Retrotope

Retrotope, Inc.
Founded 2006
Founder Charles Cantor, Dr Robert Molinari and Dr. Mikhail S. Shchepinov[1]
Legal status Clinical stage pharmaceutical company
Headquarters Los Altos, CA, United States
Services Drug development
Dr Robert Molinari
Dr Harry Saal
Website www.retrotope.com

Retrotope, Inc. commercialises the idea that fortifying food with heavy isotopes[2] protects living cells by making bonds within the delicate molecules inside and around cells harder to break and the cells less prone to damage. Founded in 2006 by a team of entrepreneurs and scientists including Dr Charles Cantor and Dr Robert Molinari using seed funding from private investors, Retrotope is developing a non-antioxidant approach to preventing lipid peroxidation, a detrimental factor in mitochondrial, neuronal and retinal diseases. The company employs the virtual business model[3] and works in scientific collaboration with more than 80 research groups in universities worldwide.[4]

Development

Retrotope's drug platform, deuterium stabilized polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), prevents lipid peroxidation damage from propagating, rapidly stopping the toxic chain reaction at its source. Because the fatty acids in mitochondrial and cellular membranes turn over rapidly, the dietary substitution of stabilized fatty acids creates cells fortified against damage due to kinetic isotope effect. 11,11-D2-ethyl linoleate suppresses lipid peroxidation even at relatively low levels of incorporation into membranes.[5] In 2010 Retrotope found that it more than 150 times increases the resistance of the yeast to oxidative stress,[6][7] later it was shown to be effective in an animal model of Alzheimer's disease.[8] A June 2018 study found that a diet of D-PUFA was shown to significantly decrease F2-isoprostanes (a cerebrospinal fluid found in elevated amounts in Huntington's disease) when fed to one-month old mice over the course of five months.[9] These findings caused discussion in popular science press about the use of deuterated nutrients against ageing,[10] but the most promising direction of further development was towards rare neurodegenerative disorders in which oxidative damage plays a part.

Clinical trials

The first deuterated PUFA made and studied by Retrotope, 11,11-D2-ethyl linoleate, has become the first Retrotope's drug RT001 that was taken into the clinic. It has passed Phase I/II clinical trial for the treatment of Freiderich's ataxia, reaching statistical significance in, and displaying strong correlations between several endpoint measurements.[11]

In 2017 FDA granted RT001 orphan drug designation in the treatment of phospholipase 2G6-associated neurodegeneration (PLAN).[12] A Phase II open-label clinical study for long-term evaluation of efficacy, safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of RT001 in the treatment of Infantile Neuroaxonal Dystrophy started in the Summer 2018.[13]

Other clinical use

After a petition for access filed by investigators at major medical centers, in 2018 RT001 was given to a patient with ALS under a "compassionate use" scheme sponsored by Retrotope.[14]

References

  1. "Retrotope Inc.: Private Company Information - Bloomberg". www.bloomberg.com.
  2. "Research suggests fortified food could help resist ageing". The Guardian. 27 March 2007.
  3. "Fat-based Parkinson's drug headed to clinical trial with $6.5M in angel money". MedCityNews.
  4. "Collaborations". Retrotope.
  5. Hill S, Lamberson CR, Xu L, To R, Tsui HS, Shmanai VV, Bekish AV, Awad AM, Marbois BN, Cantor CR, Porter NA, Clarke CF, Shchepinov MS (August 2012). "Small amounts of isotope-reinforced polyunsaturated fatty acids suppress lipid autoxidation". Free Radical Biology & Medicine. 53 (4): 893–906. doi:10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2012.06.004. PMC 3437768. PMID 22705367.
  6. Thomson H (27 October 2010). "Heavy hydrogen keeps yeast looking good". New Scientist.
  7. Hill S, Hirano K, Shmanai VV, Marbois BN, Vidovic D, Bekish AV, Kay B, Tse V, Fine J, Clarke CF, Shchepinov MS (January 2011). "Isotope-reinforced polyunsaturated fatty acids protect yeast cells from oxidative stress". Free Radical Biology & Medicine. 50 (1): 130–8. doi:10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2010.10.690. PMC 3014413. PMID 20955788.
  8. Elharram A, Czegledy NM, Golod M, Milne GL, Pollock E, Bennett BM, Shchepinov MS (December 2017). "Deuterium-reinforced polyunsaturated fatty acids improve cognition in a mouse model of sporadic Alzheimer's disease". The FEBS Journal. 284 (23): 4083–4095. doi:10.1111/febs.14291. PMC 5716852. PMID 29024570.
  9. "Deuterium‐reinforced linoleic acid lowers lipid peroxidation and mitigates cognitive impairment in the Q140 knock in mouse model of Huntington's disease". The FEBS Journal. 22 June 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  10. Hamzelou J (13 May 2015). "Pill of super-protective 'heavy' fat may be key to eternal youth". New Scientist.
  11. Zesiewicz T, Heerinckx F, De Jager R, Omidvar O, Kilpatrick M, Shaw J, Shchepinov MS (April 2018). "Randomized, clinical trial of RT001: Early signals of efficacy in Friedreich's ataxia". Movement Disorders. doi:10.1002/mds.27353. PMID 29624723.
  12. "US FDA Grants Orphan Drug Designation for Retrotope's RT001 in the Treatment of Phospholipase 2G6 (PLA2G6)-Associated Neurodegeneration". Global Newswire. 2 November 2017.
  13. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03570931
  14. https://alsnewstoday.com/2018/09/18/experimental-rt001-available-for-als-under-expanded-access-program/
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