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Electrified Fabric Could Zap the Coronavirus on Masks and Clothing – Scientific American

June 25th, 2020 6:44 pm

Wearing masks and other personal protective equipment (PPE) can slow the spread of COVID-19. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends everyone wear some kind of face covering in public places, especially where social distancing is difficult to maintain. And health workers are donning additional coverings, such as gowns. Yet all such protective gear shares one significant problem: people still risk becoming infected with the novel coronavirus if they accidentally touch areas of the fabric that are contaminated with viral particles. So researchers are working to develop cloth that could inactivate or repel coronavirusesideally including the one that causes COVID-19and other pathogens.

People can transfer infectious particles to their hands if they touch the front of a mask during use or when they remove gowns or other PPE, according to Chandan Sen, director of the Indiana Center for Regenerative Medicine and Engineering at Indiana University. He and his colleagues have been developing a way to render those particles and other infectious agents harmless. The team researches electroceutical materials that wirelessly generate electric fields across the surface of the fabric, Sen says. Those fields can disrupt the behavior of bacteria or viruses on the cloth.

The beauty of this [technology] is the inherently simple design, he says. The polyester material is printed with alternating spots of silver and zinc resembling polka dots. They are one to two millimeters wide and spaced one millimeter apart. When the electroceutical material is dry, it functions as an ordinary fabric. But if it gets dampenedsay, with saliva, vapor from a coughed up droplet or other bodily fluidsions in the liquid trigger an electrochemical reaction. The silver and zinc then generate a weak electric field that zaps pathogens on the surface.

The researchers co-developed the material with the biotechnology company Vomaris Innovations in 2012. Last year they showed that the technology could be used to treat bacterial biofilms in wounds. A clinical trial is underway to further evaluate the fabrics effectiveness as a Food and Drug Administrationcleared dressing for wound care, Sen says.

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Sens team tested its existing material on a different coronavirus strain that causes a respiratory illness in pigs and on an unrelated type of pathogen called a lentivirus. We wanted to know how broadly this principle could be applicable, he says. In a study posted on the preprint server ChemRxiv in May, Sens team reported that its electroceutical fabric destabilized both viruses, leaving them unable to infect cells. The researchers plan to submit the results to a peer-reviewed journal as well.

To study the fabrics action, they placed a liquid solution containing viral particles onto the electroceutical fabric and a polyester control fabric without the metal dots. After the droplets were fully absorbed, and the samples had rested for one to five minutes, the researchers recovered viral particles from both fabrics and tested whether they could still infect the types of cells they typically target.

The data presented here show that, of the total virus that was recovered, a significant percentage was inactivated, says Jeff Karp, a professor of medicine at Brigham and Womens Hospital in Boston and co-leader of an N95 respirator working group at the Massachusetts General Brigham Center for COVID Innovation. Karp, who was not involved with the study, adds that the researchers did not test all of the virus that they had placed on the cloth. In fact, the majority of virus was not recovered from the textiles examined in this study, he says. Sen responds that his team focused on sampling only enough viral particles to show that the fabric had rendered them unable to infect cells. The researchers recovered roughly 44 percent of the particles from the electroceutical fabric samples that had rested for one minute. And they retrieved 24 percent of them from the samples that had rested for five minutes.

The materials virus-fighting abilities have not been tested specifically on SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. The researchers findings with the two viruses they studied, however, gave them hope that this could apply more widely, Sen says. He adds that large-scale manufacturing of the electroceutical fabric is already possible and that the costs of producing it are relatively low. The metal dots could be printed directly onto the front surfaces of masks, he suggests. Or an electroceutical fabric could be inserted between the front of a mask and the wearers face.

If a virus-stopping PPE material were widely available, it could limit the novel coronaviruss ability to spread. There is a huge unmet need to better understand modes of viral transfer that lead to virus transmission, Karp says. As we develop a better understanding of this, there is a huge immediate need to develop and quickly apply solutions that can reduce transmission.

Metal dots are not the only potential approach. Paul Leu, director of an advanced materials laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh, and his colleagues are developing a textile coating that repels bodily fluids, proteins and bacteria. It also repels one strain of adenovirus that causes respiratory illness and another that causes conjunctivitis, as reported in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces in April. Leus team has also not tested the material with the novel coronavirus itself, however. The main thing with testing [the coating on] SARS-CoV-2 is the biosafety level you need to test it, because its very hazardous, he says. Still, his team plans to see how well textiles with this coating repel a different coronavirus.

Leu says the coating, which remains repellent even after ultrasonic washing and scraping with a razor blade, could make PPE safer for wearers to take off. It could also be used on hospital bed linens, drapes and waiting room chairs, the researchers note in the study. But Leu points out that the coating is intended for use with medical textiles that are already considered reusable. His team has not tested it on single-use masks or N95s, but he thinks it could potentially damage them. Still, he says, the coating could work well for cloth masks such as those now being worn by many among the general public.

By developing materials that kill or repel viruses, researchers hope to make masks and other protective gear safer to remove and more effective against all viruses. If the common person were to have PPE that wouldnt spread infection, Sen says, I think thats a big, big deal.

Read more about the coronavirus outbreakfromScientific Americanhere. And read coverage from ourinternational network of magazines here.

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Biopreservation Market Worth $4.9 Billion by 2025 – Exclusive Report by MarketsandMarkets – Yahoo Finance

June 25th, 2020 6:44 pm

CHICAGO, June 23, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the new market research report "Biopreservation Market by Type (Media (Sera), Equipment (Thawing Equipment, Alarms, Freezers)), Biospecimen (Human Tissue, Stem Cells, Organs), Application (Therapeutic, Research, Clinical Trials), End User (Hospitals, Biobank) - Global Forecast to 2025", published by MarketsandMarkets, the Biopreservation Market is projected to reach USD 4.9 billion by 2025 from USD 3.1 billion in 2020, at a CAGR of 9.1% between 2020 and 2025.

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Increasing R&D investments, advances in biobanking and the growing trend of conserving cord blood stem cells of newborns, rising investments in regenerative medicine research, and the increasing demand for personalized medicine are the major factors driving the growth of the biopreservation media and equipment market.

The biopreservation media segment accounted for the largest share of the biopreservation media and equipment market.

Based on type, the biopreservation media and equipment market is segmented into biopreservation media and equipment. The biopreservation media segment accounted for the largest share of the global biopreservation media and equipment market in 2019. The large share of this segment is attributed to the increasing research activities in stem cell therapy, regenerative medicine, and personalized medicine.

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The human tissue samples segment accounted for the largest share of the biopreservation media and equipment market in 2019.

On the basis of biospecimen, the biopreservation media and equipment market is segmented into human tissue samples, organs, stem cells and other biospecimens. The human tissue samples segment accounted for the largest share of the global biopreservation media and equipment market in 2019. The large share of this segment is attributed to the increasing number of biobanks and growth in R&D spending for life science research.

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North America to dominate the biopreservation media and equipment market during the forecast period

In 2019, North America dominated the biopreservation media and equipment market, followed by Europe. The major factors driving the growth of this market include increasing research activities in the field of regenerative medicine, rising R&D investment in life sciences research and growing awareness of personalized medicine.

The prominent players in this market include Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. (US), Merck KGaA (Germany), and Avantor, Inc. (US) ThermoGenesis Holdings, Inc. (US), Bio-Techne Corporation (US), BioLife Solutions, Inc. (US), Exact Sciences Corporation (US), (US), Worthington Industries, Inc. (US), and Chart Industries, Inc. (US).

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Global Cord Blood Banking Market 2020 Production, Revenue, Average Product Price and Market Shares of Key Players 2025 – Jewish Life News

June 25th, 2020 6:44 pm

The study on the Cord Blood Banking Marketby Brand Essence Market Research is a compilation of systematic details in terms of market valuation, market size, revenue estimation, and geographical spectrum of the business vertical. The study also offers a precise analysis of the key challenges and growth prospects awaiting key players of the Cord Blood Banking market, including a concise summary of their corporate strategies and competitive setting.

In 2018, the Global Cord Blood Banking Market size was xx million US$ and it is expected to reach xx million US$ by the end of 2025, with a CAGR of xx% during 2019-2025.

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Cord Blood Banking Market is valued at USD 1.24 Billion in 2018 and expected to reach USD 2.83 Billion by 2025 with the CAGR of 12.5 % over the forecast period.

A cord blood bank is a facility that stores umbilical cord blood for future use. Both private and public cord blood banks are developed in response to the reliable for cord blood in treating diseases of the blood and immune systems. Private or family cord blood banks are developed for autologous use or directed donation for a family member. Physicians recommend blood bank facility for a variety of reasons. Nowadays, Umbilical cord blood is used to treat many life-threatening diseases including leukemia, certain other cancers, and blood, immune and metabolic disorders. Over 30,000 transplants worldwide have been performed using stem cells from umbilical cord blood and because stem cell technologies continue to advance, the opportunities to utilize preserved cord blood and are steadily increasing. For example, Cryo-Cells umbilical cord blood banking service processes and cryogenically preserves these cells for potential therapeutic use.

Global cord blood banking market report is segmented on the basis of bank type, and regional & country level. Based upon bank type, cord blood banking market is classified as private, public, and hybrid. The regions covered in this Global Cord blood banking market report are North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Rest of the World. On the basis of country level, market of Cord blood banking market is sub divided into U.S., Mexico, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Italy, China, Japan, India, South East Asia, GCC, Africa, etc.

Key Players for Global Cord blood banking Market Report

Global Cord Blood Banking Market Report covers prominent players are like Singapore Cord Blood Bank, CBR Systems, ViaCord LLC, Cordlife, FamiCord, Cryo-Save, Americord, Global Cord Blood Corporation, LifeCell and Jeevan Stem Cell Foundation and others.

Increasing Demand for Umbilical Cord Blood (UCB) Units for Regenerative Medicine Purposes is one of the Major Factors Drive the Market growth.

Increasing demand for umbilical cord blood (UCB) units for regenerative medicine purposes is expected to drive the growth of cord blood banking market. An increase in the number of UCB transplants specifies an expansion of utility in a broad spectrum of disease conditions. For example, the loaded umbilical cord blood in the stem cell can treat cancer, blood diseases like anemia, and some immune system disorders, which disrupt bodys ability to defend it. Apart from that, additional potential applications of UCB include hematopoietic transplantation, immunotherapy, and tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. In addition, increasing prevalence and incidence rate of chronic diseases is also supplementing the market growth. For example, According to the World Health Organization, chronic disease prevalence is expected to rise by 57% by the year 2020. The increasing number of cancer patients is a major driver for the growth of stem cell/cord blood banking market. In 2018, an estimated 1,735,350 new cases of cancer were diagnosed in the United States. However, stringent regulatory requirements may hamper the market growth. In spite of that, increasing technological developments in the field of cord blood storage and processing are also expected to provide an opportunity for the further growth of the market.

North America is Expected to Dominating the Global Cord Blood Banking Market.

North America market is anticipated to grow at a significant rate in the global cord blood banking market in upcoming years, mainly due to the growing demand for the umbilical cord blood in stem cell analysis in this region. In addition, well developed healthcare infrastructure and high adoption of advanced technology in healthcare in this region are also supplementing the market growth. The umbilical cord blood banking may be public and private. In North America, An estimated 4.0 million umbilical cord blood units have been saved for private or family use. In 2017, there are 28 public cord blood banks in North America. These banks have sufficient capacity for those demanding a donation of cord blood. The European cord blood banking market is a second largest market followed by Asia pacific.

