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Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Chemistry Nobel goes to new way to construct molecules, speeding up drug development

 Scientists Benjamin List and David MacMillan won the Nobel Prize in chemistry Wednesday for discovering a new way to construct molecules. By allowing chemical reactions to happen faster, with fewer steps, their technique, known as asymmetric organocatalysis, has been instrumental in drug development and has allowed chemistry to become more energy efficient and thus “greener.”

It’s all about catalysts. These are substances that speed up the rate of a chemical reaction without themselves being consumed as part of the final product. Traditionally, catalysts were either metals or enzymes. But as members of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry pointed out in a press conference on Wednesday morning in Stockholm, all of that changed around 2000, when List — now a director at the Max Planck Institute for Coal Research — and MacMillan — a distinguished university professor of chemistry at Princeton — independently helped develop a way to use small organic molecules as catalysts, which could more efficiently forge together the building blocks that make up compounds.

“When I did this experiment, I thought maybe it’s a stupid idea or maybe somebody has tried it already,” said List, when he was reached by phone at the press conference. It was only when it worked that he realized how big this discovery could potentially be.

One of the challenges in building molecules is that, like our hands, they can be non-identical mirror images of each other. The “left-hand” version of a molecule can have a different effect on the human body than the “right-hand” version; the building blocks might be identical, but their architectural orientation changes their physiological effect. The difference between the smell of orange and the smell of lemon, for instance, is simply a question of the “handedness” of the molecule.

Before the early 2000s, it wasn’t unheard of for certain drugs to include both the left-handed and right-handed versions of a molecule — even though one half might not actually be beneficial, and might potentially have side effects, Florence Wagner, associate director of the center for the development of therapeutics at the Broad Institute, told STAT. “If you think about a patient taking a pill, half of it is useless,” she said.

Now, though, that’s very rare. “Thanks to this particular discovery and other discoveries in the world of asymmetric chemistry,” Wagner said, “we are able to control those reactions so we are able to get one more specific molecule.”

A chemist can very precisely forge a molecule with the intended “handedness” using a metal or an enzyme as a catalyst, but it can be a complex proposition.

Inside our bodies, enzymes drive chemical reactions all the time. But as molecules go, enzymes are hulking and intricate. They can be expensive and hard to keep in the right shape throughout an experiment. “It requires more art, more technique, in order to carry the reaction out,” explained H. N. Cheng, president of the American Chemical Society, in an interview.

Likewise, metals pose certain challenges, too. They can be rare and pricey — and toxic to boot. They might end up as waste products once an experiment is done. Plus, some easily react with common molecules, making them hard to use in an industrial lab.

“At the end of the day, if you can take a simple organic molecule that is widespread, readily available, cheap, nontoxic and perform a transformation, it’s golden, right?” said Stellios Arseniyadis, associate professor of organic chemistry at Queen Mary University of London. That doesn’t mean this technique has replaced those using metals or enzymes. “It’s not like, ‘Cool, we’ve got organocatalysis, we’re only going to do organocatalysis.’ This is a complementary tool.”

This might not seem all that scintillating, as scientific discoveries go. To a chemist, though, it’s now hard to imagine the field without this. “It’s almost like if you have a toolbox that is missing a screwdriver, if you don’t have that, there’s a lot of things you cannot do,” said Wagner.

“This changed our everyday,” said Arseniyadis, adding that there were other important players in the field, too. “The discovery of organocatalysis, is by no means because of Ben List and David MacMillan, but in determining what the field has become, these guys are huge protagonists.”

“If I were … an astronomer, I can only study nature, I can only take observations of stars, I cannot change them,” Cheng said. “In chemistry, I can change things, I can synthesize molecules, I can customize molecules, I can modify molecules. That’s the exciting part, being able to manipulate nature. That’s why I think, for chemists, this is exciting.”

List and MacMillan — both born in 1968, the former in Germany, the latter in the U.K. — will share 10 million Swedish kronor, or about $1.35 million. Their names are added to a list of chemistry Nobel winners that includes 188 people, only seven of whom are women.

Many Nobel watchers had had their money on the scientists behind mRNA vaccines — a technique that had shifted the course of the pandemic and allowed in-person press conferences to take place at all. But as committee member Pernilla Wittung Stafshede put it at the press conference, “This is an extremely important topic we’re thinking about, but there will be more years, more Nobel Prizes.”

https://www.statnews.com/2021/10/06/nobel-prize-chemistry-new-way-construct-molecules/

Feds eye quadrupling rapid testing supply by December

 The White House said Wednesday that the country's supply of at-home rapid COVID-19 tests is on track to quadruple by December amid a flurry of new announcements.

President Biden announced a $2 billion investment in rapid testing, which can deliver results in as little as 15 minutes, in September, which a White House official said was already on track to double capacity. The Food and Drug Administration's authorization of a new rapid test from ACON Laboratories on Monday, as well as an additional $1 billion investment being announced Wednesday, will further increase capacity, the official said.

The moves are a burst of activity in an area where many experts have been calling for greater action for more than a year. Some experts have criticized the FDA, saying it has been too cautious and conservative in authorizing new rapid tests.

