REDWOOD CITY, CA and MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA -- 11/15/09 --
Amunix, Inc. and
Versartis, Inc. announced today that the scientific journal Nature
Biotechnology has published a comprehensive paper entitled "A recombinant
polypeptide extends the in vivo half-life of peptides and proteins in a
tunable manner." The paper (http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nbt.1588) describes
the design of Amunix's polypeptide sequence XTEN and presents preclinical
data for Versartis' product candidates VRS-859 as a monthly-dosed treatment
for type 2 diabetes and VRS-317 as a monthly-dosed treatment for growth
hormone deficiency.
The published data demonstrate that XTEN, a technology for half-life
extension, can provide an effective means for prolonging the in vivo
half-life of therapeutic peptides and proteins. With a longer half-life,
patients have improved convenience and compliance with comparable efficacy
to the drug without XTEN. XTEN is an unstructured recombinant polypeptide
that is genetically fused to a peptide or protein. The XTEN sequence has
been specifically designed to have low immunogenicity and good
manufacturability, making it a generic platform technology applicable to a
wide variety of peptide and protein therapeutics. The publication presents,
for the first time, the example case of the exenatide peptide fused to
XTEN, with a projected human half-life of 139 hours, and preclinical data
on human growth hormone fused to XTEN with a half-life in monkeys of 110
hours.
"Based on data from several peptides and proteins fused to XTEN, we expect
that XTEN will enable dosing of otherwise rapidly cleared protein drugs at
up to monthly intervals in humans," commented Willem 'Pim' Stemmer, Ph.D.,
Amunix Chief Executive Officer.
"These peer-reviewed results further validate that the monthly-dosed
exenatide (VRS-859) and human growth hormone (VRS-317) products provide
significant advantages over other approaches on the market or in clinical
trials," noted Jeffrey L. Cleland, Ph.D., Versartis Chief Executive
Officer.
XTEN has now been successfully fused to more than ten different protein
payloads with sizes ranging from small peptides such as exenatide to larger
proteins such as growth hormone and Factor VII. Depending on the length of
the attached XTEN sequence, data have demonstrated that the serum half-life
of a given compound may be tuned to fit its clinical indication. In the
case of some payloads, glucagon in particular, extremely long serum
half-life may exacerbate toxic side-effects. In addition, extremely long
serum
half-life can be undesirable in the case where toxicities manifest during
treatment, since drug treatment cannot be rapidly withdrawn. Therefore, it
is expected that the versatility of various truncations of the XTEN
sequence will enable rapid development of precisely tuned therapeutic
agents. Although extremely long serum half-life is a concern for some
payloads, a large number of payloads benefit significantly from reduced
injection frequency, including improvements in patient compliance and
expense.
The recombinant nature of XTEN provides several advantages over traditional
PEGylation. Genetic fusion of a defined amino acid sequence results in a
homogeneous drug compound relative to chemically PEGylated proteins. The
overall cost and yield of the final product are also significantly improved
for XTEN products, since the need for chemical coupling and purification
from multiply PEGylated species, inactive species, and free PEG has been
removed. The nonimmunogenic and biodegradable properties of XTEN are
expected to yield a significantly improved safety profile relative to PEG.
In addition to the reduced dosing frequency, XTEN products enable room
temperature stability and low cost manufacturing. The XTEN properties
allow for co-formulation and co-administration of proteins and peptides
that are normally incompatible. Versartis and Amunix are also conducting
research on combination products for metabolic disease to further exploit
these novel properties.
About Amunix
Amunix is focused on the application of its proprietary XTEN protein
polymer technology to create a broad spectrum of protein pharmaceutical
products with improvements in dosing frequency, compliance and ease of use
(via serum half-life increase); safety potential (biodegradability
resulting in reduced kidney vacuolation as well as reduced payload
immunogenicity); cost of goods (by elimination of chemical conjugation
steps); manufacturability (through E. coli soluble cytoplasmic expression,
universal purification processes including heat lysis); and formulation
(payload stabilization allowing liquid formulation and increased
concentration through hydrophilicity). Amunix, Inc. has 28 employees and
is located in Mountain View, California. See www.amunix.com for more
details.
About Versartis
Versartis, Inc., a Redwood City, California biotechnology company, is
developing new therapeutic compounds for the treatment of metabolic
diseases and endocrine disorders using XTEN, a novel hydrophilic amino acid
sequence that prolongs the half-life of proteins and peptides. Versartis
products are designed to provide enhanced stability and less frequent
dosing requirements with potentially fewer patient side effects than
currently available treatments.
Versartis, a joint venture company between Amunix, Inc. and Index Ventures,
owns and develops three novel drug candidates in metabolic diseases and
endocrinology that it has licensed from Amunix. Versartis has preclinical
proof-of-concept for exenatide and IL-1ra for diabetes, and hGH for growth
hormone deficiency. Further information on Versartis can be found at
www.versartis.com.
Contacts:
Corporate
Jeffrey L. Cleland, Ph.D.
CEO
650 632-4410
Email Contact
Pim Stemmer, Ph.D.
CEO
650-428-1800
Email Contact
Media
Debra Bannister
530 676-8001
Email Contact