R43AG072965
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Development of Reprogramming Ligands for Menopausal Hormone Therapy - Project Summary/Abstract
Health issues facing menopausal women are becoming much more prevalent due to their increasing longevity. Well-recognized short-term symptoms, such as hot flashes, sleep disturbances, and mood swings, lead to lower quality of life and loss of work productivity.
Prolonged estrogen deficiency during menopause is associated with an increased incidence of chronic diseases, such as osteoporosis, obesity, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular disease. Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) has been used to alleviate short-term menopausal symptoms and prevent some chronic conditions.
The Women's Health Initiative (WHI) found that the risk of long-term treatment outweighed the benefits. The use of MHT has dropped dramatically after the results of the WHI trial were reported. It is now approved to treat hot flashes and vaginal symptoms but not for chronic disease prevention. MHT is currently recommended for short-term use of 5 years.
Countless menopausal women continue to wait anxiously for a safe long-term MHT to improve their quality of life and health. Women who have vasomotor symptoms beyond 5 years and a history of low bone density, osteoporosis, and prediabetes would greatly benefit from long-term MHT.
Unfortunately for menopausal women, it is unlikely that the major pharmaceutical companies will have a long-term MHT product soon based on their longstanding pursuit of estrogen agonists and antagonists, which bind to the estradiol (E2) binding pocket. Nearly 80 years after MHT was approved, it is clear that this strategy is not working since no long-term MHT is available.
We decided to pursue a different approach by screening drugs that act synergistically with E2 rather than acting as an agonist or antagonist. We discovered a class of compounds termed Estrogen Receptor Alpha (ERA) Reprogramming Coligands that reprogram the effects of E2 on gene expression and cell proliferation.
We found that the combination of the reprogramming drug and E2 regulates genes that are not altered by the reprogramming drug or E2 alone, demonstrating that the combination induces a new set of genes. The reprogramming coligand blocked the proliferation of human breast cancer cells and growth of the mouse uterus in response to E2.
Based on these findings, our objective is to replace the progestin component in MHT with a reprogramming coligand and add it to the estrogen-alone formulation to generate an E2/coligand combination. Our hypothesis is that an E2/coligand combination will be safer than the current estrogen-alone and estrogen/progestin MHT formulations on the market for short-term menopausal symptoms and can be used as long-term therapy to prevent chronic conditions associated with menopause.
In this proposal, we will prepare synthetic analogs of our prototype reprogramming coligand and identify the best analogs to combine with E2 for future testing in animal models and other preclinical studies required for clinical development.
Health issues facing menopausal women are becoming much more prevalent due to their increasing longevity. Well-recognized short-term symptoms, such as hot flashes, sleep disturbances, and mood swings, lead to lower quality of life and loss of work productivity.
Prolonged estrogen deficiency during menopause is associated with an increased incidence of chronic diseases, such as osteoporosis, obesity, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular disease. Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) has been used to alleviate short-term menopausal symptoms and prevent some chronic conditions.
The Women's Health Initiative (WHI) found that the risk of long-term treatment outweighed the benefits. The use of MHT has dropped dramatically after the results of the WHI trial were reported. It is now approved to treat hot flashes and vaginal symptoms but not for chronic disease prevention. MHT is currently recommended for short-term use of 5 years.
Countless menopausal women continue to wait anxiously for a safe long-term MHT to improve their quality of life and health. Women who have vasomotor symptoms beyond 5 years and a history of low bone density, osteoporosis, and prediabetes would greatly benefit from long-term MHT.
Unfortunately for menopausal women, it is unlikely that the major pharmaceutical companies will have a long-term MHT product soon based on their longstanding pursuit of estrogen agonists and antagonists, which bind to the estradiol (E2) binding pocket. Nearly 80 years after MHT was approved, it is clear that this strategy is not working since no long-term MHT is available.
We decided to pursue a different approach by screening drugs that act synergistically with E2 rather than acting as an agonist or antagonist. We discovered a class of compounds termed Estrogen Receptor Alpha (ERA) Reprogramming Coligands that reprogram the effects of E2 on gene expression and cell proliferation.
We found that the combination of the reprogramming drug and E2 regulates genes that are not altered by the reprogramming drug or E2 alone, demonstrating that the combination induces a new set of genes. The reprogramming coligand blocked the proliferation of human breast cancer cells and growth of the mouse uterus in response to E2.
