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Biospyder Technologies, Inc. SBIR Phase I Award, January 2021

A SBIR Phase I contract was awarded to BioSpyder Technologies in January, 2021 for $252,121.0 USD from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and National Institutes of Health.

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sbir.gov/node/2184381
Is a
SBIR/STTR Awards
SBIR/STTR Awards

SBIR/STTR Award attributes

SBIR/STTR Award Recipient
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BioSpyder Technologies
0
Government Agency
0
Government Branch
National Institutes of Health
National Institutes of Health
0
Award Type
SBIR0
Contract Number (US Government)
1R43ES032514-010
Award Phase
Phase I0
Award Amount (USD)
252,1210
Date Awarded
January 1, 2021
0
End Date
July 31, 2022
0
Abstract

Summary: This Phase I project will demonstrate the feasibility for assessing the impact of genetic diversity on exposure and inferences to the corresponding risk of toxicity across the human population by generating dose response data for each test agent using the TempO-Seq gene expression assay for a panel of cells, each with different pharmacogenomic gene (PGx) variant activities. As many as 10% to 20% of the population can express a genetic variant, such as deficiency in CYP2D6, CYP2C19, or CYP2C9, but significant numbers of persons have functionally different activities resulting from genomic variants of many other pharmacogenomic genes such as in ABC transporters, UGT transferases, and the ligand binding domains of PXR, AHR, and CAR. The human-specific S1500v2 whole transcriptome surrogate TempO-Seq gene expression assay will be used to profile HepaRG knockouts reflecting functional variation in activity of PGx gene products and 3D HEPATOPAC co-cultures of primary human hepatocytes (PHH) from donors expressing functional variant activity. The HepaRG cells will be grown and profiled in the proliferative and differentiated states. The HEPATOPAC PHH (co-cultures with mouse 3T3 “stromal” cells) will also be profiled using the mouse S1500 assay to measure the stromal response. Dose response data for test agents (a set of reference compounds in Phase I), will be obtained after a 96-hr treatment, from which compound-specific signatures, mode of action and toxicity pathways will be identified using DESeq and pathway analysis. BMDExpress will be used to determine the benchmark concentration (BMC) for each modulated pathway and gene. Differences between variants in compound signatures and gene and pathway BMCs will be identified and used to define the impact variant functional activity has on in vitro exposure and toxicity. These data will add to the field , since gene expression dose response data for HepaRG knockouts, HEPATOPAC 3D cultured PHH, and functionally variant PHH have not been published. Once feasibility is demonstrated in Phase I, the cell lines and assays will be marketed. An expanded panel of variant HepaRG and/or (depending on the utility of each determined in Phase I) HEPATOPAC co-cultures will be established in Phase II, the test process validated, and the additional variant cells marketed so that the in vitro impact genetic variability across the population has on exposure and toxicity of agents being tested can be determined and used for in vitro-to-in vivo extrapolation (IVIVE) of exposure risk of individuals with such genetic variants. The test process envisioned will be to i) profile the test agent in (e.g.) 3D PHH culture with “normal” average PGx function to identify the pathways of metabolism, MoA, and toxicity and BMCs: ii) Select the variant cells (e.g. high and low/no activity cells) for each identified pathway modulated by test agent and determine variant toxicity profiles and BMCs to establish the in vitro range of exposure and toxicity risk; iii) perform IVIVE risk assessment across the variability of exposure individuals may be subject to due to PGx variants. The variant cells can also be used to assess the impact of PGx variants on toxicokinetic metabolic clearance.Narrative: This Phase I project will demonstrate the feasibility of using expression profiling for assessing the impact of genetic variation on response to compound exposure and inferences to the corresponding risk of toxicity across the human population. Using the TempO-Seq S1500 surrogate human whole transcriptome assay to profile all known biochemical pathways, together with HepaRG cells harboring knockouts of major xenobiotic clearance pathway genes, 3D HEPATOPAC co-cultures of primary human hepatocytes from donors with varying compound responses, and a set of reference compounds with known modes of action, compound- specific signatures and toxicity pathways will be identified for each genetic variant using DESeq2 and Pathway analysis, then quantified using BMDExpress to determine the benchmark concentration (BMC) for each modulated pathway and gene to define differences between variants in metabolism, exposure level, and toxicity pathways and dose. Once feasibility is demonstrated in Phase I, the use of the HEPATOPAC and HepaRG cell systems and the TempO-Seq assay will be marketed, an expanded panel of variant HepaRG variants and/or HEPATOPAC cultures will be established, and test process validated and commercialized in Phase II, so that the in vitro impact of genetic variability across the population on exposure and toxicity of test agents can be determined and used for in vitro-to-in vivo extrapolation of exposure risk of genetically diverse individuals.

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