
NA University of Louisville-born invention that may help treat cancer now has a commercial partner.
Qualigen Therapeutics Inc., a California biotechnology company focused on developing novel therapeutics for the treatment of cancer and infectious diseases, has signed a license agreement for the technology and plans to fund continued development with UofL to ready it for market.
The technology works by targeting the RAS protein, which sends signals that regulate when and where the body produces and grows new cells. When mutated, the protein turns into a 鈥渟tuck accelerator pedal,鈥 according to UofL researcher Geoffrey Clark, who co-invented the technology with colleagues John Trent and Joe Burlison.
鈥淣ormally, it gets pressed when you need to grow and then the foot comes off and the cell slows down,鈥 said Clark, professor of pharmacology and toxicology at UofL. 鈥淲hen it becomes mutated, the accelerator鈥檚 jammed on, with cells continuing to grow and ultimately becoming a cancerous tumor.鈥
The drug targets only the active RAS protein and, so far, has little toxic effect on healthy cells. Many current non-targeted treatments, such as chemotherapy, can hurt both healthy and cancerous cells, leading to painful side effects. By some estimates, targeting this mutation could stop the growth of at least a third of human tumors.
鈥淭he patient impact could be extremely broad because RAS is involved in a lot of different cancers,鈥 Trent said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the holy grails that there has been limited success in targeting.鈥
Trent leads the Molecular Modeling Facility at UofL Health 鈥 James Graham Brown Cancer Center and the UofL partnership with , a non-profit with a network of school computers across the state. When the computers aren鈥檛 being used by students, they鈥檙e connected to act as a distributed supercomputer, allowing researchers to process and analyze huge amounts of data.
Trent used that capability to run through millions of cancer-fighting drug possibilities in a matter of days. The result was a drug that could inhibit the deregulated RAS protein.聽Development of the technology was supported by the UofL NIH REACH ExCITE program.
Qualigen holds an exclusive license to the technology through the聽, which works with startups and industry to commercialize university-owned technologies. This license agreement builds on a sponsored research agreement with Qualigen for the development of several small-molecule RAS Inhibitor drug candidates. Qualigen also has licensed and is developing other UofL technologies for fighting COVID-19 and .
鈥淧artnering on this new cancer-fighting technology is another example of the relationship we鈥檝e developed with the University of Louisville,鈥 said Michael Poirier, CEO of Qualigen. 鈥淲e look forward to working with UofL and to advancing this important clinical program with the goal of developing an effective treatment for this unmet need.”
More information about supporting this cancer research at UofL is available online.听听


























