Title: Case Study of a Cambridge Biotech Startup
1- Case Study of a Cambridge Biotech Start-up
2Funxional Therapeutics Ltd (FXT)
A company with products entering clinical
development, based upon a strategy exploiting
functional screening to develop novel new classes
of drugs
3Pre -1980s
Select compounds which have a desirable effect on
the function of the individual Optimise the lead
candidates
- Aspirin from willow
- Penicillin from mould
- Vitamins
Inefficient
4Pre -1980s
Select compounds which have a desirable effect on
the function of the individual Optimise the lead
candidates
How do I find new lead compounds? How do I
evaluate safety? How do I reduce the risk
associated with costly late stage clinical trials?
Inefficient
5Today
Reduce the organism to a simple collection of
molecules Choose a molecular target (receptor or
enzyme) Perform a high-throughput
screen Optimise the lead candidates
Inefficient
6Today
Reduce the organism to a simple collection of
molecules Choose a molecular target (receptor or
enzyme) Perform a high-throughput
screen Optimise the lead candidates
Inefficient
How do I validate my molecular targets? What
happens if no single receptor/enzyme is
responsible for the function I need to modulate?
7Select Target
Design screening assays Screen library Select
promising hits Synthesise directed
sub-libraries Re-screen
Development lead
8Select Target
Design screening assays Screen library Select
promising hits Synthesise directed
sub-libraries Re-screen
Development lead
9Select Target
Design screening assays Screen library Select
promising hits Synthesise directed
sub-libraries Re-screen
Development lead
10Pharmaceutical companies have grown by optimising
every stage of the process EXCEPT target selection
Everyone knows you need to target the adrenalin
receptor to modulate blood pressure. The winners
in this game will be the ones who find the best
compound for the job, and develop it into the
best product.
Senior Executive, 1968
11Select Target
Design screening assays Screen library Select
promising hits Synthesise directed
sub-libraries Re-screen
Development lead
12Pitfalls of molecular target selection
- If its obvious to you, its probably obvious to
everyone - Dependent on good hypotheses
- Validation paradigm
- - Knockout the gene
- - Look for effect in animal model
- How good is the animal model?
- How many genes are developmental lethal?
- Closely related isoforms?
-
13Scarring following incisional wounding Traumatic
brain injury Ischemic stroke Atherosclerosis Ca
ncer Asthma Rheumatoid arthritis
GOOD
BAD
14Scarring following incisional wounding Traumatic
brain injury Ischemic stroke Atherosclerosis Ca
ncer Asthma Rheumatoid arthritis
GOOD
BAD
Species? Cell types involved? Conserved
trigger?
15Tomorrow
Reduce the organism to a simple collection of
functions Choose a function to modulate Perform
a functional screen Optimise the lead candidates
Efficient
16Tomorrow
Reduce the organism to a simple collection of
functions Choose a function to modulate Perform
a functional screen Optimise the lead candidates
Efficient
Finds drugs with unexpected or complex molecular
targets, but highly desirable functional
properties
17Functional screening
Side-steps bottleneck of molecular target
selection Opens access to a different
space Finds useful agents acting at unexpected
targets Identifies agents acting simultaneously
at multiple molecular targets
18Functional screening
Side-steps bottleneck of molecular target
selection Opens access to a different
space Finds useful agents acting at unexpected
targets Identifies agents acting simultaneously
at multiple molecular targets Functional
screening is hard to do!
BUT
19Enabling Skillsets
Hurdle Functional assays are not as
straightforward to perform in high-throughput
format as molecular assays
- Solutions
- Expertise in parallel microtitre format
functional assays - Use peptides to aid rational design, rather than
rely on vast random libraries - Well-validated general methods of designing
peptidomimetic small molecules which retain
function - Use proprietary small molecule libraries which
are not random, but heavily enriched in bioactive
NCEs
FXT has all these skillsets
20Molecular screening technology is only faster
because billions of pounds have been spent by the
pharmaceutical industry optimising that paradigm.
Functional screening can be made just as cheap,
just as high throughput given even a fraction of
that investment.
Jason Avery, FXT CEO, 2005
21Example 1 Anti-inflammatory Drug
Hypothesis Chemokines are important for
orchestrating leukocyte recruitment to sites of
inflammation
Molecular approach Select a chemokine receptor
and screen for antagonists
BUT Which chemokine? Which receptor?
Functional approach Set up a functional assay
for leukocyte recruitment and search for
functional Inhibitors of chemokine-dependent
migration
22Functional Cell Migration Assay
23Alignment Strategy to Identify Chemokine
Inhibitors
AQPDAINAPV TCCYNFTNRK ISVQRLASYR
RITSSKCPKE .. . .
. AQPDAVNAPL TCCYSFTSKM IPMSRLESYK
RITSSRCPKE AVIFKTIVAK EICADPKQKW VQDSMDHLDK
QTQTPKT . . . .
AVVFVTKLKR EVCADPKKEW VQTYIKNLDR NQMR...
PEPTIDE 1
PEPTIDE 2
human
mouse
PEPTIDE 3
Alignment of different chemokines from more than
10 species identified regions of homology across
the whole superfamily
24Properties of Peptide 3
The first broad-spectrum chemokine inhibitor
(BSCI)
- Sequence specific
- Effective against all chemokines tested, with
similar potency - Completely inhibits migration
- Not very potent
Reckless Grainger (1999) Biochem. J. 340803-10
25Conventional Medicinal Chemistry Optimises Lead
Candidate
PEPTIDES
AMINO-GLUTARIMIDES
- NR58-3.14.3
- BIM 58171
- BIM 58189
YOHIMBAMIDES
AMINO-CAPROLACTAMS
- Olfoxamide
- BN 83250
- BN 83470
BN83470 most promising candidate for further
development
Grainger et al. (2005) Mini Rev. Med. Chem.
