Science Pool

Selective P2X3 Receptor Antagonist, Eliapixant, for Treatment of Hypersensitive Nerve Fibre Disorders

Posted by Evotec on Oct 7, 2021 11:56:52 AM

P2X3 receptors play an important role in the sensitisation of nerve fibres and pain pathways. Involvement in pathways triggering cough and contribution to the pathophysiology of endometriosis and overactive bladder have also been reported. Development of P2X antagonists have been hampered by off‑target effects which include severe taste disturbances associated with blocking the P2X2/3 receptor heterotrimer.  

In this publication, we focus on:

  • how eliapixant (BAY 1817080), a P2X3 receptor antagonist, is both highly potent and selective for P2X3 over other P2X subtypes in vitro including P2X2/3
  • how eliapixant reduces inflammatory pain in relevant animal models
  • experimental evidence that P2X3 antagonism reduces neurogenic inflammation and vaginal pain, and demonstration of the potential use of eliapixant in endometriosis

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Tags: Neuroscience, Articles & Whitepapers, In vitro Biology, In vivo Pharmacology

Faster Development of Novel Anti-Infectives: The Hollow Fibre Infection Model

Posted by Evotec on Oct 5, 2021 6:06:10 PM

The key to de-risking and expediting the development and approval of new antimicrobials lies in the detailed understanding of the PK/PD relationship. Understanding this relationship informs the development of optimal human dosing, maximising efficacy while minimising the potential to antimicrobial resistance.

This white paper describes and appraises today's most versatile in vitro system for the determination of in vitro PK/PD relationships between antimicrobial compounds and bacteria, fungi and viruses - the Hollow Fibre Infection Model (HFIM)

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Tags: Articles & Whitepapers, In vitro Biology, Anti-Infectives

Time-Resolved Ubiquitinome Profiling by DIA-MS Reveals USP7 Targets

Posted by Evotec on Oct 4, 2021 5:22:21 PM

Mass spectrometry (MS)-based ubiquitinomics allows a system-level understanding of ubiquitin signalling. 

In this publication, we focus on:

  • a background to ubiquitinome profiling
  • presentation of a scalable and robust workflow for deep and precise in vivo ubiquitinome profiling using DIA-MS (data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry) and neural network based data processing
  • comprehensive mapping of substrates of deubiquitinase USP7, an anticancer drug target known to regulate tumour suppressor p53
  • application of the method including rapid mode of action profiling of candidate drugs targeting deubiquitinases or ubiquitin ligases 

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Tags: Oncology, Articles & Whitepapers, Proteomics, Metabolomics & Biomarkers

Discovery of Novel UDP-N-Acetylglucosamine Acyltransferase (LpxA) Inhibitors

Posted by Evotec on Sep 30, 2021 7:41:42 PM

Alastair Parkes, Ph.D, Group Leader, Discovery Chemistry, Evotec UK

As part of our ongoing efforts at Evotec to tackle AMR through the design of novel antibiotics we have been working with Boston-based X-Biotix in a collaboration focussed on targeting priority Gram-negative pathogens. We are now able to share the story of our work on inhibitors of UDP-N-Acetylglucosamine Acyltransferase (LpxA), a key enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway of the outer membrane lipopolysaccharide of Gram-negative bacteria. Building on hit-finding work at X-Biotix we put together a multi-disciplinary team including Medicinal Chemistry, Computational Chemistry, Structural Biology and DMPK at our Abingdon UK site, in vitro and in vivo Microbiology and PK at our Alderley Park UK site, and in vitro Biology at our site in Hamburg, Germany. Through structure and property-based optimisation we were able to design highly potent inhibitors of Pseudomonas aeruginosa LpxA that were active against multi-drug resistant clinical isolates. To our knowledge, this is the first reported LpxA inhibitor series with selective activity against P. aeruginosa bacteria. In our paper in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry we share the optimisation story, along with a significant quantity of activity data that we hope will be useful for other teams working on small molecule strategies to tackle P. aeruginosa and other Gram-negative bacteria.

