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Health & Society

Peptide Drug Advances Being Made on 黑料不打烊 Campus Working to Redefine Obesity, Diabetes Care

Tuesday, January 7, 2025, By Diane Stirling
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College of Arts and SciencesfacultyResearch and CreativeSTEM Transformation黑料不打烊 Impact

Over the past 18 months, , a medicinal chemist and the Jack and Laura H. Milton Professor of in the at 黑料不打烊, introduced two at conferences of the and . He and his collaborators reported that the compounds notably reduce body weight and normalize blood glucose levels without the typical negative side effects experienced by many patients who take currently available GLP-1-based anti-obesity drugs.

Doyle and his fellow researchers have since worked on refining the compounds, GEP44 and KCEM1, and have undertaken lab-animal testing, filed patents, spoken with investors and explored market placement. They believe these drugs, ultimately intended for use in humans, will offer significant advances in how obesity and diabetes are treated in the U.S. and around the world. The researchers have also discovered another highly promising weight-loss compound and new outgrowths that have potential to treat opioid addiction through similar neuroendocrine pathways.

Doyle is also a professor of pharmacology and medicine at . He is working with two primary collaborators on the compounds: , Albert J. Stunkard Professor in Psychiatry at the , and , an endocrinologist at .

Doyle, a medicinal chemist, teaches at 黑料不打烊 and is also on the faculty at SUNY-Upstate Medical University.

Multiple Receptors

GEP44 consists of 44 amino acids that target receptors in the brain, pancreas and liver simultaneously, uncoupling the connection between food intake and nausea and vomiting. 鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of a reboot of the body鈥檚 computer. It鈥檚 the sum of those receptors communicating with each other that is facilitating changes to metabolic behavior like what you鈥檇 see in a lean person or someone post bariatric surgery,鈥 Doyle says.

GEP44 works very well and is a significant improvement over GLP1-based drugs; however, it requires daily injections鈥攁 regimen Doyle acknowledges would be challenging for many patients. That鈥檚 why the researchers are working to reformulate the compound as a long-acting version.

鈥淣ow, we鈥檙e looking at how proteins are changing, what neurons are firing and which genes are changing in response to our drug that aren鈥檛 changing in response to the current therapies,鈥 Doyle explains. 鈥淲e can definitely do a once-a-week injectable, control weight loss, control tolerability as measured by pica (a craving to eat things having no nutritional value). However, we want to create a formulation that has the best tolerability and the highest efficacy before we move into licensing. After all, it is not a trivial thing to take something you鈥檝e optimized to work beautifully well, then go ahead and make it long acting.鈥

The second compound, KCEM1, was formulated to treat hypothalamic obesity in children, a genetic (as opposed to calorie intake-related) condition. Roth is testing the drug in lab animals and the team is working with the German researchers who discovered the causative gene.

Doyle and Hayes recently produced another 鈥渆xtraordinary compound鈥 that Doyle says is 鈥渧ery exciting and really, really positive for the future.鈥 DG260 targets different mechanisms in the body. In addition to producing weight loss with high drug tolerability and no adverse side effects, it has added health benefits: higher caloric burn and the ability to flush glucose from the blood without needing to increase insulin secretion.

An unexpected outgrowth of this effort has been the team鈥檚 discovery that GEP44 reduces cravings in opioid-addicted lab animals, extending the intervals between periods of drug-seeking behavior. This 鈥減leasant surprise鈥 may lead to new therapies to help reduce human cravings for drugs such as fentanyl, Doyle believes. , a neuropharmacologist and associate professor of psychiatry at聽the , is collaborating with Doyle on this work.

On-Site Lab

All compounds are produced in a campus lab at 黑料不打烊’s Center for Science and Technology equipped as a sort of mini pharmaceutical design and manufacturing center. It houses three state-of-the-art, microwave-assisted peptide synthesizers and a fourth robotic system, which allows high throughput peptide synthesis of up to 1,200 peptides in the span of three to four days.

gloved hand examins one of three vials of a substance in a chemistry department lab

Manufacturing of the peptide compounds is done in the University’s state-of-the-art lab, located on campus in the Center for Science and Technology. The facilities allow rapid pivoting based on ongoing test findings.

鈥淲e can get data back, turn it around in days and turn that into a genuine lead in the space of a few weeks. Our setup also lets us manufacture and purify at large scales. That lets us pivot quickly, screen quickly and get back into an in vivo (testing on whole living organisms) setup again quickly. We鈥檙e able to operate at a real cutting-edge, rapid-pivoting capability,鈥 Doyle says.

The sophisticated machinery was acquired in part through a $3 million grant awarded in 2019 by the (DoD) . The team鈥檚 work holds particular promise for military personnel and veterans, for whom obesity and weight-related diabetes rates have steadily increased, according to a from the . Those conditions cost the government $135 billion annually and have negative implications for U.S. military readiness, the report states.

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 have gotten anywhere near where we are now without that initial DoD grant,鈥 Doyle says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic that we鈥檝e been able to take this all the way through to patentability, have active engagement with investors, get licensed to an existing company and work this as far forward as we have with hopes of seeing its use in people.鈥

two students in blue lab coats look at a display of peptides on a computer screen

Doyle’s peptides investigation provides robust research opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students and postdoctoral scholars, such as Nick Najjar, left, a third-year graduate student and Lucy Olcott, a senior.

More recently, the researchers鈥 work has been awarded four additional National Institutes of Health grants totaling more than $6 million. The projects also provide important experiential laboratory learning for undergraduate and graduate students and cutting-edge research opportunities for postdoctoral associates.

Looking Ahead

When their work began eight years ago, the researchers aimed to make safety and tolerability a front-and-center focus, Doyle says. 鈥淲e were adamant that nausea, vomiting and indigestion were more of an issue than had previously been put forward. Now, everyone knows that these side effects are a problem and that the existing drugs need to be replaced with ones that are better tolerated. So, the race is on to find new pathways to achieve what we鈥檝e all gotten a taste for鈥攖hese miraculous weight-loss drugs鈥攁nd make them effective in the long term.鈥

Accordingly, Doyle sees a coming explosion in the development of 鈥渟uper safe, super effective weight-loss medicines.鈥

鈥淭he market鈥檚 only going to double and triple over the next 20 years. In the next five to 10 years, we may see six, seven, eight new drugs that are well tolerated without the current side effects and that are super long acting. Now, everyone鈥檚 racing toward that. We鈥檙e trying to drive that forward from 黑料不打烊 and Central New York, and we鈥檝e had a good start.鈥

  • Author

Diane Stirling

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