By Bank Type:

By Regional & Country Analysis:

Table of Contents

1 Report Overview1.1 Study Scope1.2 Key Market Segments1.3 Players Covered1.4 Market Analysis by Type1.4.1 Global Cord Blood Banking Market Size Growth Rate by Type (2014-2025)1.4.2 Topical Products1.4.3 Botulinum1.4.4 Dermal Fillers1.4.5 Chemical Peels1.4.6 Microabrasion Equipment1.4.7 Laser Surfacing Treatments1.5 Market by Application1.5.1 Global Cord Blood Banking Market Share by Application (2014-2025)1.5.2 Hospitals1.5.3 Dermatology Clinics1.6 Study Objectives1.7 Years Considered

2 Global Growth Trends2.1 Cord Blood Banking Market Size2.2 Cord Blood Banking Growth Trends by Regions2.2.1 Cord Blood Banking Market Size by Regions (2014-2025)2.2.2 Cord Blood Banking Market Share by Regions (2014-2019)2.3 Industry Trends2.3.1 Market Top Trends2.3.2 Market Drivers2.3.3 Market Opportunities

3 Market Share by Key Players3.1 Cord Blood Banking Market Size by Manufacturers3.1.1 Global Cord Blood Banking Revenue by Manufacturers (2014-2019)3.1.2 Global Cord Blood Banking Revenue Market Share by Manufacturers (2014-2019)3.1.3 Global Cord Blood Banking Market Concentration Ratio (CR5 and HHI)3.2 Cord Blood Banking Key Players Head office and Area Served3.3 Key Players Cord Blood Banking Product/Solution/Service3.4 Date of Enter into Cord Blood Banking Market3.5 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion Plans

Read More: https://industrystatsreport.com/Lifesciences-and-Healthcare/Cord-Blood-Banking-Market-Size-and-share/Summary

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Electrified fabric could zap the coronavirus on masks, clothing – Deccan Herald

June 25th, 2020 6:44 pm

Wearing masks and other personal protective equipment (PPE) can slow the spread of Covid-19. The USCenters for Disease Control and Prevention recommends everyone wear some kind of face-covering in public places, especially where social distancing is difficult to maintain. And health workers are donning additional coverings, such as gowns. Yet all such protective gear shares one significant problem: people still risk becoming infected with the novel coronavirus if they accidentally touch areas of the fabric that are contaminated with viral particles. So researchers are working to develop cloth that could inactivate or repel coronavirusesideally including the one that causes Covid-19and other pathogens.

For latest updates and live news on coronavirus, click here

People can transfer infectious particles to their hands if they touch the front of a mask during use or when they remove gowns or other PPE, according to Chandan Sen, director of the Indiana Center for Regenerative Medicine and Engineering at Indiana University. He and his colleagues have been developing a way to render those particles and other infectious agents harmless. The team researches electroceutical materials that wirelessly generate electric fields across the surface of the fabric, Sen says. Those fields can disrupt the behaviour of bacteria or viruses on the cloth.

The beauty of this [technology] is the inherently simple design, he says. The polyester material is printed with alternating spots of silver and zinc resembling polka dots. They are one to two millimetres wide and spaced one millimetre apart. When the electroceutical material is dry, it functions as an ordinary fabric. But if it gets dampenedsay, with saliva, vapour from a coughed updropletsor other bodily fluidsions in the liquid trigger an electrochemical reaction. The silver and zinc then generate a weak electric field that zaps pathogens on the surface.

The researchers co-developed the material with the biotechnology company Vomaris Innovations in 2012. Last year, they showed that the technology could be used to treat bacterial biofilms in wounds. A clinical trial is underway to further evaluate the fabrics effectiveness as a Food and Drug Administrationcleared dressing for wound care, Sen says.

In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, Sens team tested its existing material on a different coronavirus strain that causes a respiratory illness in pigs and on an unrelated type of pathogen called a lentivirus. We wanted to know how broadly this principle could be applicable, he says. In a study posted on the preprint server ChemRxiv in May, Sens team reported that its electroceutical fabric destabilised both viruses, leaving them unable to infect cells. The researchers plan to submit the results to a peer-reviewed journal as well.

To study the fabrics action, they placed a liquid solution containing viral particles onto the electroceutical fabric and a polyester control fabric without the metal dots. After the droplets were fully absorbed, and the samples had rested for one to five minutes, the researchers recovered viral particles from both fabrics and tested whether they could still infect the types of cells they typically target.

The data presented here show that, of the total virus that was recovered, a significant percentage was inactivated, says Jeff Karp, a professor of medicine at Brigham and Womens Hospital in Boston and co-leader of an N95 respirator working group at the Massachusetts General Brigham Center for COVIDInnovation. Karp, who was not involved with the study, adds that the researchers did not test all of the virus that they had placed on the cloth. In fact, the majority of virus was not recovered from the textiles examined in this study, he says. Sen responds that his team focused on sampling only enough viral particles to show that the fabric had rendered them unable to infect cells. The researchers recovered roughly 44 percent of the particles from the electroceutical fabric samples that had rested for one minute. And they retrieved 24 percent of them from the samples that had rested for five minutes.

The materials virus-fighting abilities have not been tested specifically on SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes Covid-19. The researchers findings with the two viruses they studied, however, gave them hope that this could apply more widely, Sen says. He adds that large-scale manufacturing of the electroceutical fabric is already possible and that the costs of producing it are relatively low. The metal dots could be printed directly onto the front surfaces of masks, he suggests. Or an electroceutical fabric could be inserted between the front of a mask and the wearers face.

If a virus-stopping PPE material were widely available, it could limit the novel coronaviruss ability to spread. There is a huge unmet need to better understand modes of viral transfer that lead to virus transmission, Karp says. As we develop a better understanding of this, there is a huge immediate need to develop and quickly apply solutions that can reduce transmission.

Metal dots are not the only potential approach. Paul Leu, director of an advanced materials laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh, and his colleagues are developing a textile coating that repels bodily fluids, proteins and bacteria. It also repels one strain of adenovirus that causes respiratory illness and another that causes conjunctivitis, as reported in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces in April. Leus team has also not tested the material with the novel coronavirus itself, however. The main thing with testing [the coating on] SARS-CoV-2 is the biosafety level you need to test it, because its very hazardous, he says. Still, his team plans to see how well textiles with this coating repel a different coronavirus.

Leu says the coating, which remains repellent even after ultrasonic washing and scraping with a razor blade, could make PPE safer for wearers to take off. It could also be used on hospital bed linens, drapes and waiting room chairs, the researchers note in the study. But Leu points out that the coating is intended for use with medical textiles that are already considered reusable. His team has not tested it on single-use masks or N95s, but he thinks it could potentially damage them. Still, he says, the coating could work well for cloth masks such as those now being worn by many among the general public.

By developing materials that kill or repel viruses, researchers hope to make masks and other protective gear safer to remove and more effective against all viruses. If the common person were to have PPE that wouldnt spread infection, Sen says, I think thats a big, big deal.

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Electrified fabric could zap the coronavirus on masks, clothing - Deccan Herald

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With cell and gene therapy boom coming, experts at Novartis, Kite trumpet need for capacity: panel – FiercePharma

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

Cell and gene therapy has evolved into one of the biopharma industry's hottest markets with a major splash of investment and a run of approvals likely in the coming years. To meet what's likely to be massive demand for manufacturing capacity, industry experts are calling for "forward-looking" investmentsbut as one pointed out, those checks aren't easy to write.

During a virtual roundtable Monday hosted by Fierce Pharma, manufacturing experts from Novartis, Gilead's Kite unit, BioMarin and Astellas' Audentes said building capacity and figuring out how to scale production would make the difference in whether the industry will be ready to handle a slate of expected approvals.

According to former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, the agency could approve between 10 and 20 cell and gene therapies a year through 2025 with as many as 800 such therapies moving through drugmakers' pipelines.

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Chuck Calderaro, Kite's global head of technical operations, said Kite's primary concern was how to scale production of its cell therapy offerings, including Yescarta, the company's only approved therapy in the space.

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Calderaro noted that Kite has a turnaround time of 16 days from patients having their blood drawn to infusionand the drugmaker is hoping to keep that figure stable as its manufacturing chain grows.

"Access to capacity is always a challenge in a growing area, and especially in cell therapy, which is personalized to order," Calderaro said. "The challenge for us is to be able to scale that excellence as we begin to globalize our cell therapy treatments."

The first challenge for Gilead will come from bringing its newest facility in Amsterdam online after the EU gave it the go-ahead earlier this month.

RELATED: Gilead sees better days ahead for CAR-T therapy Yescarta with Amsterdam manufacturing hub online

Gilead's 117,000-square-foot CAR-T facility at SEGRO Park Amsterdam Airport won a green light after the European Medicines Agency (EMA) approved the plant's end-to-end manufacturing process. The site will house European production fo Yescarta, which won an EMA approval back in August 2018 to treat relapsed or refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma.

Calderaro highlighted the Amsterdam facility as the "next step" in Gilead's global manufacturing ramp-up for Yescarta as the site will be able to churn out enough of the pricey therapy for 4,000 patients each year.

Gilead also plans to build a 67,000-square-foot facility at its Oceanside, California, biologics site just for developing viral vectors, the tools needed to deliver genetic material into cells. Calderaro said that facility would give Gilead "a little more control" of its supply chain as it looks to scale up.

RELATED: Pharma's gene and cell therapy ambitions will kick into high gear in 2020despite some major hurdles

Meanwhile, Steffan Lang, Novartis' head of technical operations, pointed out that building capacity for the future will go hand-in-hand with building an experienced team to lead into the future.

"Its about the people and capabilities," Lang said. "You have to have the right team in place to build capacity at the appropriate scale across the globe."

Novartis' gene therapy Kymriah was the first FDA-approved therapy of its kind back in August 2017. Since then, Novartis has expanded Kymriah's reach globally, including opening a new facility in Stein, Switzerland, that cleared up a transatlantic bottleneck for shipments to Novartis' facility in Morris Plains, New Jersey.

Meanwhile, BioMarin and Audentes are both pursuing first FDA approvals for their cell and gene therapy candidates and are looking to scale up manufacturing to make the leap into commercial.

RELATED: Audentes investing $109M in gene therapy manufacturing facility with 200 jobs

In February, Audentes announced it would invest $109 million into a 135,000-square-foot facility in Sanford, North Carolina to flesh out its cell and gene therapy manufacturing needs. The first phase is slated to take 18 months to build and will be operational by 2021. The rest of the investment will play out over two more years.

Donald Wuchterl, Audentes' SVP of technical operations, said building capacity would require a "forward-looking" approach to investingbut the lengthy timelines for these therapies make that foresight difficult.

"These are tough checks to write," Wuchterl said. "Were looking at potentially three years out in a field thats growing rapidlyit takes some constitution, I would say."

BioMarin, which is in the homestretch for an FDA approval for its hemophilia A gene therapy candidate valoctocogene roxaparvovec, or valrox, is in a similar boat looking to make the leap to commercial. For the Robert Baffi, special advisor to the company's CEO, scaling up manufacturing is a big taskbut he hopes that a "biology revolution" could provide a big breakthrough for production in the coming years.

