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Researchers develop first drug using synthetic protein to treat incurable eye diseases

eye doctor equipment
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Researchers have developed a novel synthetic protein to treat macular degeneration and other incurable eye diseases that lead to blindness in millions of people. It is the first drug of its kind and is currently in human trials.

Neovascular age-related (AMD) affects more than 200 million people worldwide. In addition, millions more with type-1 or are at risk of developing (DME). Both diseases currently have no cure.

The novel antibody activates the Wnt-signaling network, a group of proteins that pass information into a cell through surface receptors such as frizzled receptors (FZD). It improves the blood vessel integrity in the eye and thereby blocks fluid buildup in the retina and may help improve sight in those afflicted with AMD or DME.

The drug originated in the lab of Dr. Sachdev Sidhu, entrepreneur in residence researcher at the University of Waterloo's School of Pharmacy. He led its development with AntlerA Therapeutics Inc., where he is a scientific co-founder, in partnership with EyeBio.

"While the biology of the Wnt/FZD pathway in eye disease has been studied for many years, we are the first group to develop a drug that activates this pathway in patients, leading to a treatment for these diseases," Sidhu said. "Our synthetically derived proteins can act like the natural proteins and we knew if we figured this out, we could open many other doors to treat other diseases."

The researchers are now developing drugs that target other branches of the Wnt/FZD system and could treat other that affect people across the world, including diseases of the lungs, liver, bones and intestines.

"Basic science and are closely linked due to the advancement of technology and its ability to translate ideas rapidly into therapies for patients," Sidhu said. "It is essential to have entrepreneurs involved in both innovative science and business for ideas to advance smoothly into products."

The research team that developed the drug alongside Sidhu includes Dr. Jarrett Adams and Dr. Levi Blazer, engineering and science research associates at Waterloo.

The team is confident this treatment will change the drug development landscape, as it is the first member of an entirely new class of drugs that can actually repair organ damage caused by , rather than merely preventing further damage, as is the case with most current drugs.

Citation: Researchers develop first drug using synthetic protein to treat incurable eye diseases (2023, July 25) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-07-drug-synthetic-protein-incurable-eye.html
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