Based on these findings, our objective is to replace the progestin component in MHT with a reprogramming coligand and add it to the estrogen-alone formulation to generate an E2/coligand combination. Our hypothesis is that an E2/coligand combination will be safer than the current estrogen-alone and estrogen/progestin MHT formulations on the market for short-term menopausal symptoms and can be used as long-term therapy to prevent chronic conditions associated with menopause.
In this proposal, we will prepare synthetic analogs of our prototype reprogramming coligand and identify the best analogs to combine with E2 for future testing in animal models and other preclinical studies required for clinical development.
Awardee
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
California
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have decreased from $255,543 to $254,810.
Iaterion was awarded
Project Grant R43AG072965
worth $254,810
from National Institute on Aging in September 2021 with work to be completed primarily in California United States.
The grant
has a duration of 1 year and
was awarded through assistance program 93.866 Aging Research.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity PHS 2020-2 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed).
SBIR Details
Research Type
SBIR Phase I
Title
Development of reprogramming ligands for menopausal hormone therapy
Abstract
Project Summary/Abstract Health issues facing menopausal women are becoming much more prevalent due to their increasing longevity. Well-recognized short-term symptoms, such as hot flashes, sleep disturbances and mood swings lead to lower quality of life and loss of work productivity. Prolonged estrogen deficiency during menopause is associated with an increased incidence of chronic diseases, such as osteoporosis, obesity, diabetes, metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular disease. Menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) has been used to alleviate short-term menopausal symptoms and prevent some chronic conditions. The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) found that the risk of long- term treatment outweighed the benefits. The use of MHT has dropped dramatically after the results of the WHI trial were reported. It is now approved to treat hot flashes and vaginal symptoms, but not for chronic disease prevention. MHT is currently recommended for short-term use of 5 years. Countless menopausal women continue to wait anxiously for a safe long-term MHT to improve their quality of life and health. Women who have vasomotor symptoms beyond 5 years and a history of low bone density, osteoporosis, and prediabetes would greatly benefit from long-term MHT. Unfortunately for menopausal women it is unlikely that the major pharmaceutical companies will have a long-term MHT product soon based on their longstanding pursuit of estrogen agonists and antagonists, which bind to the estradiol (E2) binding pocket. Nearly 80 years after MHT was approved it is clear that this strategy is not working since no long-term MHT is available. We decided to pursue a different approach by screening drugs that act synergistically with E2 rather than acting as an agonist or antagonist. We discovered a class of compounds termed estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) reprogramming coligands that reprogram the effects of E2 on gene expression and cell proliferation. We found that the combination of the reprogramming drug and E2 regulates genes that are not altered by the reprogramming drug or E2 alone, demonstrating that the combination induces a new set of genes. The reprogramming coligand blocked the proliferation of human breast cancer cells and growth of the mouse uterus in response to E2. Based on these findings our objective is to replace the progestin component in MHT with a reprogramming coligand and add it to the estrogen-alone formulation to generate an E2/coligand combination. Our hypothesis is that an E2/coligand combination will be safer than the current estrogen-alone and estrogen/progestin MHT formulations on the market for short-term menopausal symptoms, and can be used as long-term therapy to prevent chronic conditions associated with menopause. In this proposal, we will prepare synthetic analogs of our prototype reprogramming coligand and identify the best analogs to combine with E2 for future testing in animal models and other preclinical studies required for clinical development.Project Narrative Estrogens in menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) can prevent some long-term conditions that occur in postmenopausal women. Current MHT regimens are not approved for long-term treatment because it produces major adverse effects. The objective of this proposal is to develop a safer MHT regimen that can be used for long-term therapy to prevent menopausal symptoms and diseases associated with menopause.
Topic Code
NIA
Solicitation Number
PA20-260
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 7/5/23
Period of Performance
9/1/21
Start Date
8/31/22
End Date
Funding Split
$254.8K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$254.8K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to R43AG072965
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R43AG072965
SAI Number
R43AG072965-2153283016
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Small Business
Awarding Office
75NN00 NIH NATIONAL INSITUTE ON AGING
Funding Office
75NN00 NIH NATIONAL INSITUTE ON AGING
Awardee UEI
KEGPJGAUS5K3
Awardee CAGE
7FY34
Performance District
15
Senators
Dianne Feinstein
Alejandro Padilla
Alejandro Padilla
Representative
Kevin Mullin
Modified: 7/5/23