"While I think there's improvements to be had on the manufacturing side today, I think there's a biology revolution still to come in terms of making the vectors more specific, more targeted, more preciseand that would be a big boon for the industry," he said.

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With cell and gene therapy boom coming, experts at Novartis, Kite trumpet need for capacity: panel - FiercePharma

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One-and-done gene therapy wipes out Parkinson’s symptoms in mouse models – FierceBiotech

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

A researcher at the University of San Diego, California (USCD) made an accidental discovery several years back after he silenced a gene called PTB in mouse fibroblasts, cells in connective tissue. Within weeks, almost all of the fibroblasts were gone, and the rest had transformed into neurons.

Now, researchers in the same lab are applying that discovery to Parkinsons disease in the hopes of creating a one-time gene therapy to replace the dopamine-producing neurons that are lost to the disease.

The UCSD team developed a gene therapy technique that cripplesthe ability of the PTB gene to produce a functioning protein. In mouse models of Parkinsons, the gene therapy turned supportive cells called astrocytes into dopamine-producing neurons, erasing symptoms of the disease, the researchers reported in the journal Nature.

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The gene therapy created by the UCSD team consists of a viral vector that carries a piece of DNA called an antisense oligonucleotide into cells. The DNA binds to the RNA that codes for PTB, shutting off the production of the PTB protein and allowing neurons to form.

"Researchers around the world have tried many ways to generate neurons in the lab, using stem cells and other means, said Xiang-Dong Fu, Ph.D., professor of cellular and molecular medicine at UCSD School of Medicine, in a statement. "The fact that we could produce so many neurons in such a relatively easy way came as a big surprise."

RELATED: Mount Sinai researchers uncover new genetic drivers of Parkinson's disease

The UCSD team delivered the gene therapy to the midbrain of the mice and compared them with animals that got a sham procedure. The population of neurons in the brains of mice that received the treatment jumped 30%, and their dopamine levels returned to normal. The control mice saw no improvements, the researchers reported.

Within three months of the gene therapy, the treated mice were able to move their limbs normally, and they remained free of Parkinsons symptoms for the rest of their lives, the team added.

Antisense oligonucleotides are already being used in neurodegenerative diseases. Biogens Spinraza to treat spinal muscular atrophy is an antisense oligonucleotide drug, as are many experimental medicines. Earlier this month, Eli Lilly formed a $20 million deal with Evox Therapeutics, which is using the approach to develop treatments for Duchenne muscular dystrophy and several neurological disorders.

Meanwhile, some research groups are exploring other gene-based approaches to Parkinsons. Last year, a team at Mount Sinai knocked out the gene STMN2 in mice and discovered that nine other genes related to Parkinsons were activateda finding that could lead to new treatment pathways. Startup Prevail Therapeutics is developing a gene therapy to treat Parkinsons thats caused by mutations in the GBA1 gene.

The next step for the UCSD team is to optimize the gene therapy and test it in mouse models of genetic Parkinsons. Theyve patented the technique with plans tofurther optimizeit for testing in people.

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Emergent in $75m expansion into viral vectors and gene therapy – BioPharma-Reporter.com

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

Emergent BioSolutions, a contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) currently focused on biologics, plans to widen the range of its offerings by adding viral vector and gene therapy services.

According to the company, this will involve a molecule-to-market service, once it has completed the $75m (67m) investment into its Canton, Massachusetts site.

The capital will be put towards buying a property adjacent to its existing live viral drug substance facility, with the expanded area being a multi-suite operation holding capacity up to the 1,000L scale.

Once the work is completed, the CDMO expects to be able to offer advanced therapy drug substance manufacturing services by the beginning of 2023.

Complementing the Canton site are Emergents additional locations in the US, as the company offers development services out of its Gaithersburg location and drug product manufacturing from Rockville, with the latter site also being expanded and with a completion date set for the end of 2021.

Alongside a growing manufacturing footprint, the company has found its services in demand during the novel coronavirus outbreak.

The US government provided the company with a $628m contract to provide CDMO services for COVID-19 programs, with Emergent set to use part of this funding towards expanding drug product fill/finish capacity.

Prior to this, Emergent had already sealed a manufacturing partnership with Johnson & Johnson to develop its lead COVID-19 vaccine candidate as the latter company worked towards securing a supply of one billion doses for its potential vaccine.

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SFARI | SFARI workshop explores challenges and opportunities of gene therapies for autism spectrum disorder – SFARI News

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

On February 67, 2020, the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative (SFARI) convened a two-day workshop to explore the possibility of gene therapies for autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a neurodevelopmental condition associated with changes in over 100 genes. Inspired by the recent, stunning successes of gene therapy for the fatal neuromuscular disorder spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)1, and by the accumulation of genes confidently associated with ASD2, SFARI welcomed a diverse collection of researchers to begin to think about whether a similar approach could be taken for ASD. Because gene therapy attempts to fix what is broken at the level of a causative gene, it would offer a more direct and imminent strategy than mitigation of the many and as yet mostly unclear downstream effects of a damaged gene.

The workshop was organized in 20 talks and several discussion panels, which tackled many outstanding issues, including how to choose candidate target genes and predict outcomes; how to optimize vectors for gene delivery; how to decide when to intervene; which animal models to develop; how to find appropriate endpoints for clinical trials and understand the available regulatory pathways. SFARI also raised the question of how its funding might best propel gene therapy efforts amid the emerging, complex ecosystem of academic laboratories, biotech companies, and pharmaceutical industries.

Even the opportunity to have this discussion is very rewarding, said SFARI Investigator Matthew State of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), one of the investigators who directed teams of geneticists to analyze the Simons Simplex Collection (SSC).

These efforts have offered up multiple potentially feasible therapeutic targets. Though rare, de novo disruptive mutations in the highest confidence ASD genes often result in severe impairment characterized not only by social difficulties, but also by intellectual disability and seizures. The combination of a single gene mutation of large effect coupled with particularly severe outcomes that include ASD are likely to offer the most immediate targets for gene therapy. For now, this leaves out a large number of individuals with autism for whom genetic causes are not yet known and are likely the result of a combination of many small effect alleles across a large number of genes.

Highlights from talks and discussion panel, chaired by Rick Lifton of Rockefeller University

In the first talk of the workshop, State brought the group up to speed on ASD genomics. The most recent tally from exome-sequencing in simplex cases of ASD highlighted 102 genes in which rare mutations confer individually large risks2. In contrast, the task of identifying common variants carrying very small risks remains quite challenging, with less than a half dozen alleles so far identified with confidence3. The rare, disruptive mutations that result in loss of function of one gene copy are an attractive focus for gene therapy because of the tractability of targeting a single spot in the genome per individual and because, in the vast majority of cases, there remains a single unchanged allele. This points to ways to boost gene and/or protein expression back toward the normal state by leveraging the unaffected copy. But both the limited number of cases known so far combined with the possibility that different mutations to the same gene may have different effects complicate thinking about how to prioritize targets for gene therapy.

State made several points that were continually touched on throughout the workshop. Many ASD genes are highly expressed during midfetal development in the cortex, and additional experiments will need to determine whether and how long a window of opportunity may be present for successful gene therapy postnatally. Given the relatively small number of people with these conditions, new clinical trial designs are needed that dont rely on comparisons between large control and intervention groups (see also Bryan Kings talk below).

Beyond the gene-crippling mutations found in the exome, disruptions to transcription may also dramatically raise risk for autism and may be corrected with a type of gene therapy using ASOs. SFARI Investigator Stephan Sanders of UCSF focused on the role of splicing, the process by which an initial transcript is turned into messenger RNA by removal of introns and joining together of exons. Splicing is disrupted in at least 1.5 percent of individuals with ASD4, and possibly many more, as suggested by transcript irregularities found in postmortem autism brain5. Sanders described Illuminas Splice AI project in which machine-learning helps predict noncoding variants that can alter splicing, including those beyond typical splice sites found near a gene6. As a result of incorporating sequence information around and between splice sites, this computational tool detected more mutations with predicted splice-altering consequences in people with ASD and intellectual disability than in those without the condition.

An ASO designed to bind specific portions of RNA could conceivably correct errors in transcription. ASOs have already been approved for use in other disorders in order to skip exons, retain exons or to degrade mRNA. Unlike other forms of gene therapy, ASOs do not permanently alter the genome, making it a kind of gene therapy lite. This reversibility has both disadvantages (having to re-infuse the ASO every few months) and advantages (multiple opportunities to optimize the dose and target; serious adverse effects are not permanent).

Jonathan Weissman of UCSF discussed the available toolbox for controlling gene expression developed by many different laboratories. To turn genes on or off, he has developed a method to combine CRISPR with an enzymatically inactive (dead) Cas9, which can then be coupled with a transcriptional activator (CRISPRa) or repressor (CRISPRi)7 (Figure 2). In the case of loss-of-function mutations, Weissman outlined strategies to make the remaining good allele work harder: increase transcription via CRISPRa, decrease mRNA turnover, increase translation of a good transcript via modification of upstream open reading frames (uORFs) or increase a proteins stability, possibly through small molecules acting on the ubiquitin system8. That said, the effects on a cell may be complicated. Using Perturb-Seq screens, Weissman described genetic interaction manifolds that show nonlinear mapping between genotype and single cell transcriptional phenotypes9. Additionally, Weissman summarized recent work from his laboratory that has identified large numbers of uORFs that result in polypeptides, some of which affect cellular function.

SFARI Investigator Michael Wigler of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories echoed the idea of a gene-therapy strategy that increases expression of the remaining good copy of a gene, especially given that in his estimate, 45 percent of simplex cases of autism carried a de novo, likely disrupting variant. He also called attention to the uterine environment, especially the challenge posed by expression of paternally derived antigens in the fetus and the impact of a potential maternal immune response, and the need to understand how it interacts with de novo genetic events.

Highlights from talks and discussion panel, chaired by Arnon Rosenthal of Alector

The discussion turned to finding ways of getting genes into the central nervous system. The AAV is the darling of gene therapy, given that it does not replicate and is not known to cause disease in humans. A version that can cross the blood-brain barrier (AAV9) was used to deliver a gene replacement to children with SMA intravenously; though this effectively delivered the genetic cargo to ailing motor neurons in the spinal cord, it does not work that well at delivering genes throughout the brain.

Ben Deverman of the Stanley Center at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard detailed his efforts to optimize AAV for efficient transduction of brain cells through a targeted evolution process: his team engineers millions of variants in the capsid of the virus, then screens them for entry into the nervous system and transduction of neurons and glia. This has yielded versions (called AAV-PHP.B and AAV-PHP.eB) that more efficiently enter the brain10,11. One successfully delivered the MECP2 gene to the brain of a Rett syndrome mouse model, resulting in ameliorated symptoms and an extended lifespan12. Unfortunately, these viruses dont work in human cells or in all mouse strains. A quick mouse genome-wide association study (GWAS) revealed that the Ly6a gene mediates efficient blood-brain barrier crossing of AAV-PHP.B and AAV-PHP.eB13. Now his group has identified Ly6a-independent capsids that may translate better to humans. He also noted that the PHP.B vectors have tissue specificity for brain and liver.

