Scientists receive $2.6 million
grant to develop drug for cancer, autoimmune
disease
Partnership among biotech firm, OU-HCOM and OHIO
could spur regional economic growth
By Andrea Gibson
Dec. 4, 2009
The National
Institutes of Health (NIH) has awarded a $2.6
million grant to the Interthyr Corporation to
develop a new drug that potentially could treat
pancreatic cancer and autoimmune diseases such
as diabetes. The project, a partnership with
Ohio University (OHIO), received its funding
through the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act and aims to stimulate economic development
in Ohio.
Interthyr CEO
Leonard Kohn, M.D., who recently retired
as the J.O. Watson Endowed Diabetes Research
Chair at the Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM) and Distinguished
Senior Research Scientist at the Edison
Biotechnology Institute (EBI), will work with an
OHIO research team led by Doug Goetz, Ph.D.,
professor of chemical and biomolecular
engineering, to explore the potential of the
drug. Preliminary lab studies have shown that
the drug can slow the growth of cancer cells and
effectively treat various
autoimmune-inflammatory diseases.
The university
is slated to receive $886,695 to support the
salaries of research faculty, technicians,
students and postdoctoral fellows at work on the
project at OU-HCOM, EBI, the Russ College of
Engineering and Technology, and the College of
Arts and Sciences.
“This grant is
intended to help us develop the drug to the
point where it could advance to phase I/II
clinical trials for pancreatic cancer, in order
to test its safety and efficacy,” Kohn said.
“We’d also like to do a combined trial that
addresses an autoimmune disease such as colitis,
and ideally diabetes.”
The project has
generated interest in the research community
because of the unexpected connection it draws
between autoimmune disease and cancer, said
Kelly McCall, Ph.D., co-principal
investigator on the grant and OU-HCOM assistant
professor of specialty medicine.
“Some of the
molecular mechanisms that play a role in
pathological inflammation also play a role in
cancer,” McCall explained. “Our research takes a
novel approach to therapy by trying to inhibit
the environmental induction of disease
expression rather than genetics.”
Physicians are
eager for advances in the treatment of
pancreatic cancer, one of the deadliest forms of
the disease. The current gold standard
treatment, gemcitibine, only extends life by
about two weeks. McCall said the research team
garnered a large audience at a recent cancer
conference for their presentation on the initial
results of the compound’s effectiveness.
“That shows how
desperate—and excited—everyone is for a
potential new treatment for the disease,” said
Goetz.
The research
team’s drug may have other possible applications
as well, Kohn said. In collaboration with
Mitchell J. Silver, D.O. (’89), F.A.C.C., an
interventional cardiologist with the Ohio Health
Medical Specialty Foundation in Columbus,
several members of the team are exploring
whether the drug can be used as a diagnostic and
therapeutic compound for atherosclerosis.
“This grant is
an excellent example of how Ohio University is
breaking down academic silos to engage in
dynamic interdisciplinary research that can make
a true impact on some of our most important
health and wellness issues,” said Rathindra
Bose, Ph.D., vice president for research,
dean of the Graduate College and OU-COM
professor of biomedical sciences. “A project
like this also can be an important driver of
economic development and job creation in our
region.”
Other OHIO
faculty members involved in the project include
Frank Schwartz, M.D., professor of
specialty medicine, and Ramiro Malgor, M.D.,
assistant professor of biomedical sciences, at
OU-HCOM, and Mark McMills, Ph.D., and Steve
Bergmeier, Ph.D., in the Department of Chemistry
and Biochemistry in the College of Arts and
Sciences.
The project also aims to boost economic growth
in southeastern Ohio. As part of its federal
stimulus funding initiative, the NIH awarded the
grant through its Small Business Technology
Transfer (STTR) program. The program supports
start-up firms that conduct research that has
the potential for commercialization and public
benefit.
OHIO has become
more competitive for such federal grants since
the establishment of the region’s
Entrepreneurial Signature Program, TechGrowth
Ohio, which was funded by the state of Ohio in
2007, said David Wight, interim director of the
OHIO Technology Transfer Office and EBI
director. The program provided the resources for
EBI to provide direct business assistance to
Interthyr and also to hire consultants who
specialize in helping scientists write STTR
grant proposals and prepare commercialization
plans. The consultant’s expertise was an
important component in the development of a
successful proposal, Wight said.
As part of the
regional economic development aims of the
project, Interthyr will move into a
779-square-foot wet lab space in the Innovation
Center, OHIO’s small business incubator that
focuses on biotechnology and high-tech start-up
firms. The space was previously occupied by
Diagnostic Hybrids, Inc., which has graduated
from the Innovation Center and has established a
manufacturing facility in Athens. Interthyr
initially will employ three staff members at the
Innovation Center location, Kohn said.
If the studies
are successful, however, more jobs could be
generated—both here and in northeast Ohio—when
the research moves into early-stage clinical
trials for safety and efficacy, Kohn added.
Interthyr also will work with Ricerca
Biosciences in Concord, Ohio, on aspects of the
project, which could preserve and increase jobs
in that region, he noted.
In addition to
its economic development benefits, the project
reflects synergies among researchers at OU-HCOM,
EBI, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the
Russ College of Engineering and Technology.
Faculty from these areas make up OHIO’s new
master of science in biomedical engineering
program, which is led by Goetz. The program’s
first graduate, Anthony Schwartz, was the lead
author on a published scientific paper that
described the drug’s effect on cancer.
In May 2010,
the medical and engineering colleges will
celebrate the grand opening of a new joint
research and teaching facility, the Academic &
Research Center (ARC), in which the research
team and other faculty members will be housed.
The $30 million building primarily has been
funded through donations from the Osteopathic
Heritage Foundation, Marilyn and Charles Stuckey
Jr. and other friends and alumni of OU-HCOM and
OHIO. The new laboratory space in the ARC will
provide a home for interdisciplinary
collaborative research, including this project
and others focusing on diabetes and infectious
diseases.
The Interthyr
Corporation was established in June 2000 as part
of an Ohio Technology Action Fund (TAF)
award to Kohn and OHIO. Its initial goal,
to help develop the biotechnology and job base
in southeast Ohio and Athens by collaborating
with Diagnostic Hybrids, Inc. to commercialize
better diagnostic assays for autoimmune thyroid
disease, was cited in 2004 as one of the most
successful TAF projects awarded, Kohn said.