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News from Medical
News Today Feb. 26, 2007
Brandeis
And Brigham And Women's Hospital License Technology For Gaucher's To
Amicus Therapeutics
Main Category: Biology / Biochemistry
Brandeis University and Brigham and Women's Hospital have agreed to
grant a license option to Amicus Therapeutics for a
jointly-developed novel pharmaceutical technology that could be
instrumental in finding new treatments for Gaucher Disease.
Biochemists Raquel Lieberman, Gregory Petsko and Dagmar Ringe, each
affiliated with both Brandeis and Brigham and Women's, invented a
patentable technology related to the structure of acid
beta-glucosidase, also known as GCase, and methods for identifying
therapeutic agents. In collaboration with scientists at Amicus
Therapeutics, the inventors discovered that GCase, the protein that
is mutated in
Gaucher Disease, undergoes a structural change near its
active site upon binding to a small molecule that is in clinical
trials for the treatment of the disease.
One emerging type of treatment for genetic diseases such as Gaucher
Disease involves the use of small molecules known as pharmacological
chaperones, which are proposed to help mutated, less stable proteins
perform their normal function in the cells of patients with the
disease. The identification of appropriate pharmacological
chaperones and understanding how they work in the body are aided by
knowing the structure of the target protein under different
conditions and when bound to the small molecule.
Cranbury, New Jersey-based Amicus Therapeutics, which specializes in
the discovery and development of pharmacological chaperones, will
use this structure of GCase to look for additional small molecules
that can keep the protein properly folded and stabilized.
"This work helps explain the way pharmacological chaperones work to
stabilize proteins that are rendered less stable by genetic
mutations in diseases such as Gaucher, Anderson-Fabry, and other
genetic disorders," explained Petsko, the Gyula and Katica Tauber
Professor of Biochemistry and Chemistry, Brandeis University and
Adjunct Professor, Department of Neurology and Center for Neurologic
Diseases, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School. "With
this information it may be possible to use the pharmacological
chaperone strategy in other diseases."
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About Gaucher Disease
Gaucher Disease is an often devastating genetic disorder that may
afflict up to one in every five hundred persons, but as many as one
in fifteen in the Ashkenazi Jewish population. Gaucher Disease is an
inborn error of metabolism that arises from the inability of cells
to hydrolyze a particular lipid, leading to liver dysfunction and
damage to the spleen and skeleton, among other serious problems.
Although there are dozens of genetic mutations known to cause
Gaucher Disease, just four mutations are responsible for 95 percent
of the cases among Ashkenazi Jews and 50 percent of the cases in the
general population.
About Amicus Therapeutics
Amicus Therapeutics is a biopharmaceutical company developing novel,
oral therapeutics known as pharmacological chaperones for the
treatment of a range of human genetic diseases. Pharmacological
chaperone technology involves the use of small molecules to restore
or improve biological activity in cells by selectively binding to
misfolded proteins caused by genetic mutations. Amicus is initially
targeting lysosomal storage disorders, which are severe, chronic
genetic diseases with unmet medical needs. Amicus is currently
conducting Phase 2 clinical trials for its lead compound, Amigal™,
for Fabry disease, has completed Phase 1 clinical trials of AT2101
for Gaucher disease and is conducting Phase 1 clinical trials of
AT2220 for Pompe disease.
Contact: Laura Gardner
Brandeis
University
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