SBIR-STTR Award

Advancing CAP4196 Into in Vivo Proof of Concept Translational Studies
Award last edited on: 9/24/2022

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NEI
Total Award Amount
$1,611,055
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
867
Principal Investigator
Sridhar G Prasad

Company Information

Plex Pharmaceuticals Inc (AKA: CalAsia Pharmaceuticals Inc)

6330 Nancy Ridge Drive Suite 102
San Diego, CA 92121
   (858) 587-8800
   bd@plexpharma.com
   www.plexpharma.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 52
County: San Diego

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43EY027236-01
Start Date: 9/1/2016    Completed: 8/31/2018
Phase I year
2016
Phase I Amount
$162,399
Cataract, the clouding of the eye lens is responsible for 48% of world blindness. According to World Health Organization nearly 18 million people are bilaterally blind from cataract in the world. Cataract is easily treated by surgery and is considered as one of the most cost-effective interventions. Although cataract surgery is generally considered to be safe, there are significant complications: (i) 30-50% of patients in the US having cataract surgery develop opacification of the posterior lens capsule within two years and require laser treatment; (ii) 0.8% have retinal detachments; (iii) 0.6-1.3% are hospitalized for corneal edema or require corneal transplantation and (iv) about 1% are presented with endophthalmitis. In addition, in many remote and poor areas of the developing and under-developed regions of the world, people still remain blind from cataract, primarily due to lack of access to eye care. As a result of which, cataract related blindness is as high as 50% or more in poor and remote regions of the world compared to only 5% in developed countries. Alpha-crystallin (AC) is one of the three major eye lens crystallins and is a representative member of the small heat shock protein (sHsp) family. AC serves as molecular chaperone, protecting damaged or aged lens proteins and enzymes from aggregation that would otherwise lead to light scattering and cataract formation. It is well established that chaperone-like activity (CLA) of AC is critical for lens transparency and it is hypothesized that maintaining optimal or increasing chaperone activity might aid in the prevention or slowing of cataract. The rationale of our proposal is based on the observation that small molecule pharmacological agents from natural sources can prevent the loss of CLA of Alpha crystallin A-chain (AAC) and can delay cataract formation in preclinical models. It has been estimated that delaying cataract formation by 10 years can reduce the vision care expense by 50%. In addition, our preliminary data supports the hypothesis that drug-like synthetic small molecules representing the CAP01023 series specifically increases AAC CLA and maintains transparency of the eye lens in organ culture experiments of cataract model. Therefore, the basic goal of our proposal is to discover potent small molecule activators of AAC to be developed into safe and cost-effective non-surgical treatment to delay and/or reverse cataract related blindness, and the specific aims are: (Aim 1) Structure based design, commercial acquisition and synthesis of small molecule activators of AAC; (Aim 2) Assess therapeutic efficacy of AAC activators from Specific Aim 1 using in vitro glycation and ex-vivo cell culture experiments and (Aim 3). Assess compounds from Specific Aim 2 for preliminary in vivo safety and efficacy using ex vivo organ culture cataract models. The milestone for the Phase I studies is to discover 2-4 potent activators of AAC with EC50 ? 50uM, shown to be safe in rabbit eye lens, maintain clarification of lens for ?12 days in organ culture experiments with concomitant compound uptake and decrease in aggregated forms of lenticular client protein levels.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
Project Narrative Cataracts are the leading cause of blindness worldwide, particularly in low and middle income countries. Data dating back to the beginning of this millennium showed that 30-60% of blindness in Africa and 60-80% in South East Asia is attributable to cataracts. The only treatment currently available is surgical extraction of the lens and replacement with an interocular lens that is accompanied by a high public health burden. This proposal provides an innovative non-surgical approach to address this public health burden.

NIH Spending Category:
Aging; Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision; Prevention

Project Terms:
Address; Africa; aged; Aging; Alcohol dehydrogenase; alpha-Crystallins; analog; Area; Back; base; Biological Assay; blind; Blindness; Caring; Cataract; Cataract Extraction; Cell Culture Techniques; Cells; Child; Chlorobenzene; Client; Corneal edema; cost effective; Crystalline Lens; Crystallins; cytotoxicity; Data; design; Developed Countries; Development; Diabetes Mellitus; disparity reduction; Drug Delivery Systems; Endophthalmitis; Enzymes; Eye; Far East; Formulation; Fructose; glycation; Goals; Heat shock proteins; Hereditary Disease; High Pressure Liquid Chromatography; Human; In Vitro; in vivo; innovation; Intervention; iterative design; Keratoplasty; Lasers; Lead; lens; lens capsule; lens protein; lens transparency; Libraries; light scattering; low and middle-income countries; member; Modeling; Molecular Chaperones; Muramidase; mutant; Operative Surgical Procedures; Organ Culture Techniques; Oryctolagus cuniculus; Patients; Permeability; Pharmaceutical Chemistry; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Phase; phase 1 study; Pre-Clinical Model; prevent; Prevention; Protein Family; Proteins; Public Health; Pyrazoles; research study; Retinal Detachment; Risk Factors; Safety; Series; small molecule; Smoking; Solubility; Source; Structure; Structure-Activity Relationship; Testing; Tissues; Trauma; Treatment Efficacy; Ultraviolet Rays; uptake; Uveitis; Visual impairment; World Health Organization

