P5*

OsteoProtect

Prof. Bodo Levkau, University of Duisburg-Essen; Dr Sarah Weske, University of Duisburg-Essen

PROvendis GmbH


Challenge

There are currently 200 million people suffering from osteoporosis worldwide. Low bone mass and deteriorating bone quality lead to an increased risk of fractures, high morbidity and increased mortality. According to the International Osteoporosis Foundation, one in three women and one in five men over the age of 50 will experience osteoporotic fractures. Current pharmacological therapy consists of antiresorptive agents, none of which stimulates new bone formation.


Technology

Bone tissue undergoes dynamical remodeling by the coordinated action of bone-degrading osteoclasts and bone-forming osteoblasts. The inventors showed that S1P inhibited osteoclast function, but most importantly, stimulated osteoblasts to produce new bone. Thus, a sufficient S1P-concentration is fundamental for an osteoanabolic fine-tuning of the skelettal system. Furthermore they showed that high S1P counteracts obesity by reducing adipose tissue mass. According to the invention, in patients suffering from osteoporosis, bone formation may be facilitated (and obesity reduced) by administering inhibitors of the S1P-lyase (the key enzyme degrading S1P). An exemplary S1P-lyase inhibitor tested by the inventors is the compound 4-deoxypyridoxin (DOP). The compound showed clear therapeutic potential in mouse models of genetic and hormonal (estrogen deficiency) osteoporosis. S1P blood concentration was also an indicator of bone health in a study with over 4000 human individuals.


Commercial Opportunity

Licensing and collaboration


Development Status

In vivo data are available


Patent Situation

Priority application filed


Further Reading

Weske, S. et al. (2018) Targeting sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase as an anabolic therapy for bone loss. Nat. Med. 24(5): 667-678


 

OsteoProtect