With an estimated 87 percent of autism-associated genes raising risk through haploinsufficiency (having only one functional gene copy out of the two), SFARI Investigator Nadav Ahituv of UCSF made the case for approaches that boost expression of the remaining good copy of a gene through endogenous mechanisms a strategy he called cis-regulation therapy. This method also provides a way to work around the small four kb payload of AAV, which strains to contain cDNA of many autism genes. A recent study by his group used CRISPRa targeted at an enhancer or promoter of SIM1 and promoter of MC4R, both obesity genes, in mice. Using one AAV vector for a dCas9 joined to a transcription activator, and another AAV vector having a guide RNA targeting either a promoter or an enhancer, and a guide RNA targeting a promoter, the researchers injected the vectors together into the hypothalamus, which resulted in increased SIM1 or MC4R transcription and reversed the obesity phenotype brought on by loss of these genes14. Targeting regulatory elements had the added benefit of tissue specificity, and there seemed to be a ceiling effect for SIM1 expression, which suggested an endogenous safeguard against overexpression at work. He is now collaborating with SFARI Investigator Kevin Bender, also at UCSF, to apply this approach to the autism gene SCN2A.

Botond Roska of the Institute of Molecular and Clinical Ophthalmology in Basel, Switzerland pointed out that getting genes to the cells where they are needed is crucial when treating eye diseases. Off-target effects there can induce degeneration of healthy cells. For this reason, Roska and his group have created AAVs that target specific cell types in the retina by developing synthetic promoters that efficiently promote expression of the viruss cargo15. The promoters they designed were educated guesses based on four approaches: likely regulatory elements close to genes expressed with cell-type specificity in the retina, conserved elements close to cell typespecific genes, binding sites for cell typespecific transcription factors and open chromatin close to cell typespecific genes. Screening a library of these in mouse, macaque and human retina revealed some with high cell-type specificity (Figure 3). Importantly, macaque data predicted success in human retina much better than did mouse data. In preliminary experiments, and more relevant to gene therapy for ASD, these cell-specific vectors also had some success in mouse cortex, for example lighting up parvalbumin neurons or an apparently new type of astrocyte.

Roska also described new methods for delivery, in which nanoparticles are coated with AAV, then drawn into the brain using magnets16. This magnetophoresis technique allows a library of experimental AAVs to be tested at the same time in one monkey. Steering nanoparticles with magnets gives more control of vector placement and gene delivery. He argued that these in the future could access even deep structures of the brain.

Highlights from talks and discussion panel, chaired by Steven Hyman of the Broad Institute at MIT and Harvard

Kathy High of Spark Therapeutics reviewed the story of gene therapy for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) type 1. Though she was not directly involved in that research, she is well aware of the regulatory atmosphere surrounding gene therapy, given that Spark Therapeutics developed the first approved AAV-delivered gene for a form of retinal dystrophy. The SMA story is a useful case study in that an ASO-based therapy (nusinersen, marketed as Spinraza), approved in 2016, set the stage for a gene-replacement therapy, marketed as Zolgensma (onasemnogene abeparvovec). Ultimately, the amount of data supporting Zolgensmas approval was modest: a Phase one dose study of 15 infants1, and an ongoing Phase three trial of 21 infants and safety data from 44 individuals. Yet the approval was helped by the dramatic results and clear endpoints: those receiving a single intravenous infusion of an AAV9 vector containing a replacement gene all remained alive at 20 months of age, whereas only 8 percent survived to that age in the natural history data, which compiles the diseases untreated course. High mentioned that maintaining product quality for gene therapeutics may prove trickier than for typical medications.

The attractive, highly customizable nature of gene therapy might have a regulatory downside in that different vector payloads, even when designed to do the same thing, could invite separate approval processes. Though not knowing how regulatory agencies would view this, High said that their perspectives are bound to evolve as more gene therapy trials are completed.

Getting to ASD-related syndromes, Bender talked about SCN2A, which encodes the sodium channel Nav1.2. SCN2A mutations in humans can be gain of function or loss of function; gain-of-function mutations are associated with early onset epilepsy, and loss-of-function mutations with intellectual disability and ASD. In a mouse model missing one copy of SCN2A, Bender and his group have discovered a role for SCN2A in action potential generation in the first week after birth, and in synaptic function and maturation afterward through regulation of dendritic excitability18 (Figure 4). Using AAV containing CRISPRa constructs developed with the Ahituv lab, the researchers successfully increased SCN2A expression, and recovered synapse function and maturity, even when done several weeks postnatally. Getting the appropriate dosage is critical since gain-of-function mutations are linked to epilepsy. However, Bender reported even when SCN2A expression increased to double normal levels, no hints of hyperexcitability appeared. We might be able to overdrive this channel as much as we want and actually may not have risk of producing an epileptic insult, he said. Next steps are to figure out the developmental windows for intervention, evaluate changes in seizure sensitivity and extend this kind of cis-regulatory approach to other ASD genes.

Angelman syndrome is another condition that attracts interest for gene therapy, in part because neurons already harbor an appropriate replacement gene. Angelman syndrome stems from mutations to the maternally inherited UBE3A gene, which is particularly damaging to neurons because they only express the maternal allele, while the paternal allele is silenced by an antisense transcript. SFARI Investigator Mark Zylka of the University of North Carolina and colleagues showed in 2011 that this paternal allele could be unsilenced with a cancer drug in a mouse model of Angelman syndrome19. Since then, three companies have built ASOs to do the same thing, and these are going into clinical trials. To get a more permanent therapeutic, Zylka has been developing CRISPR/Cas9 systems to reactivate paternal UBE3A, and preliminary experiments show that injecting this construct into the brains of embryonic mice, and then again at birth, results in brain-wide expression of paternal UBE3A and is long-lasting (at least 17 months). Zylka is now making human versions of these constructs. He later noted rare cases of mosaicism for the Angelman syndrome mutation people with 10 percent normal cells in blood have a milder phenotype20, which suggests that even inefficient transduction of a gene vector could help.

Zylka also made a case for prenatal interventions in Angelman syndrome: studies of mouse models indicate that early reinstatement of UBE3A expression in mouse embryos rescues multiple Angelman syndrome-related phenotypes, whereas later postnatal interventions rescue fewer of these21; for humans, a diagnostic, cell-based, noninvasive prenatal test will be available soon22; ultrasound-guided injections into fetal brain of nonhuman primates have been developed23; prenatal surgeries are now standard of care for spinal bifida; and intervening prenatally decreases the risk of an immunogenic response to an AAV vector or its cargo. During the discussion, it was noted that another benefit of acting early was that less AAV would be needed to transduce a much smaller brain; however, a drawback is the lack of data on Angelman syndrome development from birth to one year of age. This natural history would be necessary for understanding whether a prenatal therapy is more effective than treatment of neonates.

SFARI Investigator Guoping Feng of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has been investigating SHANK3, a high-confidence autism risk gene linked to a severe neurodevelopmental condition called Phelan-McDermid syndrome, which is marked by intellectual disability, speech impairments, as well as ASD. SHANK3 is a scaffold protein important for organizing post-synaptic machinery in neurons. Mouse studies by Feng have shown that SHANK3 re-expression in adult mice that have developed without it can remedy some, but not all, of their phenotypes, including dendritic spine densities, neural function in the striatum and social interaction24. Furthermore, early postnatal re-expression rescued most phenotypes. This makes SHANK3 a potential candidate for gene therapy; however, it is a very large gene 5.2kb as a cDNA that is difficult to fit into a viral vector. To get around this, Fengs group has designed a smaller SHANK3 mini-gene as a substitute for the full-sized version. Preliminary experiments show that AAV delivery of the mini-gene can rescue phenotypes like anxiety, social behavior and corticostriatal synapse function in SHANK3 knockout mice. Feng also discussed his success in editing the genome in marmosets and macaques using CRISPR/Cas9 technology and showed data from a macaque model of SHANK3 dysfunction25. These models may help test gene therapy approaches and identify biomarkers of brain development closely related to the human disorder.

For people with rare conditions brought on by even rarer mutations, individualized gene therapies can provide a pathway for treatment. SFARI Investigator Timothy Yu of Boston Childrens Hospital/Harvard described his N-of-1 study in treating a girl with Batten disease, a recessive disorder in which a child progressively loses vision, speech and motor control while developing seizures. In a little over a year, an ASO that targeted her unusual splice-site mutation in the CLN7 gene was designed, developed and given intrathecally to the girl26. The lift was in negotiating with the FDA and working with private organizations, not just in the science, Yu said. After a year of treatment with the ASO (dubbed milasen after the girl, Mila), there were no serious adverse events; seizure frequency and duration had decreased (Figure 5); and possibly her decline had slowed. Though she remains blind, without intelligible speech and unable to walk on her own, she was still attentive and could respond happily to her familys voices. The highly personalized framework for this drugs approval is completely different from how medications meant for populations are approved, and it opens a regulatory can of worms, Yu said, though he added that the regulators were willing to countenance drug approval for an individuals clinical benefit.

Rett syndrome is a neurodevelopmental condition caused by mutations to the MECP2 gene that has a substantial research base in mouse models. Over 10 years ago, mouse models highlighted the possibility for therapeutics in this condition when Rett-associated phenotypes were rescued by adding back MECP2, even in adulthood27. This reversibility has spurred interest in gene therapy for Rett syndrome, but getting the MECP2 dose right is critical, said Stuart Cobb of the University of Edinburgh and Neurogene: just as too little MECP2 leads to Rett syndrome, too much also results in severe phenotypes. For this reason, it would be nice to package a replacement MECP2 gene with other regulatory elements to control its expression, but this results in constructs that do not fit into viral vectors. To make more room, Cobb and his colleagues have been able to chop away two-thirds of the MECP2, reserving two domains that interact to make a complex on DNA (Figure 6). Mice with this mini-gene are viable and have near normal phenotypes; likewise, injecting this mini-gene into MECP2-deficient mice extended their survival28. Doubling the dose, however, substantially lowered survival. Putting in safety valves to prevent overexpression is going to be quite important, he said. One idea is to add back a construct containing only the last two exons of MECP2, which is where most Rett mutations land. These would then be spliced into native transcripts (called trans-splicing), and thus their expression controlled by endogenous regulatory elements.

Underscoring the double-edged sword of MECP2 dosage, Yingyao Shao from Huda Zoghbis lab at Baylor described an MECP2 duplication syndrome (MDS) in humans, which features hypotonia, intellectual disability, epilepsy and autism. Experiments in an MDS mouse model, which carries one mouse version and one human version of MECP2, recapitulates some of the phenotypes of the human condition and can be rescued by an ASO targeting the human allele29. Shao described work to optimize the ASO for translation into humans, which involved developing a more humanized MDS model that carries two human MECP2 alleles. An acute injection of the ASO was able to knock down MECP2 expression in a dose-dependent manner in these mice, and RNA levels dropped a week after injection, with protein levels falling a week later. MECP2 target genes also normalized their expression level, and one maintained this for at least 16 weeks post-injection. The ASO also rescued behavioral phenotypes of motor coordination and fear conditioning, but not of anxiety; these corrections followed the molecular effects, and these timelines would be important to keep in mind while designing clinical trials. Shao also noted that overtreatment with the ASO resulted in Rett-associated phenotypes, but that this was reversible, which suggests that some fine-tuning of dosing in humans might be possible.