5825-32
26BSCIs A New Family of Anti-inflammatory drugs
- BN83470 is an orally acting anti-inflammatory
agent - Efficacy data in 10 animal models of
inflammation - Active at 1µg/kg doses - equivalent to
corticosteroids - Excellent side effect profile
- Beginning Phase I trials in 2007
- Development programme in place for allergic
rhinitis, asthma, COPD - Other aminocaprolactam BSCIs being developed for
surgical adhesions, stroke and heart disease
27BSCIs Mechanism of Action
- Not known a priori (unlike products of molecular
screens) - Identify molecular targets by conventional
pharmacology - BSCIs are receptor AGONISTS!
- Function by deafening the cell to the chemokine
signal - Molecular target is a known GPCR, but not one
anyone has ever considered targeting to inhibit
inflammation - Functional screening has opened up a whole new
space for anti-inflammatory medications
IDENTITY REMAINS CONFIDENTIAL TO FXT
28Example 2 Alzheimers Drug
Hypothesis Failure to clear apoptotic cells in
the absence of apoE triggers neurodegeneration
Molecular approach ???
How is apoE modulating phagocytosis?
Functional approach Set up a functional assay
for phagocytosis and search for
functional agonists equivalent to apoE
29Functional screen for phagocytosis
- Label thymocytes with CellTracker Green
- Induce apoptosis, for example by serum
withdrawal, and confirm by Annexin V staining - Expose cultured macrophages to labelled apoptotic
cells for 30mins at 37ºC in presence or absence
of candidate agonists - Detect cells that are taken up by flow cytometry
30A small molecule apoE mimetic
Wild type
ApoE deficient
With apoE mimetic
31IBBs New Drugs for Alzheimers
- Conventional medicinal chemistry used to refine
the peptidic apoE mimetics - Yielded a family of indolylbisbenzamidine
(IBBs), the first submicromolar, non-peptide apoE
mimetics - IBBs stimulate phagocytosis of apoptotic cells
up to 3-fold in vitro, and compensate for loss of
apoE in vivo - Acceptible safety profile?
- Potent and effective in animal models of AD
32IBBs Mechanism of Action
- Not known a priori (unlike products of molecular
screens) - Identify molecular targets by conventional
pharmacology - IBBs target just one of the 10 receptors known
to bind apoE - Precise mode of action still unknown
- Molecular target well known, but never
previously considered as a target for AD
therapeutics - Functional screening has opened up a whole new
space for AD medications
IDENTITY REMAINS CONFIDENTIAL TO FXT
33GAEL Technology
GPCR-Agonist Enriched Library
- Enabling platform technology for functional
screening - Proprietary library of NCEs enriched in candidate
GPCRs agonists - Based on facile chemistry, allowing introduction
of vast diversity into GAEL library - Library elements based on scaffold with intrinsic
low toxicity and excellent PK/PD properties - A pipeline of valuable NCEs in diverse,
pre-selected therapeutic classes
34Natural Ligand
ANTAGONIST
AGONIST
Receptor
35GAEL Core Structure
Carbon
Diversity
Oxygen
Nitrogen
Hydrogen
- Core structure of an ideal GPCR agonist,
identified by molecular modeling of several
hundred known agonists at wide range of GPCRs - Create a proprietary library where every element
contains this ideal core - Elements distinguished by diverse substitutions
which control selectivity for different GPCRs
36Finding the Ideal Insulin Secretagogue
Our first application of the GAEL technology
- Huge market in diabetes, obesity and metabolic
disorders for insulin secretagogues (gt100 million
people, 10B worldwide market) - Competitors (DPP-IV inhibitors and GLP-1
analogues) have disadvantages - DPP-IV involved in metabolising other bioactive
peptides, so inhibitors have unwanted
side-effects - Current GLP-1 analogs are peptides
- GLP-1 and GIP double knock-out mice retain
glucose-sensitive insulin secretion - so other
receptors are important too - Ideal profile for applying GAEL technology in a
functional screen - aim to find mixed GIP/GLP
agonists
37Research Plan
- Synthesize 1,000 element GAEL library (6 months)
- Screen library in functional assay for
stimulation of insulin production by RIN 1046-38
cells (3 months) - Screen positive hits for ability to suppress
blood glucose levels in fasted Zucker rats (3
months) - In parallel, synthesise further analogues of lead
candidates and screen in vitro and in vivo (6
months)
38Funxional Therapeutics Ltd (FXT)
- Committed to the new functional screening
paradigm - Toolbox of proprietary screening tools
- Microtitre parallel functional assays
- Peptidomimetic chemistries
- Enriched libraries
- Family of aminocaprolactam BSCIs with unique,
proprietary mechanism of action - BN83250 s.c. product in surgical adhesions
- BN83250 i.v. product in ischemic stroke
- BN83470 product in asthma, allergic rhinitis,
COPD - Family of IBBs with proprietary mechanism of
action - EOL1 product in traumatic brain injury
- FXT173 product in Alzheimers Disease
39Funxional Therapeutics Ltd (FXT)
- Founded in 2005 and currently privately held
- Ipsen Group are major shareholders
- TCP Innovations
- Cambridge University
- Founders
- VC Investors
- Strong management team
- CEO Jason Avery
- VP RD Callum Campbell
- CSO David Grainger
- VP Business Development Bob Schroff
- Completed 5.5M series A financing October 2006
- First Phase II proof of concept Q4 2009
- First product 2012?