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Tags: Antibacterial, Medicinal Chemistry, Articles & Whitepapers, ADME/DMPK, In vitro Biology, In vivo Pharmacology, Anti-Infectives, Antimicrobial resistance

Arthralgia Resolution Rate following Chikungunya Virus Infection

Posted by Evotec on Sep 30, 2021 4:03:56 PM

Arthralgia (persistent pain or stiffness of the joints) is a common symptom of chikungunya virus infection which can persist for many months following the disease. This condition is associated with significant disability and reduced quality of life. In order to manage individual clinical expectations and long term burden on the population following a chikungunya virus infection epidemic, it is critical to know the expected duration of the post infection arthralgia. 

In this publication, we focus on:

  • a background to chikungunya virus and its symptoms including arthralgia
  • a literature review of published cohort studies which have tracked the symptoms of chikungunya virus over time after infection with the virus
  • using simple statistical models to estimate the average arthralgia resolution rate

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Tags: Articles & Whitepapers, Anti-Infectives

Joint Count Comparison of Chikungunya Arthritis with Rheumatoid Arthritis

Posted by Evotec on Sep 30, 2021 4:02:30 PM

Following chikungunya virus infection, chronic rheumatological symptoms are similar to those observed with rheumatoid arthritis. To further evaluate this, a comparison was made between the relevance of joint counts and symptoms between the two conditions.

In this publication, we focus on:

  • a background to chikungunya virus and its various symptoms including chronic joint pain and inflammation
  • a cross sectional study of 40 patients with chronic chikungunya arthralgia and 40 patients with rheumatoid arthritis in order to compare symptoms
  • an assessment of the relevance of joint counts in both conditions and their relationship with disability

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Tags: Articles & Whitepapers, Anti-Infectives

A New Approach To Off-The-Shelf Cancer Vaccines

Posted by Evotec on Sep 28, 2021 3:31:37 PM

Dendritic Cells (DCs) are very efficient antigen-presenting cells and have long been considered as attractive candidates for cancer immunotherapy. They are obtained from the patient and loaded in vitro with tumour antigens and additional maturation stimuli and subsequently, infused back into the patient. However, after more than 200 clinical trials involving thousands of patients, clinical responses have been disappointing so far.

While the treatment is safe and well-tolerated and often elicits anti-tumour immunity in both patients with advanced stages of disease and those with minimal residual disease following tumour resection, only a minority of patients demonstrates objective response rates. There are several reasons why the results are disappointing, and while scientists have been able to address problems such as active immune suppression and evasion mechanisms of the tumour, some DC therapy-related aspects contributing to the limited clinical efficacy of DC therapy remain to be solved: the choice of the antigen, the method of loading, and, above all, the type of DCs used. Access to the full spectrum of DCs is limited and many subsets known to be very effective simply are not accessible as they can be derived from the patients only in very low quantities.

As a result, sentiment has switched to approaches viewed as more promising, such as checkpoint inhibitors or chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells.

Exciting advances with iPSCs

However, thanks to the recent advances made with induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) interest in these vaccines has been renewed. iPSCs can be induced to produce dendritic cells and this provides an opportunity for the rational design of DC vaccines displaying additional functionality via genetic engineering technologies. As iPSCs also open up the possibility for the mass production of large numbers of high-quality iPSC-derived DCs, it is now possible to design next generation DC vaccines from engineered DCs.

Moreover, iPSCs also allow for the production of DC subsets that are not accessible as yet for therapeutic development because sufficient quantities could not be obtained. Examples are DCs facilitating anti-viral responses and a certain subset called CD141+ specialised on cross-presentation of antigens. The CD141+ subset, which is found in very low abundance in vivo, is of particular interest for cancer therapy as it induces optimal cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses. Thanks to iPSC, these subsets now can be produced under cGMP conditions in bulk quantities.

Off-the-shelf cancer vaccines?

All in all, these advances may provide the opportunity to design off-the-shelf DC products suitable for cancer vaccines.

Evotec therefore has invested in British immune oncology company OXvax Ltd., a spin-out from the University of Oxford focused on the development of an advanced next-generation dendritic cell vaccine platform for the treatment of solid cancers. The company is pioneering the use of iPSCs as a novel source of CD141+ dendritic cells (DC) and is based on intellectual property from the Fairchild laboratory at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology. OXvax’s technology addresses, among others, the low cross-presentation and the T-cell activation problems of past DC-based cancer treatments. The platform enables the manufacture at scale of an off-the-shelf, highly potent vaccine which addresses the major limitations that have frustrated cancer vaccine development in the past. If the approach is successful in oncology, it can also be expanded to other therapeutic areas, e.g. viral infections.