To avoid overtreatment and toxicity of any MDS-directed therapy, Mirjana Maletic-Savatic, also at Baylor, is leaving no stone unturned in a hunt for MDS biomarkers that can predict, in each individual, the safety of a particular dose and regimen. Such biomarkers would also help monitor individuals during treatment, give information about target engagement and identify candidates for a particular treatment. Anything found to be sensitive to expression levels of MECP2 could also be useful for Rett, though she noted that MECP2 levels measured in blood do not track linearly with gene copy number. Thus, because of interindividual variability, her approach is to collect a kitchen sink of data deriving composite biomarkers that accurately reflect the stage and severity of disease in a given case. She and her colleagues are collecting clinical, genetic, neurocircuitry (such as EEG and sleep waves), immunology and molecular data detected in blood, urine and CSF. These measures are also being explored in induced neurons derived from skin samples of people with MDS. She highlighted two interrelated potential biomarkers in the blood of those with this condition; both measures are downstream targets of MECP2 and are responsive to ASO treatment.

Highlights from Early detection and clinical trial issues talks and panel discussion, chaired by Paul Wang of SFARI

Coming up with objective measures of a persons status either their eligibility for a treatment, or whether the treatment has engaged with its target or even whether the treatment is effective is a real necessity in autism-related conditions, which comprise multiple interrelated behaviors. Eye-tracking methodology may provide such a marker, argued SFARI Investigator Ami Klin of Emory University. Focusing on the core social challenges of autism, Klin, Warren Jones and colleagues have been studying children as they view naturalistic social scenes to quantify their social attention patterns. This has revealed how remarkably early in development social visual learning begins and that this process is disrupted in infants later diagnosed with ASD prior to features associated with the condition appearing. By missing social cues, autism in many ways creates itself, moment by moment, Klin said. In considering gene therapy, it may be useful to know that eye looking (how much a subject looks at a persons eyes, an index of social visual engagement) in particular and social visual engagement in general are under genetic control30; that eye-tracking differences emerge as early as 26 months of age; and that homologies in social visual engagement exist between human babies and nonhuman infant primates.

In getting to a point to test gene therapies, identifying those who need them is essential. Wendy Chung of Columbia University and the Simons Foundation illustrated how diagnosis is yoked closely to therapy. To illustrate this, she described her pilot study of newborn blood spots to screen for SMA; at the start, no treatment was available, but the screen identified newborns for a clinical trial of nusinersin. Notably, the screen only cost an additional 11 cents per baby. In the three years since her pilot screen began, the FDA approved two gene therapies for SMA and the SMA screen was adopted for nationwide newborn screening. Currently she is piloting a screen for Duchenne muscular dystrophy and plans to develop a platform that will allow researchers to add other conditions. In prioritizing genetic conditions for gene therapy, she outlined some ideas for focus, such as genes resulting in phenotypes that would not be identified early without screening, those that are relatively frequent, those that are lethal or neurodegenerative, those with a treatment in clinical trials or with FDA-approved medications, and those conditions that are reversible.

In the meantime, Chung also outlined SFARIs involvement in establishing well-characterized cohorts of individuals with autism, which can help lay a groundwork for gene therapy. People with an ASD diagnosis can join SPARK (Simons Foundation Powering Autism Research for Knowledge), which collects medical, behavioral and genetic information (through analysis of DNA from saliva, at no cost to the participant). If a de novo genetic variant is found in one of ~150 genes, that person is referred to Simons Searchlight, which fosters rare conditions communities and which is also compiling natural history data on people with these mutations.

Bryan King of UCSF discussed how current trial designs for ASD were inadequate for gene therapy trials. As ASD prevalence has grown, parallel design trials with one group receiving an experimental medicine and the other a placebo are the standard, but these wont be possible for the rare conditions that are candidates for gene therapy. Also, change is hard to capture, given the malleable nature of ASD: with no intervention, diagnosis can shift between ASD and pervasive developmental disorder-not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS) in 1284 months (as defined by the DSM-IV). Current scales are subjective and may miss specific items of clinical significance. (Last year, SFARI funded four efforts to develop more sensitive outcome measures.) King outlined other pitfalls in ASD clinical trials, including significant placebo responses, inadequate sample sizes and not being specific enough when asking about adverse effects. King also mentioned improvements that may arise from just enrolling in a study, which could prompt previously housebound families to venture out with their child, which could kick off a cascade of positive effects. He reiterated how, for gene therapy, a natural history comparison group may be more appropriate, combined with solid outcome measures.

SFARI Investigator James McPartland of Yale University then underlined the need for objective biomarkers for clinical trials, for which there are currently none that are FDA qualified for ASD. As the director of the Autism Biomarkers Consortium for Clinical Trials (ABC-CT), he works with other scientists to develop reliable biomarkers that can be scaled for use in large samples across different sites. McPartland noted a biomarker studied in the ABC-CT: an event-related potential (N170) to human faces, which is on average slower in ASD than in typically developing children. He is working on ways to make it easier for people with ASD and intellectual disabilities to participate in biomarker studies and to make them more socially naturalistic. In discussion, he mentioned he thought it would be possible to look for these kinds of biomarkers in younger children.

SFARI Investigator Shafali Jeste of the University of California, Los Angeles recounted her experience in working with children with genetic syndromes associated with neurodevelopmental conditions. Though she is asked to participate in clinical trials for these conditions, she senses the field has some work to do to be ready for these trials, particularly in those with additional challenges such as epilepsy and intellectual disability. Meaningful and measurable clinical endpoints are still insufficient, and there needs to be more ways to improve accessibility of these trials for these rare conditions. This means developing new measures, such as gait-mat technology that senses walking coordination, or EEG measures in waking and sleep, which have been applied to people with chromosome 15q11.2-13.1 duplication (dup15q) syndrome, who have severe intellectual disability and motor impairments. Jeste also emphasized that increasing remote access to some measures can make a big difference for a trial; for example, a trial of a behavioral intervention for tuberous sclerosis complex that required weekly lab visits was disappointingly under-enrolled until researchers revamped it so most of the intervention could be done remotely31.

By grappling with the challenges to gene therapy for ASD, the workshop marked out a faint road map of a way forward. As the scientific questions are answered, the regulatory and clinical trial infrastructure will need to develop apace, and coordination between private, academic and advocacy sectors will be essential. But as gene therapy for diverse human conditions continues to be explored and gene discovery in ASD continues, there is reason to believe that some forms of ASD can eventually benefit from this strategy.This workshop provided a terrific discussion about the challenges in developing targeted gene interventions and their potentially transformative effects as therapies, said John Spiro, Deputy Scientific Director of SFARI. We are grateful to all theparticipants, and SFARI looks forward to translating these discussions into focused funding decisions in the near future.

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Sarepta tries to fine-tune its gene therapy approach – BioPharma Dive

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

Dive Brief:

Known for its muscular dystrophy drugs Exondys 51 and Vydonys 53, Sarepta has quickly become a leader in gene therapy as well.

The last couple of years have seen the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotech ink gene therapy manufacturing and development deals, including a partnership with Roche that could be worth more than $3 billion.

Sarepta now has six gene therapies in clinical testing and another half dozen in preclinical stages. Most recently, the company announced positive, albeit early, results from a study of its experimental treatment for limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, a potentially deadly genetic disease.

With gene therapy set to become a cornerstone of its business, Sarepta is trying to avoid some the challenges presented by current technologies.

For example, when the company teamed up with North Carolina-based StrideBio late last year, one of the main goals was to use the partner's technology to "address re-dosing challenges in patients who have received AAV-delivered gene therapy." The deal came just days after a study testing an experimental gene therapy from Solid Biosciences, one of Sarepta's rivals, was paused due to a patient experiencing an immune response and organ complications.

"If successful, the ability to re-dose will be an enormous leap forward in the science of gene therapy and provide invaluable benefits to patients beyond those we anticipate with one-time dosing," said Doug Ingram, Sarepta's CEO, in a June 18 statement announcing the Selecta deal.

Under terms of that deal, Sarepta will pay Selecta an initial, undisclosed amount. Selecta is eligible to receive pre-clinical milestone payments, and could take home additional development, regulatory and commercial milestones should Sarepta exercise its options to enter a licensing agreement.

Specifically, the deal with Selecta centers on gene therapies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy and certain limb-girdle muscular dystrophies.

With Codiac, Sarepta has offered up $72.5 million in upfront and near-term license payments plus research funding. In addition, Codiak is eligible for "significant" milestone payments, according to Sarepta.

The two-year deal gives Sarepta the option to license Codiak's technology for up to five neuromuscular targets. The companies said they will collaborate on the design of exosomes that can deliver and release gene therapy, gene editing or RNA payloads. If Sarepta exercises an option, Codiak will then be in charge of research until right before the candidate goes into in-human testing. Sarepta is responsible for clinical development and commercial activities.

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UniQure gets out the gate first in race for Huntington’s gene therapy – BioPharma Dive

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

Dive Brief:

Huntington's disease is marked by physical and cognitive decline caused by cellular production of an abnormal version of a protein called huntingtin, which is essential for nerve cell health. About 30,000 people in the U.S. have the condition.

No treatments exist for the underlying disease, but Lundbeck's Xenazine and Teva's Austedo can help control the abnormal movements associated with Huntington's.

AMT-130, by contrast, uses a common virus to deliver strips of nucleic acid that can block the mutated genes that cause production of abnormal huntingtin. It is the first gene therapy to be tested in Huntington's disease patients.

UniQure plans to enroll 26 patients in this trial, with two groups receiving different doses of AMT-130 and a placebo arm that involves a partial surgery to make it appear patients have received the injection deep in the brain.

The main goal of the trial will be to determine if the therapy is safe, but as a secondary goal researchers will want to see how persistent AMT-130 is in the brain. Researchers will also be looking for signs that patients receiving the gene therapy decline more slowly than those who didn't, but the small trial may not be able to definitively answer that question.

UniQure likely won't be alone in this chase for long. Voyager, which has already advanced a Parkinson's disease gene therapy into the clinic in partnership with Neurocrine Biosciences, is nearing a decision on when to advance VY-HTT01 into the clinic.

At its first quarter corporate update, Voyager said it is "engaged in the ongoing conduct and review of preclinical studies" and would provide an update at mid-year.

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Timing Is an Essential Element of Cell & Gene Therapy Product Development – Xconomy

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

XconomyPhiladelphia

The science underpinning the latest investigational cell and gene therapies is complex enough. But the rapid advance of technologies that support development of these kinds of drugs presents logistical considerations, too.

Drug development is an interesting process because it takes five to 10 years to get a drug to market and invariably, somewhere along that line, the technologys a little outdated before it even is approved, and theres new things out there that are better, said Jeffrey Castelli, chief portfolio officer and head of gene therapy at Amicus Therapeutics (NASDAQ: FOLD). You look at some of the gene therapies that are now just ready coming to market and you think, wow, thats a pretty outdated gene therapy approachbut you really get locked in as youre moving your product toward development.

Castelli was among the executives who spoke as part of a panel at Xconomys online Xcelerating Life Sciences Philadelphia forum last week.

Amicus, headquartered in Cranbury Township, NJ, operates a gene therapy R&D center in Philadelphia.To keep its therapies from becoming stale prior to commercialization, the company keeps an eye on new technologies that arise, Castelli said. But some innovations invariably surface too late to incorporate.

We really try to implement them early on, and then make sure that when we have our second wave of programs and products weve incorporated some of the innovation, he said. But you do get locked into your approach along the way, and theres more and more switching costs as you move along that pathway.

