for Novel, Orally-available Prodrugs for Alzheimer's Disease Dr. Colton at Duke University Medical Center was among the first to publish that early stages of Alzheimer's disease were characterized by an immuno-suppressive condition in the brain (Colton et al. 2006a). As the disease progresses, an immuno-toxic condition is acquired with disease progression so that at post- mortem analysis, both pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory immune mediators are present. In an elegant reduction to practice, Kan et al. (2015) used difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) to show that reduction of immuno- suppressive polyamines resulted in significantly improved learning and memory behavior and reduced Abeta 1- 40 and 1-42 in the CVN-AD mouse model of AD. Town's laboratory (Guillot-Sestier et al. 2015) and Chakrabaty et al. (2015) showed that increasing immuno-suppressive activities was associated with enhanced amyloid plaque formation and worsening cognitive behavior, while removing immuno-suppressive activities appears to mitigate these Alzheimer's-like pathologies. These and other publications provide strong support for the idea that reducing immuno-suppression may be a new and effective therapeutic approach to Alzheimer's disease reduction. Polyamines are immuno-suppressive mediators and polyamine levels increase in AD brains. DFMO is a potent, orally-available irreversible inhibitor of the key enzyme required for polyamine synthesis, Ornithine DeCarboxylase (ODC). Thus, our treatment thesis is to reduce brain polyamine levels to reduce brain immuno-suppression and inhibit and/or stop the development of disease when treatment is initiated at early stages of AD. DFMO is an FDA-approved drug for the treatment of sleeping sickness due to parasitic infection of the brain that is off-patent and no longer marketed, making commercialization a challenge. We have solved this problem by creating novel prodrugs of DFMO that reduce polyamine levels, are orally-available, may not have the same undesirable side-effect profile as DFMO-alone, and are patent-pending (Tavares and Vitek, WO 2016/168118 A1). In Phase 1, we successfully created DFMO-prodrugs and characterized them in vitro. In Phase 2, we are proposing to continue development of DFMO-prodrugs by making additional prodrugs, characterizing them in vitro and in vivo, determining whole animal pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles, and testing them in the CVN-AD mouse model. These additional activites are laying the groundwork for selection of a lead and a backup compound, an important milestone on the critical-path that will be taken into clinical development of Resilio's DFMO-prodrugs for an Alzheimer's indication.

Public Health Relevance

Novel, Orally-available Prodrugs for Alzheimer's Disease Polyamines increase in the brains of Alzheimer's patients to create an immuno-suppressive environment that appears to stimulate disease progression. Difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) is a potent, orally- available, FDA-approved drug that reduces polyamine levels in the brain, and is off-patent. We created novel prodrugs of DFMO that decrease polyamine levels, may have fewer unwanted side-effects and are patentable (Tavares and Vitek, WO 2016/168118 A1), thus enabling commercial investment in this new approach to Alzheimer's therapeutics.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase II (R44)
Project #
5R44AG051285-03
Application #
9550888
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Martin, Zane
Project Start
2015-08-01
Project End
2019-05-31
Budget Start
2018-06-15
Budget End
2019-05-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Resilio Therapeutics, LLC
Department
Type
DUNS #
080291049
City
Durham
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27707