Retreat powepoint - Four Corners Research Alliance
Download
Report
Transcript Retreat powepoint - Four Corners Research Alliance
Drug Discovery and
Delivery/
3
Bioprocessing (D B)
4 Corners Alliance
March 8-9, 2007
Kansas City
Group Expertise
Bruce Schultz: Anatomy & Physiology—KSU
Target identification
Drug optimization
Kevin Van Cott: Bioprocessing Facility—NU
Protein to Phase I trials
Purification, characterization, etc.
cGMP pilot plant (10,000 sq.ft. due 2007)
Small biotechs/large pharma/NIH/DoD
Vaccines, therapeutics
Works with Russ Middaugh at KU
All money staff…limits pro bono work
Group Expertise (cont.)
Kathy Roby: Anatomy & cell biology/KU
Cancer Center—KUMC
Transition to clinical trials
Ovarian cancer
Efficacy testing
No GLP/GMP = limitation
Scott Weir: leader and promotion of
collaboration
Drug to clinical trial pathway
Group Expertise (cont.)
Charles Decedue: Higuchi Bioscience
Center--KU
Drug discovery & development
Lead compound to Phase I clinical trials
Drugs on market
Group Expertise (cont.)
Robert Powers: Structural biology, NMR,
bioinformatics—NU
Small molecule library
Robert came from the pharmaceutical
industry (Wyeth)
Drug discovery/design
Metabolomics
High throughput NMR
NMR/mass spec technique (100’s a day)
Group Expertise (cont.)
Jeff Aube: medicinal chemistry, NIH
CMLD Center—KU
“Molecules are us.”
Collaborates with bioscientists
Minnesota, Iowa State, and UMKC
collaborators
High throughput screening center
120,000
compound library
KU Pharmacy ranks #3 in NIH funding
Group Expertise (cont.)
Wynn Volkert: Radiopharmaceutical
Science Institute—MU
Largest research reactor in the US
Radioisotopes
All domestic P32, etc.
Isotopes useful for therapy
NCI in vivo cellular and imaging center
Radio labeling
Peptides
Identifiable target vectors…use radio isotopes?
George Smith—large phage display library
17 tesla small bore magnet
Group Expertise (cont.)
Dave VanderVelde: NMR Facility—KU
800 MHz NMR…only in area until MU’s up
Smaller instruments for special uses
Natural products
High throughput screening
Solid state NMR
Group Expertise (cont.)
Joe Tash: male contraceptive--KUMC
Collaboration with KULC and Minnesota
MC developed from anti-cancer agent
Derivatives into library and anti-cancer
candidates
Duke plus other universities
Came because the life science group was
crowded and we “looked like a nice bunch”
10.4 tesla small bore magnet in Hoglund
imaging center
Group Expertise (cont.)
Pat Dussault: synthetic organic
chemist—NU
Anti-malarials
Therapeutics for fungal infections
Steve DiMagno
Not present. Stuck in the bioenergy
session.
Imaging techniques
PET
General Observations
Having the vet schools in the alliance
Swine at MU
Collaborate on compound management
Working issues with remote
instrumentation, e.g. mice and small
bore magnets
NIH has an R01 oriented culture
Difficulty in putting together a big idea
General Observations (cont.)
Realistic outcome = program project at
NIH
Grand Challenges
Targeted therapy (molecule, tissue, tumor)
Individualized therapy
Identification of new novel targets
“Me too” approach of big pharma leaving potential
targets behind (plus “me too” drugs)
Human genome project => drug targets
Infectious diseases
Big pharma won’t touch
Role for universities
Gates Foundation
Grand Challenges (cont.)
Expression regulation
Preventative medicine
Theoretical no. of possible compounds > no. of
atoms in universe
Can you really sample the space?
Other ways to search/screen molecule candidates?
High price of pharmaceuticals
Reduce expenses getting to Phase I
Reduce the failure rate, e.g. novel tox technique
Grand Challenges (cont.)
Two most common failures in the clinic
Efficacy
Toxicity
Challenge: find the 25 hERG like tests
for toxicity, ones with a history
Theme for the Alliance
No. 1: Infectious Agents
Pharma has abandoned
Third world
Focus on humans
Pick a disease?