To guide that process Tom Wilton, chief business officer at Philadelphia-based cell therapy company Carisma Therapeutics, says its essential to collect and analyze data early on to guide the path of drug development.

As a relatively small company youve really got to focus the majority of your resource on pushing forward that lead program and getting it into the clinic, he said. Later this year well get a lot of data back from that first-in-human clinical study, the first time anyones ever taken an engineered macrophage into the clinic. What that should give us then is a set of criteria and priorities around what we need to bring forward in a next-generator program.

To date the companys consideration of new technologies has been perhaps a bit more opportunisticeverything from gene editing the macrophages to novel binders to different combination strategiesbut once Carisma has the initial clinical data in hand, that will narrow its focus, Wilton said.

Theres always a tendency [with a first-generation product] to say we could do this to this, we could do this to this, but you have to lock it down, you have to get into the clinic and get that data set to really understand what your priorities are and where you need to focus, and thats what were planning to do.

As experimental products move into later stages of development, another consideration arises, the panelists said: Producing them at scale.

For cell and gene therapy companies, figuring out when to lock in the space needed to make these drugs so it is available when needed for clinical trials or commercialization is difficult to determine precisely, especially given the shortage of manufacturers versed in some of the advanced technologies needed to do so.

There is a capacity shortage right now in cell and gene therapy manufacturing, said Audrey Greenberg, co-founder and executive managing director of Discovery Labs, an MLP Ventures-backed biotech coworking and incubator space in King of Prussia, PA. Theres estimates that its five times [current cumulative bioreactor volumetric capacity] now and will be 50 times in five years given the FDA pipeline and the dollars flowing into these companies.

Discovery Labs is building out a $1.1 billion gene and cell treatment manufacturing operation plus developing a contract development manufacturing organization to provide services to companies in the sector.

Image: iStock/f11photo

Sarah de Crescenzo is an Xconomy editor based in San Diego. You can reach her at sdecrescenzo@xconomy.com.

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Sarepta Addressing Gene Therapy Issue With Two Acquisitions – Yahoo Finance

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

On the heels of research deals with two small biotechs, shares of Sarepta Therapeutics Inc. (NASDAQ:SRPT) hit their all-time high of more than $172 on June 23.

The share price of the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biopharmaceutical company has doubled since mid-March. It has a market cap of more than $13 billion.

Sarepta has made several deals in the past several years that have made gene therapy a key part of its business, which had been dominated by drugs for muscular dystrophy. One of those pacts, with Roche (RHHBY), could be worth more than $3 billion.

Sarepta currently has a half dozen gene therapies in clinical trials, with another six waiting in the wings, according to BioPharma Dive. One of the company's compounds has shown promise in treating a type of muscular dystrophy, a genetic disease that causes weakness and wasting of the muscles in the arms and legs.

A major challenge of gene therapy is immune system reactions. Sarepta, like other developers, uses a type of virus in its therapy that, while effective, may not be able to given more than once because patients can create antibodies to it.

That's a problem Sarepta is trying to address in its latest deals with privately held Codiak Biosciences and Selecta Biosciences Inc. (NASDAQ:SELB). In both cases, Sarepta has an option to license the biotechs' technology to develop and commercialize its therapies.

The Selecta deal focuses on gene therapies for Duchene muscular dystrophy and certain limb-girdle muscular dystrophies.

A Zion Market Research report said the global demand for the Duchenne muscular mystrophy therapeutics market was valued at approximately $2.4 billion in 2018 and is expected to grow to more than $20 billion by the end of 2025, a compound annual growth rate of more than 36% between 2019 and 2025.

Given the size of the opportunity, it's no surprise Sarepta has plenty of competitors vying for a share of the business, including Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE), PTC Therapeutics (NASDAQ:PTCT), FirbroGen Inc. (NASDAQ:FGEN), Roche and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. (NYSE:BMY).

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The two-year deal with Codiak gives Sarepta the right to license its technology for up to five neuromuscular diseases. If Sarepta exercises an option, Codiak will then handle research until right before the candidate goes into human testing. Sarepta will then be responsible for clinical development and commercializing the drug.

In April, the company announced it has resurrected its antiviral program in response to Covid-19. It has a therapy that is meant to block the coronavirus' ability to replicate. The treatment will be tested at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

"If it works, it will reduce the ability of the virus to replicate" and its ability to infect other cells, Sarepta CEO Doug Ingram told Forbes. He cautioned that the drug is at an "early stage."

According to CNN Money, the 21 analysts offering 12-month price forecasts for Sarepta have a median target of $192, with a high estimate of $260 and a low $152. The stock is rated a buy.

Disclosure: The author hold positions in Pfizer and Bristol-Myers Squibb.

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$14M Federal Grant to Research CAR-T Gene Therapy to Cure HIV – POZ

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

A group of collaborating scientists received a $13.65 million federal grant to study and develop a CAR-T therapy that will genetically modify immune cells and potentially cure HIV, according to a press release from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) funds the five-year grant as part of its effort to support HIV cure research. Participating researchers are affiliated with UCLA, the University of WashingtonFred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and CSL-Behring, a biotech company based in the United States and Australia.

The overarching goal of our proposed studies is to identify a newgene therapy strategy to safely and effectively modify a patients own stem cells to resist HIV infection andsimultaneously enhance their ability to recognize and destroy infected cells in the body in hopes of curing HIV infection, said UCLAs Scott Kitchen, PhD, an associate professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology, in the press release. Kitchen will colead the research with Irvin Chen, PhD, director of the UCLA AIDS Institute at the David Geffen School of Medicine.

Transplantation ofHIV-resistant stem cells is the only approach that has ever led to a known cure for HIV(andlikely a second such cure). But stem cell transplants are risky and can only be done in people with HIVwho need them for cancer treatment. Using gene therapy tomodify an individuals own stem cells might be a safer way toachieve the same result.

The Food and Drug Administration first approved CAR-T therapywhich stands for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapyin 2017. Its used to treat some forms of cancer, but as POZs sister publication Cancer Health has reported, it hasnt been commonly used because it is expensive and must be custom made for each patient.

In the case of cancer treatment, CAR-T therapy involves taking a patients T cells and sending them to alab where they are genetically modified to recognize and attack the cancer. The resulting cells are then infused back into the individual after the person has received strong chemotherapy to kill off some of their existing immune cells to make room for the new ones.

In CAR-T therapy for HIV, blood-forming stem cells would be genetically engineered togive rise to T cells that would seek out and destroy cells infected with HIV.

In a recent early study of the approach, the UCLA scientists found that engineered CAR T cells destroyed HIV-infected cellsand lived for more than two years.

Our work under the NIH grant will provide a great deal of insight into ways the immune response can be modified to better fight HIV infection, said Chen, a professor of medicine and of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics at the Geffen School of Medicine. The development of this unique strategy that allows the body to develop multiple ways to attack HIV could have an impact on other diseases as well, including the development of similar approaches targeting other types of chronic viral infections and cancers.

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Catalyst Biosciences Presents Preclinical FIX Gene Therapy Data in an Oral Presentation at the World Federation of Hemophilia Virtual Summit 2020 -…

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., June 19, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Catalyst Biosciences, Inc. (NASDAQ: CBIO), today presented data from preclinical studies of its hemophilia B gene therapy CB 2679d-GT at the WorldFederation of Hemophilia Virtual Summit, taking place from June 14 -19, 2020.

The oral presentation, entitled: Combination of a Novel Chimeric AAV Capsid and Potency Enhanced FIX Variant for Hemophilia B Gene Therapy, given by Dr. Grant Blouse, senior vice president of translational research, provided preclinical results of CB 2679d-GT, the companys novel FIX gene therapy. CB 2679d-GT was designed to achieve clinically relevant FIX levels at a reduced viral load by combining engineered AAV capsids with Catalysts novel high potency FIX transgene.

The preclinical data from our constructs demonstrated a strong dose response and improved reduction in bleeding relative to the Padua variant, said Nassim Usman, Ph.D., president and chief executive officer of Catalyst. The enhanced FIX activity and reduced viral dose may offer advantages over current AAV-based gene therapies in clinical development.

Studies of CB 2679d-GT in hemophilia B mice have demonstrated a 4-fold reduction in blood loss and an 8-fold reduction in bleeding time when compared with the same dose of the Padua variant of FIX. Furthermore, when packaged in a proprietary chimeric AAV capsid, CB 2679d-GT demonstrated a clear dose response of high stable FIX levels across the three dose levels in hemophilia B mice.

A pilot non-human primate study compared the expression and tolerability of CB 2679d-GT in the novel chimeric capsid KP1 with the LK03 capsid. The study demonstrated that CB 2679d-GT was well tolerated with high FIX expression that stabilized to approximately 25% to 50% FIX above baseline levels at the 6-week interim data cutoff. The novel chimeric capsid had differentiated and superior response to anti-capsid neutralizing antibodies than that observed for the LK03 comparator during the screening of non-human primates for the study.

A copy of the presentation slides can be accessed on the Events and Presentations section of the Catalyst website.

About Catalyst BiosciencesCatalyst is a research and clinical development biopharmaceutical company focused on addressing unmet needs in rare hematologic and systemic complement-mediated disorders. Our protease engineering platform includes development programs in hemophilia, a research program on subcutaneous (SQ) systemic complement inhibitors and a partnered preclinical development program with Biogen for dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD). One of our key competitive advantages is that the product candidates generated by our protease engineering platform have improved functionality and potency. These characteristics allow for improved dosing of our candidates including SQ systemic administration of recombinant coagulation factors and complement inhibitors, low-dose, high activity gene therapy constructs, and less frequently dosed intravitreal therapeutics. Our most advanced asset, SQ MarzAA has successfully completed Phase 2 development in prophylaxis, significantly reducing the annualized bleed rate (ABR) in individuals with Hemophilia A or B with inhibitors. Following regulatory guidance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency, we recently announced the design of a Phase 3 registration study that is planned for late 2020. Subcutaneous dalcinonacog alfa (DalcA) is being developed for the treatment of Hemophilia B and has demonstrated efficacy and safety in a Phase 2b clinical trial. We have a discovery stage Factor IX gene therapy construct - CB 2679d-GT - for Hemophilia B, that has demonstrated superiority compared with the Padua variant in preclinical models. Finally, we have a global license and collaboration agreement with Biogen for the development and commercialization of anti-complement Factor 3 (C3) pegylated CB 2782 for the potential treatment of geographic atrophy-associated dry AMD.

Forward-Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements that involve substantial risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements include statements about the superiority of CB 2679d-GT over the Padua variant, enhanced FIX activity of CB 2679d-GT, which may reduce viral dose and maintain high FIX activity levels while potentially decreasing liver toxicity, the chimeric capsid, which may have lower neutralization by pre-existing AAV antibodies, as well as plans for a Phase 3 trial of MarzAA in late 2020 and the Companys collaboration with Biogen for the development and commercialization of pegylated CB 2782 for the potential treatment of geographic atrophy-associated dry age-related macular degeneration. Actual results or events could differ materially from the plans, intentions, expectations and projections disclosed in the forward-looking statements. Various important factors could cause actual results or events to differ materially, including, but not limited to, the risk that trials and studies may be delayed as a result of the COVID-19 virus and other factors, that trials may not have satisfactory outcomes, that additional human trials will not replicate the results from animal trials or earlier human trials, that potential adverse effects may arise from the testing or use of DalcA or MarzAA, including the generation of neutralizing antibodies, which has been observed in patients treated with DalcA, the risk that costs required to develop or manufacture the Companys products will be higher than anticipated, including as a result of delays in development and manufacturing resulting from COVID-19 and other factors, the risk that Biogen will terminate Catalysts agreement, competition and other risks described in the Risk Factors section of the Companys quarterly report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 11, 2020, and in other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Company does not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as required by law.