Joseph Allen, a professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, tweeted Wednesday that rapid testing "will go down as THE epic failure of this pandemic."

"My question: the utility of rapid tests was so obvious for over a year, why is this just getting attention now?" he added.

The Biden administration had been under pressure to take greater action, with several senators pressing Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra at a hearing last week on the much greater availability of cheap rapid tests in other countries.

"Why are tests in the United States so much more expensive than in countries like Germany or the U.K. or India?" Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) said at the hearing.

With the new announcements, the White House official said production of rapid tests will rise from about 30 million per month to 200 million per month starting in December and that the price is expected to fall as well.

The White House will also announce Wednesday that it is doubling its commitment from 10,000 local pharmacies providing free testing to 20,000 pharmacies. That will bring the total number of free testing sites to 30,000, when non-pharmacy sites are also included. 

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/575511-white-house-moves-to-quadruple-rapid-testing-supply-by-december

Takeda slams brakes on narcolepsy program, stops 2 studies early on safety signal

 Takeda has hit the brakes hard on its narcolepsy program in response to a safety signal, stopping its two midphase clinical trials months before their planned completion dates. 

Japan-based Takeda saw the safety signal in phase 2 clinical trials of TAK-994, an oral orexin agonist designed to increase wakefulness. Takeda moved the prospect into a phase 2 clinical trial in narcolepsy patients early in 2020 before going on to start a second misphase study and pick up a breakthrough designation from the FDA this year.

Now, the program has come screeching to a halt. Takeda disclosed little in its statement, saying only that it has suspended dosing and stopped the phase 2 trials early as “an immediate precautionary measure” in response to a safety signal seen in the studies. 

According to ClinicalTrials.gov, the two studies were still enrolling subjects as of late last month with the goal of collectively recruiting more than 300 patients. ClinicalTrials.gov lists January and April 2022 as the completion dates of the two studies. Takeda said stopping the studies early will support “the timely interpretation of the benefit/risk profile of TAK-994” and identification of next steps.

Details of the safety signal and whether it has implications for the broader class of orexin agonists are yet to emerge. Takeda’s interest in the target is underpinned by evidence linking narcolepsy to the loss of orexin neurons in the brain. Providing orexin replacement could increase wakefulness, making the receptor relevant to narcolepsy and other conditions such as obstructive sleep apnea.

Takeda put an intravenous orexin type-2 receptor agonist, TAK-925, through a clutch of early-phase clinical trials from 2017 to 2020 but has turned its attention to oral candidates in recent years. The safety signal throws the future of TAK-994 into doubt, but Takeda said it remains committed to orexin, pointing to the oral phase 1 candidate TAK-861 as an asset it is taking forward. 

https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/takeda-slams-brakes-narcolepsy-program-stopping-2-studies-early-response-to-safety-signal

Biogen, mRNA players on Merck's M&A shortlist

 Merck & Co. remains in a deal-hunting mode despite its recent $11.5 billion acquisition for Acceleron. Merck CEO Rob Davis is actively piecing together a plan for life after Keytruda, and the company seems to already have a list of potential targets.

Davis, who recently rose to the top job after overseeing Merck’s business development efforts as chief financial officer, told the Financial Times he's still looking for deals to diversify the company’s portfolio beyond Keytruda before the immuno-oncology megablockbuster’s patent cliff around 2028.

“I’m confident we have the firepower, the capability, the focus and urgency to do that,” Davis said, as quoted by the newspaper. “This is the first step on a journey to continue to build out our pipeline so that we have the ability to grow sustainably well into the next decade … We won’t be limited by the balance sheet.”

The comment followed the same tone from Davis during an investors’ call about the Acceleron deal last week, when he said Merck is “well-positioned financially to complete this transaction or maintaining our ability to pursue additional opportunities,” and that “business development remains an important priority for Merck.”

It begs the question: Where is Merck looking next?

Mirati Therapeutics is one target on Merck’s M&A shortlist, FT reported, citing people briefed on the matter. The California biotech is a frontrunner in the hot KRAS race; its adagrasib is close behind Amgen’s first-in-class Lumakras. At the recent ESMO 2021 event, Mirati reported encouraging data in non-small cell lung cancer and colorectal cancer that look competitive.

With a potential FDA filing for adagrasib expected later this year, SVB Leerink analyst Andrew Berens has projected combined peak U.S. and EU sales for the KRAS inhibitor in the two tumor types at $3.84 billion.

In addition, Merck could also go after Strand Therapeutics and Arcturus Therapeutics, the sources told FT. Both biotechs are working on mRNA-based products, a hot area fueled by the success of mRNA vaccines for COVID-19.

Strand recently raised $52 million to advance its mRNA therapeutics for cancer. Arcturus has a proprietary lipid nanoparticle delivery system for genetic materials, with a pipeline covering vaccines for COVID and influenza, as well as drugs for cystic fibrosis and liver disease. Merck had in January nixed two internal COVID vaccine programs—which were part of its acquisition of Themis—on the back of lackluster immune response data.