Don’t/can’t compete with big pharma
Universities
KU(LC/MC)-molecules, natural products, probes
MU-technology, radio labeling, molecular imaging
NU-focus on entire organism, small molecule
screening
KSU-looking across species, animal/tissue models
Theme for the Alliance
No. 1: Infectious Agents (cont.)
Translational research
Getting to Phase I clinical trials
Collaborate on translation
Economic development
Theme for the Alliance
No. 2: General Screening for Toxicity
Reduce the failure rate
Animal and cell model development
Universities
KULC/KUMC--Pharm & Tox
NU—metabolomics
MU—technology
Foundations
Not an existing strength
Longer term goal
Goals
Research
Spin off companies
Improving health of the public
Infectious disease center…part of the
Alliance
NBAF support to one of the three
Alliance locations
Large-scale Infrastructure
Needs
GLP
Centralized screening facility?
Large structured core service?
Funding Opportunities
Gates Foundation
Priorities are infectious diseases
Gates not interested in basic research
Will fund distribution of the cure
Gates gave UCSF $20 million to research
anti-diarrheals (Bill Gates connection to PI)
DARPA
Pre-symptomatic detection of disease
Quantum leap development
Funding Opportunities (cont.)
CDC
MRCE (Wash. U.)
For Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, and
Cleveland
Up to $1.5 million
Vaccines
An Opportunity
Personalized medicine
Won’t be big pharma
Small boutique companies spun out of
universities
More dreaming
Other Infectious Disease
Centers
Emory?
UW—focused on pediatric diseases
Who would fund such a center?
Who will play?
KU Lawrence, KUMC, NU, MU, KSU
Expertise and Strength of
Each Participant
Infectious diseases being researched
Tularemia
HIV
Botulism
Gram positive (sepsis)
West Nile
E. coli
Salmonella
Expertise and Strength of
Each Participant (cont.)
Technology/process facilities
Faculty research
Needs, Weaknesses, or
Conflicts
Surely you joke!
Lack of a major funding source
Building a portfolio a la Russ Middaugh
at KU is difficult
Money
Cooperative spirit a plus
Likely Significant Competitors
Nobody and everybody
Biotech startups
What Value does the Alliance
Add?
Infectious disease research
Proposals in name of the Alliance
Shared campus resources
People
Needed Support
Merged seed funds for Alliance specific
collaborations
GMP
Out source
Models for lead development
Ad hoc seed funding
Core facility at one campus
Money from the Alliance (similar to way
core facilities are funded on campus)
Needed Support (cont.)
Alliance Translational Fund
Investment fund
State organizations?
Federal support?
Paid leader of the effort
Money
Cash: $1,000,000 up front
Annual:
Salary/fringe = $200,000 per year (leader)
Cores = $250,000 per core
Needed Support (cont.)
Needed actions agreed to
4 Corners Infectious Disease meeting
Grad student posters, etc.
Funding opportunities
Provide pooled seed funds to be awarded
at meeting
Communications
Pooled Political Capital
Yes
Action Plan
Leadership
Scott Weir’s long-lost twin
Person designated on each campus
Outcomes/decisions agreed to
Form small groups of faculty participants
4 Corners Infectious Disease Alliance
Work on model MOU, MTA, fees, etc.
Start with two faculty partnerships for
example and build up
Action Plan (cont.)
Who will carry out the plan?
The Group?
Who will monitor and prompt success?
Alliance VPR steering committee
Action Plan (cont.)
Need Updated List of Expertise from the
campuses
Update lists of expertise and make
available
Need wider net
Target the response—infectious diseases
Vision
Operate through 4 Corners Alliance
Four Corners Infectious Disease Alliance
(4CIDA)
Certain instruments/facilities declared
part of Alliance
On-campus rates charged to Alliance
members
Proposals submitted in the name of the
Alliance
Vision (cont.)
Alliance drug discovery core facilities
Chemical libraries
Alliance high throughput screening
Unique animal models
Protein production facilities
Biotech facilities
Pre-clinical formulation
Instruments available locally
Need: Generic Material Transfer Agreement
(MTA) for the Alliance
Vision (cont.)
Alliance will naturally spread to other
drug discovery areas
Need focus to get it started
Summary Description of
Themes/Topics Selected
Infectious diseases
Not limited in reality
Can do other drug discovery efforts
Pathway to clinical trials