9/29/2020
FAU Scientists Patent Protective Compound
Researchers Create a Compound That Slows Brain Degeneration
Two FAU professors have teamed up and discovered a compound with the potential to protect the brain from degeneration: This finding has just been patented.
Salvatore Lepore, Ph.D., a professor in the department of chemistry and biochemistry, and colleague Ken Dawson-Scully, Ph.D., a professor of biological sciences and associate vice-president for strategic initiatives in the Division of Academic Affairs, both in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, are named inventors on the patent, along with several members of their research teams. This work is funded by their collaborative $440,000 National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant where Lepore serves as the principal investigator (PI) and Dawson-Scully as the co-PI. FAU’s Office of Technology Development secured the patent protection for the invention, and is now working to commercialize it.
What is the Invention?
Powering the brain requires a substantial amount of oxygen — about 20 percent of total oxygen the body needs to fuel itself. These brain cells use oxygen to perform intense metabolic activities that generate free radicals, which in turn, help support brain cell growth and our cognitive abilities. But, when the body produces too many free radicals (a condition known as oxidative stress), damage occurs to the brain, resulting in diseases like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. Lepore and Dawson-Scully have created a unique compound to protect the brain against this effect, potentially slowing down the progression of diseases related to oxidative stress. “It’s not a cure,” Lepore said. “We don’t think the compound attacks the disease. It just offsets it.”
Lepore said he hopes a patient could take a small dose over time to treat the disease. “Someone who has high blood pressure will take a dose of high blood pressure medication, it doesn’t cure the disease, but it helps the patient live with it,” Lepore said. The two groups collaborate to create compounds with unique structures using chemical reactions pioneered by Lepore and his research team over nearly a decade. “He (Lepore) is the brilliant chemist who actually created the molecule,” Dawson-Scully said.
In collaboration with Dawson-Scully, an internationally recognized neurobiologist, these novel compounds have been tested on cells in non-human brain tissue models. “That was the breakthrough,” Lepore said. “These compounds almost serendipitously exerted this protective ability, and they do so in extremely small amounts.”
Now that Lepore and Dawson-Scully have secured patent protection for their breakthrough, they will seek industrial partnership to help take the project into a more advanced stage of drug development. Part of their strategy will be to broaden their group of collaborators, including teams from industry, taking and FAU Tech Runway and the Research Park at FAU, “in hopes of improving medical outcomes,” Dawson-Scully said.
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