All those three biotechs could be good fits for Merck as the company boasts industry-leading positions in cancer and vaccines.

But heavy is the head that wears the immuno-oncology crown. As Keytruda is projected to reach $27 billion in 2026 sales according to Evaluate Pharma, it will likely take multiple new products to fill its revenue gap after the patent cliff.

Before Acceleron, Merck had already made several M&A moves. These include the $1.1 billion Peloton Therapeutics buy, the $2.7 billion purchase of ArQule and a $2.75 billion deal for VelosBio.

Some of the companies Merck is targeting may be too early—and therefore risky—in their drug development work. And for Acceleron, Merck is buying a potential first-in-class pulmonary arterial hypertension med, sotatercept, which bears peak sales expectations of around $2 billion, with a potential FDA approval in 2024.

Biogen, which is struggling with the U.S. launch of its Alzheimer’s disease drug Aduhelm, could also become a potential target for Merck, FT reported, citing people close to Merck.

The addition of the Big Biotech could offer an immediate, huge revenue boost, but SVB Leerink analyst Daina Graybosch told the newspaper that Merck probably won’t shoot for such a large transaction.

“They don’t do things to make a big splash and in terms of doing deals like Acceleron they won’t overpay … That is the culture at Merck and I don’t see the new leadership changing that,” Graybosch said, as quoted by FT.

But first, Merck needs to close the Acceleron deal, which is facing some investor pushback on the Acceleron side.

In the meantime, the recent readout for Ridgeback Biotherapeutics-partnered oral COVID-19 drug molnupiravir could open up a government order flow of at least $10 billion by 2025, plus potential longer-term revenues from stockpiling, Graybosch said in a note Friday. A potential CDC recommendation for pneumococcal vaccine Vaxneuvance could also give Merck an additional revenue source.

https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/biogen-mirati-mrna-players-merck-s-m-a-shortlist-as-ceo-still-hungry-for-deals-after-11-5b

OpGen: Update on cash, securities registration

 

  • Preliminary Total Revenue for Q3 2021 was approximately $1.2 million

  • Cash as of September 30, 2021 was approximately $25.4 million, up significantly from the $13.4 million at year-end 2020

  • OpGen concluded search and expects to announce new CFO once appointment has been formalized

  • OpGen received 510(k) FDA clearance for its Acuitas AMR Gene Panel

  • OpGen initiated prospective multicenter clinical trial in the U.S. for the Unyvero UTI application

  • OpGen concluded search and expects to announce new CFO once appointment has been formalized

  • OpGen announced data from prospective randomized controlled multicenter clinical study using the Unyvero HPN panel for hospitalized patients with suspicion of pneumonia

  • OpGen filed a universal shelf registration statement on Form S-3 for up to $ 150 million

  • OpGen achieved key milestone in Unyvero A30 RQ development program with 10 systems now available for verification and validation testing which is ongoing

  • OpGen subsidiary Ares Genetics completed another project with Sandoz and continued commercial roll-out and growth of the ARESiss isolate sequencing service business

Enanta Covid treatment preclinical data set for confab session

 Enanta Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:ENTA), a clinical stage biotechnology company dedicated to creating small molecule drugs for viral infections and liver diseases, today announced that new preclinical data for EDP-235, its lead oral protease inhibitor specifically designed for the treatment of COVID-19, will be presented at the International Society for Influenza and Other Respiratory Virus Diseases (ISIRV)-World Health Organization Virtual Conference (WHO): COVID-19, Influenza and RSV: Surveillance-Informed Prevention and Treatment. The conference is being held virtually on October 19 – October 21, 2021.

Poster Presentation:
Date: October 19, 2021
Time: 8:00 a.m. CET
Poster #120: "EDP-235, A Potential Oral, Once-Daily Antiviral Treatment and Preventative for COVID-19"
PresenterLi-Juan Jiang, Ph.D.

Posters will be available to view on the conference platform during the conference and for three months thereafter. Further information about the ISIRV-WHO Virtual Conference 2021 can be found here.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/preclinical-data-edp-235-enanta-121600817.html

Acer Says FDA Accepts NDA for ACER-001 in Urea-Cycle Disorders

 Acer Therapeutics Inc. and collaboration partner Relief Therapeutics Holding SA said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration accepted for filing the new drug application for ACER-001 in urea-cycle disorders.

The FDA assigned a Prescription Drug User Fee Act target action date of June 5, 2022.

UCDs are a group of disorders caused by genetic mutations that result in a deficiency in one of the six enzymes that catalyze the urea cycle. That can lead to an excess accumulation of ammonia in the bloodstream, or hyperammonemia. Acute hyperammonemia can cause lethargy, somnolence, coma, and multi-organ failure, while chronic hyperammonemia can lead to headaches, confusion, lethargy, failure to thrive, behavioral changes, and learning and cognitive deficits.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ACER-THERAPEUTICS-INC-37866676/news/Acer-Says-FDA-Accepts-NDA-for-ACER-001-in-Urea-Cycle-Disorders-Shares-Up-36616559/