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Tags: Oncology, immuno-oncology, Blog, Biologics

BraYn conference 2021

Posted by Evotec on Sep 20, 2021 10:42:44 AM

Date: 20th - 22nd October 2021

Location: Pisa, Italy (Officine Garibaldi) 

Attendees: Manuela Medelin 

BraYn stands for “Brainstorming Research Assembly for Young Neuroscientists”. It is an initiative which aims to create a congress specifically intended for young researchers under the age of 40 working in the field of Neuroscience. 

Learn more about the 2021 BraYn conference

Tags: Events, Neuroscience, Evotec

Neurodegenerative Diseases - New Treatment Approaches with Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Posted by Evotec on Sep 17, 2021 10:50:48 AM

The challenge of neurodegenerative diseases

In the context of an aging population, neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson´s disease or Alzheimer´s disease have become a major health problem in Western countries.
The global market size for neurodegenerative diseases drugs was estimated at USD 35 billion in 2018 and is projected to reach USD 63 billion by the end of 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of 7.2% (source: Fortune Business Insights).

Developing treatments for neurodegenerative diseases comes with a number of challenges: The underlying causes, diseases mechanisms and progression of disorders affecting the central nervous system have not yet been fully understood. This results in much higher drug failure rates as compared to other fields, making the development of novel therapeutics for neurodegenerative disease very time and cost intensive. Approved drugs only offer short-term improvement of the patients’ symptoms, so there is a huge unmet medical need for innovative therapies that slow down or ideally revert disease progression.

New treatment approaches urgently needed

In response to the high attrition rates, R&D efforts to unveil the mechanism of neurodegenerative diseases have gained increasing attention. Evotec has a strong commitment to developing novel therapeutic options in neurodegeneration for more than a decade. In our long-standing collaboration with Celgene (now Bristol Myers Squibb) we have set out to establish human induced pluripotent stem cell-based disease models to discover novel disease-modifying treatments for a broad range of neurodegenerative diseases.

What are induced pluripotent stem cells?
Induced pluripotent stem cells (also known as iPS cells or iPSCs) are a type of pluripotent stem cell that can be generated directly from the patient’s somatic cells through reprogramming. They can be propagated indefinitely and give rise to almost every cell type in the body (such as neurons, heart, pancreatic and liver cells) thereby presenting unprecedented opportunities to model human disease pathology.

Over the past decade, Evotec has built an industrialised iPSC infrastructure that represents one of the largest and most sophisticated iPSC platforms in the industry. It comprises multiple different cell types to investigate disease-relevant phenotypes, translatable biomarkers and therapeutic targets. Evotec’s iPSC platform has continuously been optimized for increased throughput, reproducibility and robustness to provide large-scale cultures of iPSC derived cells for disease modeling, drug discovery and cell therapy. Moreover, it is closely connected with our PanOmics and PanHunter platforms to determine molecular disease signatures that may aid in stratification of patients and clinical trial success.

Evotec’s iPSC platform has been developed in collaboration with top-tier academic and industrial partners such as the CHDI Foundation, the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Centogene, CENSO Biotechnologies (now Axol Bioscience), Fraunhofer IME-SP, Reprocell, Pancella, the University of Tübingen – and more recently - Sartorius and Curexsys. The Company´s goal is to build a proprietary pipeline of first-in-class therapeutic agents for a broad range of different diseases with high medical need, including neurodegenerative disorders, to ultimately extend and improve the lives of millions of patients and their families worldwide.

READ ABOUT OUR IPSC CAPABILITIES
READ ABOUT OUR BMS COLLABORATION

Tags: Drug Discovery, Neuroscience, IPSC, Induced pluripotent stem cells, Blog, In vitro Biology

PET Tracer Candidate for Imaging Mutant Huntingtin Aggregates

Posted by Evotec on Sep 13, 2021 8:09:42 PM

Mutant huntingtin (mHTT) protein has been implicated in neuronal degeneration in Huntington's Disease.

In this publication, we focus on:

  • a background to the inherited neurodegenerative disorder, Huntington's Disease, including the impact of the mutant huntingtin (mHTT) gene
  • a discussion of the use of positron emission tomography (PET) to monitor disease progression
  • the identification of a novel ligand CHDI-626 which binds to mHTT aggregates

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Tags: Neuroscience, Articles & Whitepapers, In vitro Biology, In vivo Pharmacology