Contact:Ana KaporCatalyst Biosciences, Inc.investors@catbio.com

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The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine Announces Its 2020 Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa Goes Virtual – GlobeNewswire

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

Washington, DC, June 24, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE -- The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM), an international multi-stakeholder advocacy organization representing the regenerative medicine and advanced therapy sector, today announced a new virtual format for its annual Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa, which will take place October 12-16, 2020.

ARM's leadership and Board of Directors arrived at the decision to host the 2020 Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa virtually after consulting with numerous ARM members and gathering information from various health authorities. Ultimately, hosting the meeting virtually will be the safest and most inclusive solution, allowing attendees to connect with potential partners globally while avoiding any risk to safety.

This year's Cell & Gene Meeting on the Mesa will bring together senior executives from leading cell therapy, gene therapy, and tissue engineering companies worldwide, large pharma and biotech, institutional investors, academic research institutions, patient foundations and disease philanthropies, life science media, and more.

During this unprecedented period of social distancing, ARM continues to provide members with avenues to engage and connect, said ARM CEO Janet Lambert. Our virtual Meeting on the Mesa is an invaluable opportunity for stakeholders from across the sector to convene, to network, and to continue to work to ensure innovative cell and gene therapies reach patients in need.

The conference, which will now take place over five days, includes a virtual form of the meetings signature partnering system, expected to facilitate more than 3,000 one-to-one meetings between industry leaders. The program will include 15+ digital panels and workshops featuring key industry leaders discussing issues and trends in the regenerative medicine and advanced therapy sector, from market access to the latest discoveries in gene editing. Representatives from more than 80 prominent public and private companies will deliver on-demand presentations highlighting their clinical and commercial progress to interested partners and investors.

Additional event details will be updated regularly on the event website http://www.meetingonthemesa.com.

Registration is currently open, with discounted early-bird rates available through July 24. Registration is complimentary for investors and credentialed members of the media. To learn more and to register, please visitwww.meetingonthemesa.com. For members of the media interested in attending, please contact Kaitlyn (Donaldson) Dupont atkdonaldson@alliancerm.org.

For interested organizations looking to increase exposure to this fields top decision-makers via sponsorship, please contact Laura Stringham at lparsons@alliancerm.org for additional information.

About the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine

The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM) is an international multi-stakeholder advocacy organization that promotes legislative, regulatory, and reimbursement initiatives necessary to facilitate access to life-giving advances in regenerative medicine worldwide. ARM also works to increase public understanding of the field and its potential to transform human healthcare, providing business development and investor outreach services to support the growth of its member companies and research organizations. Prior to the formation of ARM in 2009, there was no advocacy organization operating in Washington, D.C. to specifically represent the interests of the companies, research institutions, investors, and patient groups that comprise the entire regenerative medicine community. Today, ARM has more than 350 members and is the leading global advocacy organization in this field. To learn more about ARM or to become a member, visithttp://www.alliancerm.org.

Kaitlyn (Donaldson) Dupont

803-727-8346

kdonaldson@alliancerm.org

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Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market: Revenue Growth and Applications Insights – Cole of Duty

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

Prophecy Market Insights Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market market research report focuses on the market structure and various factors affecting the growth of the market. The research study encompasses an evaluation of the market, including growth rate, current scenario, and volume inflation prospects, based on DROT and Porters Five Forces analyses. The market study pitches light on the various factors that are projected to impact the overall market dynamics of the Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market market over the forecast period (2019-2029).

The data and information required in the market report are taken from various sources such as websites, annual reports of the companies, journals, and others and were validated by the industry experts. The facts and data are represented in the Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market report using diagrams, graphs, pie charts, and other clear representations to enhance the visual representation and easy understanding the facts mentioned in the report.

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The Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market research study contains 100+ market data Tables, Pie Chat, Graphs & Figures spread through Pages and easy to understand detailed analysis. The predictions mentioned in the market report have been derived using proven research techniques, assumptions and methodologies. This Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market market report states the overview, historical data along with size, share, growth, demand, and revenue of the global industry.

All the key players mentioned in the Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market market report are elaborated thoroughly based on R&D developments, distribution channels, industrial penetration, manufacturing processes, and revenue. Also, the report examines, legal policies, and competitive analysis between the leading and emerging and upcoming market trends.

Global Cell and Gene Therapy MarketMarket Key Companies:

Segmentation Overview:

Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market, By-Products:

Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market, By Distribution Channel Type:

Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market, By End-Users:

Apart from key players analysis provoking business-related decisions that are usually backed by prevalent market conditions, we also do substantial analysis on market segmentation. The report provides an in-depth analysis of the Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market market segments. It highlights the latest trending segment and major innovations in the market. In addition to this, it states the impact of these segments on the growth of the market.

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The survey report includes a vast investigation of the geographical scene of the Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market market, which is manifestly arranged into the localities. The report provides an analysis of regional market players operating in the specific market and outcomes related to the target market for more than 20 countries.

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Impact Analysis of Covid-19 On Cell and Gene Therapy Market Key Players, Share, Trend, Segmentation and Forecast to 2027 | Amgen, Biogen, BioMarin…

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

A new business intelligence report released by CMI with title Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market Insights, Forecast to 2027 that targets and provides comprehensive market analysis with future prospects to 2024. The analysts of the study have garnered extensive research methodologies and data sources (i.e. Secondary & Primary Sources) in order to generate collective and useful information that delivers latest market undercurrents and industry trends.

If you are involved in the Global Cell and Gene Therapy industry or intend to be, then this study will provide you comprehensive outlook. Its vital you keep your market knowledge up to date segmented by major players. If you have a different set of players/manufacturers according to geography or needs regional or country segmented reports we can provide customization according to your requirement.

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Top players in the market

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Research methodology adopted by Coherent Market Insights

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This study categorizes the global Cell and Gene Therapy breakdown data by manufacturers, region, type and application, also analyzes the market status, market share, growth rate, future trends, market drivers, opportunities and challenges, risks and entry barriers, sales channels, distributors and Porters Five Forces Analysis. Global Cell and Gene Therapy market size will increase to Million US$ by 2027, from Million US$ in 2017, at a CAGR of during the forecast period. In this study, 2017 has been considered as the base year and 2020 to 2027 as the forecast period to estimate the market size for Cell and Gene Therapy. This report focuses on the top manufacturers Cell and Gene Therapy capacity, production, value, price and market share of Cell and Gene Therapy in global market. The following manufacturers are

Competition Analysis:

Some of key competitors or manufacturers included in the study are Amgen, Biogen, BioMarin Pharmaceuticals, Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis, Pfizer, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Sanofi, Spark Therapeutics, Agilis Biotherapeutics, Angionetics AVROBIO, Freeline Therapeutics, Horama, MeiraGTx, Myonexus Therapeutics, Nightstar Therapeutics, Kolon TissueGene, Inc., JCR Pharmaceuticals Co., Ltd., and MEDIPOST.

Detailed Segmentation:

By Therapy Type:Cell TherapyStem CellsT CellsDendritic CellsNK CellsTumor CellsGene TherapyGlobal Cell and Gene Therapy Market, By Indication:Cardiovascular DiseaseCancerGenetic DisorderInfectious DiseaseNeurological DisordersOthers

Market Analysis by Geographies:

This report is segmented into key Regions to identify significant trends and factors driving or inhibiting the market growth. To analyze the opportunities in the market for stakeholders by identifying the high growth segments., To strategically analyze each submarket with respect to individual growth trend and their contribution to the market. & to analyze competitive developments such as expansions, agreements, new product launches, and acquisitions in the market. With Production Development, Sales, and Regional Trade & Forecast.

Stay up-to-date with Global Cell and Gene Therapy market research offered by CMI. Check how key trends and emerging drivers are shaping this industry growth as the study avails you with market characteristics, size and growth, segmentation, regional breakdowns, competitive landscape, shares, trend and strategies for this market. In the Cell and Gene Therapy Market Analysis & Forecast 2020-2027, the revenue is valued at USD XX million in 2017 and is expected to reach USD XX million by the end of 2027, growing at a CAGR of XX% between 2020 and 2027. The production is estimated at XX million in 2017 and is forecasted to reach XX million by the end of 2027, growing at a CAGR of XX% between 2020 and 2027.

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Some of the Points cover in Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market Research Report is:

Chapter 1: Overview of Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market (2020-2027)

Chapter 2: Market Competition by Players/Suppliers 2015 and 2020

Chapter 3: Sales (Volume) and Revenue (Value) by Region (2015-2020)

Chapter 4, 5 and 6: Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market by Type, Application & Players/Suppliers Profiles (2015-2020)

Chapter 7, 8 and 9: Global Cell and Gene Therapy Manufacturing Cost, Sourcing & Marketing Strategy Analysis

Chapter 10 and 11: Cell and Gene Therapy Market Effect Factors Analysis and Market Size (Value and Volume) Forecast (2020-2027)

Chapter 12, 13, 14 and 15: Global Cell and Gene Therapy Market Research Findings and Conclusion, appendix and data source

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BRIEF-Uniqure Announces License Agreement With CSL Behring To Commercialize Hemophilia B Gene Therapy – Reuters

June 25th, 2020 6:42 pm

June 24 (Reuters) - Uniqure NV:

* UNIQURE ANNOUNCES LICENSE AGREEMENT WITH CSL BEHRING TO COMMERCIALIZE HEMOPHILIA B GENE THERAPY

* UNIQURE NV - UNIQURE ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE MORE THAN $2 BILLION, INCLUDING $450 MILLION IN UPFRONT CASH

* UNIQURE NV - CO ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE $1.6 BILLION IN MILESTONE PAYMENTS, AND DOUBLE-DIGIT ROYALTIES RANGING UP TO A LOW-TWENTIES PERCENTAGE OF NET SALES

* UNIQURE NV - LICENSING AGREEMENT PROVIDES CSL BEHRING EXCLUSIVE GLOBAL RIGHTS TO ETRANACOGENE DEZAPARVOVEC

* UNIQURE NV - CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT AND REGULATORY ACTIVITIES PERFORMED BY UNIQURE UNDER AGREEMENT WILL BE REIMBURSED BY CSL BEHRING

* UNIQURE NV - CSL BEHRING WILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR REGULATORY SUBMISSIONS & COMMERCIALIZATION OF ETRANACOGENE DEZAPARVOVEC

* UNIQURE NV - CO PLANS TO DE-PRIORITIZE ITS RESEARCH PROGRAM OF AMT-180 FOR PATIENTS WITH HEMOPHILIA A

* UNIQURE NV - EXPECT TRANSACTION TO PROVIDE CO WITH SIGNIFICANT FINANCIAL RESOURCES TO ADVANCE & EXPAND PIPELINE OF GENE THERAPY CANDIDATES Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage:

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Sarepta Therapeutics and Codiak BioSciences Collaborate to Research and Develop Exosome-Based Therapeutics for Rare Diseases – GlobeNewswire

June 24th, 2020 12:47 pm

- Alliance to explore the utility of engineered exosomes developed with Codiaks engEx Platform to deliver gene therapy, gene editing and RNA technologies -

- Two-year, global research and option agreement covers up to five neuromuscular targets -

- Codiak is eligible to receive up to$72.5 millionin upfront and near-term license payments plus research funding -

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sarepta Therapeutics, Inc.(NASDAQ:SRPT), the leader in precision genetic medicine for rare diseases, and Codiak BioSciences, Inc., a company at the forefront of advancing engineered exosomes as a new class of biologic medicines, today announced a global research and option agreement to design and develop engineered exosome therapeutics to deliver gene therapy, gene editing and RNA technologies for neuromuscular diseases. The engineered exosome approach offers the potential to effectively deliver genetic therapeutics without triggering the adaptive immune response.

