentrations achieved in skeletal muscle over the course of one-week post-single-dose administration; and
° Redistribution over one week after administration between organ systems enriches concentrations in key brain regions up to two-fold, including in those deep brain structures most relevant for HD;
° Retention of ~90% of compound concentrations achieved in skeletal muscle over the course of one-week post-single-dose administration; and
- Sustained concentrations in many other key organ systems throughout the body may indicate the potential for durable therapeutic responses and an infrequent dosing cadence.
Patient-Derived Huntington’s Cell Line Pharmacodynamic Studies
Multiple
Huntington’s disease candidate compounds were incubated with HD-derived
cells and assayed for their toxicity and their ability to selectively
knock down mutant huntingtin protein (“mHTT”) expression by engaging
with the CAG repeat expansion in the huntingtin (“HTT”) gene
transcript. Multi-well plates were seeded with cells and candidates were
added to the culture at various concentrations. Cells were grown for
three days and thereafter assayed for cell death. Cell pellets were also
collected, lysed, and run on gradient SDS-PAGE gels. Following the
transfer of the proteins to a membrane, the membrane was probed with
anti-huntingtin and anti-beta-actin antibodies. Secondary antibodies
were used to image the immunoblots. The beta-actin bands were used to
normalize the amount of protein across the wells. The amounts of mutant
and wild type huntingtin protein in treated cells were compared to
untreated cells to determine the level of knockdown. The major
conclusions from this study include:
- Activity in engaging target disease-causing transcripts and knocking-down resultant malfunctioning mHTT protein levels preferentially over normal HTT protein knock-down; and
- Dose limiting toxicities were not observed relative to a control either at or above the doses demonstrating activity in human cells in vitro.
In addition, PATrOL™ enabled compounds were generally well-tolerated in vivo
after systemic administration, both after single dose administration in
NHPs and multi dose administration in mice for over a month.
“We
believe the PATrOL™ platform has the potential to create drugs that are
easy for patients to take at infrequent intervals after they have
tested positive for a genetic disease but before symptoms emerge,” said
Dietrich Stephan, Ph.D., chief executive officer of NeuBase. “We believe
the best way to effectively manage degenerative genetic diseases is to
get ahead of the disease process, and we believe that can only be
achieved with early diagnosis coupled with well-tolerated, effective,
and easily administered therapies.”
Dr. Robert Friedlander, chief medical officer of NeuBase and member of the National Academy of Medicine, stated, “An
allele specific approach that can be systemically administered and
cross the blood brain barrier would be an ideal drug profile for many
untreatable genetic diseases. I believe that NeuBase is moving towards
realizing this goal.”
The intersection of the NHP pharmacokinetic data and the in vitro
patient-derived pharmacodynamic data provides a roadmap to create a
pipeline of therapeutic candidates which can reach target tissues of
interest after systemic administration and achieve the desired activity
at that dose. NeuBase believes the data from these studies support the
advancement of the Company’s HD and DM1 programs into lead optimization
and subsequent IND-enabling studies, as well as provide a roadmap for
the future expansion of the Company’s therapeutic pipeline into other
indications, including oncology.
Dr. Sam
Broder, former Director of the National Cancer Institute of the National
Institutes of Health and member of the National Academy of Sciences,
stated, “I believe that the NeuBase strategy of targeting transcripts
before they become dangerous mutant proteins has the potential to
deliver a dramatic improvement in our collective capabilities to
effectively treat a wide range of genetic diseases, including some of
the most deadly cancers, by targeting driver mutations and accelerating
immunotherapy capabilities.”
About NeuBase Therapeutics
NeuBase
Therapeutics, Inc. is developing the next generation of gene silencing
therapies with its flexible, highly specific synthetic antisense
oligonucleotides. The proprietary NeuBase peptide-nucleic acid (PNA)
antisense oligonucleotide (PATrOL™) platform is designed to permit the
rapid development of targeted drugs, thereby potentially increasing the
treatment opportunities for the hundreds of millions of people affected
by rare genetic diseases, including those that can only be treated
through accessing of secondary RNA structures. Using PATrOL™ technology,
NeuBase aims to first tackle rare, genetic neurological disorders.
No comments:
Post a Comment