Phase II

Contract Number: 5R43EY027236-02
Start Date: 9/1/2016    Completed: 8/31/2018
Phase II year
2017
(last award dollars: 2021)
Phase II Amount
$1,448,656

Cataract, the clouding of the eye lens is responsible for 48% of world blindness. According to World Health Organization nearly 18 million people are bilaterally blind from cataract in the world. Cataract is easily treated by surgery and is considered as one of the most cost-effective interventions. Although cataract surgery is generally considered to be safe, there are significant complications: (i) 30-50% of patients in the US having cataract surgery develop opacification of the posterior lens capsule within two years and require laser treatment; (ii) 0.8% have retinal detachments; (iii) 0.6-1.3% are hospitalized for corneal edema or require corneal transplantation and (iv) about 1% are presented with endophthalmitis. In addition, in many remote and poor areas of the developing and under-developed regions of the world, people still remain blind from cataract, primarily due to lack of access to eye care. As a result of which, cataract related blindness is as high as 50% or more in poor and remote regions of the world compared to only 5% in developed countries. Alpha-crystallin (AC) is one of the three major eye lens crystallins and is a representative member of the small heat shock protein (sHsp) family. AC serves as molecular chaperone, protecting damaged or aged lens proteins and enzymes from aggregation that would otherwise lead to light scattering and cataract formation. It is well established that chaperone-like activity (CLA) of AC is critical for lens transparency and it is hypothesized that maintaining optimal or increasing chaperone activity might aid in the prevention or slowing of cataract. The rationale of our proposal is based on the observation that small molecule pharmacological agents from natural sources can prevent the loss of CLA of Alpha crystallin A-chain (AAC) and can delay cataract formation in preclinical models. It has been estimated that delaying cataract formation by 10 years can reduce the vision care expense by 50%. In addition, our preliminary data supports the hypothesis that drug-like synthetic small molecules representing the CAP01023 series specifically increases AAC CLA and maintains transparency of the eye lens in organ culture experiments of cataract model. Therefore, the basic goal of our proposal is to discover potent small molecule activators of AAC to be developed into safe and cost-effective non-surgical treatment to delay and/or reverse cataract related blindness, and the specific aims are: (Aim 1) Structure based design, commercial acquisition and synthesis of small molecule activators of AAC; (Aim 2) Assess therapeutic efficacy of AAC activators from Specific Aim 1 using in vitro glycation and ex-vivo cell culture experiments and (Aim 3). Assess compounds from Specific Aim 2 for preliminary in vivo safety and efficacy using ex vivo organ culture cataract models. The milestone for the Phase I studies is to discover 2-4 potent activators of AAC with EC50 ? 50uM, shown to be safe in rabbit eye lens, maintain clarification of lens for ?12 days in organ culture experiments with concomitant compound uptake and decrease in aggregated forms of lenticular client protein levels.

Public Health Relevance Statement:
Project Narrative Cataracts are the leading cause of blindness worldwide, particularly in low and middle income countries. Data dating back to the beginning of this millennium showed that 30-60% of blindness in Africa and 60-80% in South East Asia is attributable to cataracts. The only treatment currently available is surgical extraction of the lens and replacement with an interocular lens that is accompanied by a high public health burden. This proposal provides an innovative non-surgical approach to address this public health burden.

Project Terms:
Address; Africa; aged; Aging; Alcohol dehydrogenase; alpha-Crystallins; analog; Area; Back; base; Bilateral; Biological Assay; blind; Blindness; Caring; Cataract; Cataract Extraction; Cell Culture Techniques; Cells; Child; Chlorobenzene; Client; Corneal edema; COS-7 Cell; cost effective; Crystalline Lens; Crystallins; cytotoxicity; Data; design; Developed Countries; Developing Countries; Development; Diabetes Mellitus; Drug Delivery Systems; effective intervention; Endophthalmitis; Enzymes; experimental study; Eye; Family; Far East; Formulation; Fructose; glycation; Goals; Heat shock proteins; Hereditary Disease; High Pressure Liquid Chromatography; Human; In Vitro; in vivo; innovation; iterative design; Keratoplasty; Lasers; Lead; lens; lens capsule; lens protein; lens transparency; Libraries; light scattering; low and middle-income countries; member; Modeling; Molecular Chaperones; Muramidase; mutant; Operative Surgical Procedures; Organ Culture Techniques; Oryctolagus cuniculus; Patients; Permeability; Pharmaceutical Chemistry; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Pharmacology; Phase; phase 1 study; Physiological; Pre-Clinical Model; prevent; Prevention; Proteins; Public Health; Pyrazoles; Retinal Detachment; Risk Factors; Safety; Series; small molecule; Smoking; Solubility; Source; Structure; Structure-Activity Relationship; Synthesis Chemistry; Testing; Tissues; Trauma; Treatment Efficacy; Ultraviolet Rays; uptake; Uveitis; Visual impairment; World Health Organization