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New Small and Medium Sized Enterprises Join TI Pharma by Signing Two New Projects
LEIDEN, The Netherlands , July 6 /PRNewswire/ -- Three new small and
medium sized enterprises (SMEs) - Syncom, Synvolux Therapeutics and InteRNA
Technologies - have joined public-private partnership TI Pharma by
participating in two new projects. These projects, focusing on cancer and
inflammatory diseases, have a total budget of nearly 6 million euros.
The new consortium, formed by Syncom, Synvolux Therapeutics, and
University Medical Center Groningen, focuses on designing a versatile drug
delivery system for inflammatory diseases and cancer. Another new consortium
is formed by InteRNA Technologies,Utrecht University and VU University
Medical Center, and focuses on the development of anti-angiogenic
microRNA-based therapeutic products for the treatment of cancer.
Versatile drug delivery platform for inflammatory diseases and cancer
New molecular entities (NMEs) in the drug development pipeline comprise
various classes of kinase inhibitors that cause unacceptable toxicity in
humans. Proper formulation might circumvent side effects and improve their
general therapeutic efficacy. However, currently, no appropriate formulation
technology is available for these kinase inhibitors.
This project focuses on a systematic approach in which chemical
modification of NMEs is combined with drug formulation studies. This will
lead to a versatile drug delivery platform for future clinical application of
kinase inhibitors in the treatment of cancer and chronic inflammatory
diseases. "This approach is expected to make targeted drug delivery finally
meet its expectations, as it will become available for a variety of drug
classes that are under development in the pharmaceutical industry," according
to the consortium members.
Development of novel anti-angiogenic miRNA based therapeutics
"Conventional cancer treatment such as surgery, radiation therapy and
chemotherapy are far from sufficient, therefore, new strategies of cancer
treatment are needed more than ever," says Roel Schaapveld, Chief Executive
Officer, InteRNA. There is a large body of evidence indicating that tumor
growth and metastasis formation are dependent on the formation of new blood
vessels. Furthermore, angiogenesis is an early event in the development of
tumors, being already switched on in pre-cancerous events and long before
visible or clinically relevant tumor mass is present. Schaapveld: "These two
features make angiogenesis an ideal target for the development of novel
anti-cancer strategies."
The recent discovery that non-coding RNAs, called microRNAs (miRNAs),
play a critical role in gene regulation provides new opportunities to
discover RNAs that can control angiogenesis. The major aim of this project is
to establish a technology platform for the development of (anti-cancer)
therapeutics based on angiostatic miRNAs. miRNA is utilized as a therapeutic
modality and advanced nanoparticle delivery systems accomplish intracellular
delivery of nucleic acid agents. These will be combined with the
identification of surface receptor targets on tumor blood vessels to allow
for therapeutic intervention. Eventually, this will result in the development
of anti-angiogenic miRNA-based therapeutic products for the treatment of
cancer.
SOURCE TI Pharma
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