The two-year agreement includes up to five neuromuscular targets. Codiak is eligible to receive up to$72.5 millionin upfront and near-term license payments plus research funding. Sarepta is granted an option to any of the candidates developed pursuant to the research alliance.

Exosomes are natural nanoparticles that serve as the bodys intercellular communication system, facilitating the transfer of a wide variety molecular payloads between cells. As they are derived from human cells, exosomes provide a unique advantage as a targeted delivery system for genetic medicines because they are inherently non-immunogenic. Through its proprietary, engEx Platform, Codiak can engineer exosomes with specific cargos and guide tropism to cell types of interest. The collaboration will leverage Codiaks exosome engineering capabilities with Sareptas expertise in precision genetic medicine to develop next generation therapeutics for patients with neuromuscular diseases that have few or no treatment options.

As Sarepta expands its leadership position in precision genetic medicine, this alliance with Codiak furthers our goal to deliver the most advanced therapies to patients. Codiaks engEx technology could potentially address some of the limitations of current treatment approaches and offers broad utility across Sareptas therapeutic modalities -- gene therapies, gene editing and RNA. Codiaks exosomes are engineered for precise tissue targeting and offer a non-viral delivery approach with non-immunogenic potential, thus opening up avenues for more efficient delivery and potential re-dosing, said Doug Ingram, president and chief executive officer, Sarepta Therapeutics.

The development of targeted delivery systems that enable repeat-dosing to select cell types has been a challenge for the emerging field of genetic medicine, especially in diseases of the muscle, said Douglas E. Williams, President and CEO of Codiak BioSciences. Engineered exosomes may offer a solution through their potential to selectively target muscle cells. We are excited to work with the world-class team at Sarepta to further build the engEx Platform and evaluate the potential of exosomes as next generation constructs incorporating gene therapy, gene editing and other nucleic acid payload modalities.

Under the terms of the agreement, Sarepta has the exclusive option to license Codiaks technology to develop and commercialize engineered exosome therapeutics for up to five neuromuscular targets. Sarepta and Codiak will collaborate to design exosomes that can deliver and functionally release select payloads, such as nucleic acids and gene therapy and gene editing constructs, in neuromuscular indications. If Sarepta elects to exercise its option on a target, Codiak will be responsible for research and preclinical development through IND preparation, and Sarepta will be responsible for clinical development and commercial activities. In addition to upfront, research funding and license payments, Codiak will be eligible to receive significant development and regulatory milestone payments and tiered royalties on future sales.

About engEx PlatformThe engEx Platform is Codiaks proprietary exosome therapeutic engine for engineering and manufacturing novel exosome product candidates designed to target multiple pathways throughout the body. Using this platform, Codiak can design exosomes with precisely engineered properties, incorporate various types of biologically active molecules and direct them to specific cell types and tissues. These exosomes engage targets by cellular uptake, membrane-to-membrane interaction or a combination of both mechanisms and are designed to change the biological functioning of the recipient cells in order to produce the intended biological effect. Codiak is building a broad pipeline of engEx product candidates that may have a transformative impact on the treatment of many diseases.

About Codiak BioSciencesCodiak BioSciences is harnessing exosomesnatural intercellular messengersto develop a new class of biologic medicines, exosome therapeutics. Utilizing our proprietary and versatile exosome engineering and manufacturing platform (engEx Platform), Codiak is developing exosomes with precisely engineered properties to engage pathways and deliver potent therapeutics to specific cell targets. We are building a broad pipeline of therapeutic candidates that may have a transformative impact on the treatment of many diseases, including in the areas of oncology, immune-based diseases, fibrotic disorders, neurological disorders and rare diseases. For more information, visithttp://www.codiakbio.com.

About Sarepta Therapeutics At Sarepta, we are leading a revolution in precision genetic medicine and every day is an opportunity to change the lives of people living with rare disease. The Company has built an impressive position in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and in gene therapies for limb-girdle muscular dystrophies (LGMDs), mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA, Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT), and other CNS-related disorders, with more than 40 programs in various stages of development. The Companys programs and research focus span several therapeutic modalities, including RNA, gene therapy and gene editing. For more information, please visitwww.sarepta.com or follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and Facebook.

Sarepta Forward Looking StatementsThis press release contains "forward-looking statements." Any statements contained in this press release that are not statements of historical fact may be deemed to be forward-looking statements. Words such as "believes," "anticipates," "plans," "expects," "will," "intends," "potential," "possible" and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include statements regarding the parties obligations and responsibilities under the agreement, potential payments and fees, potential neuromuscular targets and Sareptas option to any of the candidates developed pursuant to the research alliance; the potential benefits of the engineered exosome approach, including effectively delivering genetic therapeutics without triggering the adaptive immune response and selectively targeting muscle cells; the potential of exosomes to provide a unique advantage as a targeted delivery system for genetic medicines; and the potential benefits of the collaboration between Sarepta and Codiak, including the development of next generation therapeutics for patients with neuromuscular diseases that have few or no treatment options.

These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond Sareptas control. Known risk factors include, among others: the expected benefits and opportunities related to the collaboration between Sarepta and Codiak BioSciences may not be realized or may take longer to realize than expected due to challenges and uncertainties inherent in product research and development. In particular, the collaboration may not result in any viable treatments suitable for commercialization due to a variety of reasons, including any inability of the parties to perform their commitments and obligations under the agreement; success in preclinical trials does not ensure that later clinical trials will be successful; Sarepta may not be able to execute on its business plans and goals, including meeting its expected or planned regulatory milestones and timelines, clinical development plans, and bringing its product candidates to market, due to a variety of reasons, many of which may be outside of Sareptas control, including possible limitations of company financial and other resources, manufacturing limitations that may not be anticipated or resolved for in a timely manner, regulatory, court or agency decisions, such as decisions by the United States Patent and Trademark Office with respect to patents that cover Sareptas product candidates and the COVID-19 pandemic; and even if Sareptas programs result in new commercialized products, Sarepta may not achieve the expected revenues from the sale of such products; and those risks identified under the heading Risk Factors in Sareptas most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2019, and most recent Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as well as other SEC filings made by Sarepta which you are encouraged to review.

Any of the foregoing risks could materially and adversely affect Sareptas business, results of operations and the trading price of Sareptas common stock. For a detailed description of risks and uncertainties Sarepta faces, you are encouraged to review the SEC filings made by Sarepta. We caution investors not to place considerable reliance on the forward-looking statements contained in this press release. Sarepta does not undertake any obligation to publicly update its forward-looking statements based on events or circumstances after the date hereof.

Contacts:

Sarepta TherapeuticsInvestors: Ian Estepan, 617-274-4052, iestepan@sarepta.comMedia: Tracy Sorrentino, 617-301-8566, tsorrentino@sarepta.com

Codiak BioSciencesKate Niazi-Sai, 617-949-5696, media@codiakbio.com

Link:
Sarepta Therapeutics and Codiak BioSciences Collaborate to Research and Develop Exosome-Based Therapeutics for Rare Diseases - GlobeNewswire

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Genetic Medicine will be the Solution to COVID-19, and Ligandal is Leading the way – PR Web

June 24th, 2020 12:47 pm

Andre Watson

SAN FRANCISCO (PRWEB) June 18, 2020

Vaccines currently in development face the dual challenge of overcoming the temporary immunity presented by coronavirus infection, and the SARS-CoV-2 viruss highly effective cloaking mechanism that effectively renders it invisible to the immune system.

Ligandals technology has been designed around the unique genetic signature of the virus, which has informed the development of a peptide nanoscaffold. This peptide prevents the virus from binding with human cells, halting infection. The peptide also simultaneously disables the viral cloaking mechanism, making the virus vulnerable to an immune response.

Andre Watson, CEO and Founder of Ligandal, says, I started Ligandal to create practical genetic medicine technology that solves the worlds most pressing health problems. We had been developing a way of training T-cells to attack cancer tumours, but when the COVID-19 pandemic began, I realised our technology would be effective at neutralising this single, virulent pathogen without requiring a gene therapy component. The beauty of our solution is that it can be used as treatment and vaccine. In infected people, the peptide will prevent viral entry and replication, while bolstering the immune response and formation of neutralising antibodies that can eliminate the virus. Other approaches may neutralise the virus, but many alternatives such as antibody therapies and viral-neutralising compounds will leave the body vulnerable to repeat infection. In those who havent been infected, the peptide will display critical immunoepitopes for antibody and T cell responses against the key parts of the virus necessary for forming a neutralising response. The peptide can also be used in conjunction with other treatments and vaccinesand may bolster the efficacy of spike protein vaccines in particularalthough that shouldnt be necessary if we achieve in vivo results suggested by the in silico modelling.

Adam Hamdy, a medical consultant and author, who recently joined the companys advisory board, says, The microbiological characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 make it extremely unlikely that current vaccine approaches, which rely on training the immune system but present key challenges with this virus, will offer anything more than partial protection at best. It was clear to me that any effective response to this virus had to target it directly while also bolstering immune response.

Importantly, Ligandals peptide has advantages over other technologies in development because it is room temperature stable, meaning it represents a genuinely global solution, both in terms of logistics and the storage of the medicine. It also has a low cost per dose once at mass production scale, which means global producton is entirely feasible. It can also move rapidly through preclinical and clinical studies given the accelerated global regulatory environment and simple at scale manufacturing process.

Andre Watson says, As hostile actors take note of the havoc caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, it is clear we need better ways to ramp up our biodefense capabilities. A rapid four-year conventional vaccine cycle to trial a single solution isnt going to be sufficient to meet future threats. Ligandal modelled its peptide within five hours of receiving a genetic sequence of the virus, and was ready to test its response in two months. We anticipate being ready to commence clinical studies later this year or very early next year. Our only limitation in getting this to the general public is how quickly we can move through the clinical studies.

Adam Hamdy says, A long term solution to the COVID-19 problem lies in genetic medicine. Ligandals peptide is an exciting leap forward in our ability to address and neutralise the virus directly. Unlike conventional vaccines, which only get one shot at proving efficacy, Ligandals peptide can be improved by rewriting its genetic code in response to novel viral variants, giving us the opportunity to rapidly iterate and keep at the problem until we get the answer absolutely right.

About Ligandal

Based in San Francisco, Ligandal is a genetic medicine company that uses nanotechnology to develop targeted and personalised therapies.

For more information visit http://www.ligandal.com

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Genetic Medicine will be the Solution to COVID-19, and Ligandal is Leading the way - PR Web

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