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1 BUSINESS MODEL March 14th 2013 Alexandre Chavatte - Julie Mouton Hélène Pauchet – Céline Renard 2 PLAN • • • • • Introduction Technology Partnership Examples of applications Financial situation 3 Introduction - What is Phylogica? - Historic - Management team Introduction 4 Phylogica is a biotechnology company based in Perth, Australia and Oxford, peptides, there is UK. around a USD 2 million sign-on fee, then there are milestone payments of up to USD 150 million which the company will receive if any compounds make it to market. This can include around USD 10 million when a Phase II trial commences and around USD 20 million at the start of a Phase III trial. The company will also receive somewhere between 3%-5% royalties from any future sales of products. The company aims to capitalize on recurring revenues from its partnerships with pharmaceutical companies, which enabled it to achieve profitability as early as next year and Provides peptide drug discovery services to the Pharmaceutical fund internal R&D activities. industry. Historic 5 Collaboration between & Perth, Western Australia Philadelphia, USA Was spun out in 2001. & March 2005 Frankfurt Stock, Germany Currently 25 employees Historic 6 Phylogica partnered with researchers from the University of Cambridge in a spin-off company named Phenomica. combination of Phylogica’s Phylomer® libraries with technology from Cambridge to identify vulnerable points in a disease that can be the focus for new drug development. Management team Dr Doug Wilson Executive Chairman CEO Dr Paul Watt 7 Mr Nick Woolf CFO & VP Corporate Development Dr Richard Hopkins COO and VP Research 8 Technology • Phylomer® • Screening • Applications Using Phylomers to expand the druggable landscape 9 Technology = Phylomer® 10 New class of biological therapeutics Bioactive fragments of naturally occurring proteins that are encoded in the genomes of evolutionary diverse microbes. Highly enriched for stable secondary and tertiary structures Act as high affinity peptide disruptors of protein-protein interactions and binders of protein targets. Target validation tool 11 Origin of Phylomer® Peptides 12 From 25 characterised bacterial genomes we have derived up to 260 million distinct Phylomer® peptides from thousands of protein structural folds Source of Phylomer® Peptides 13 Diverse and often harsh environments volcanic streams geysers deep sea volcanic vents Subject to intense natural selection optimal protein structures required for cell survival Thermophile genomes may encode more thermostable folds 14 Phylomer properties • • • • Structure Stability Immunogenicity Efficacy Technology = Phylomer® 15 Encoded structural motifs within Phylomer® sequences may allow stable folding as they bind to a particular target (via an induced fold), even if peptides don’t fold autonomously by themselves Pharmacological properties: Stability 16 RETROINVERSO Retro inverso peptide Inverso peptide Retro peptide Pharmacological properties: Stability 17 RETROINVERSO plasma stability with more than 50 % of the Phylomer peptide present after 12 hrs incubation (vs 10 to 30 min for unmodified phylomer) Protease-resistant in human plasma In vivo half-life without further modification (eg : PEGylation) Pharmacological properties: In vitro stability 18 Pharmacological properties: Pharmacokinetic in rats 19 InSymbiosis, Canada In vivo Phylomer® half-life Pharmacological properties: Immunogenicity 20 In silico testing against : Multiple HLA MCH Class II - More than 60% of Phylomer® peptides were not modeled as significantly immunogenic - More than 85% of Phylomer® peptides, including PYC35 and PYC36 were potentially less immunogenic than currently marketed peptide drugs Efficacy 21 Global model of ischemic stroke Focal cortical model of CNS injury Full thickness burns model Inhaled LPS model of ARDS Synthesis 22 Pepsets Synthetic High Purity Synthesis Recombinant Protein Synthesis 23 24 Screening From phenotype to pharmacophore 25 Phylomer screening 26 Intracellular targets: Forward two hybrid, Reverse two hybrid Extracellular targets: Lytic Phage Display (T7) , Secreted Phage Display (M13) Phenotype driven: synthetic Phylomer library Mammalian expression vector (phenotypic complementation) Sreening extracellular target using phage display 27 médecine/sciences 1998 ; 14 : 300-9 Screening intracellular targets using yeast two-hybrid assays 28 Target discovery screening method 29 Arrayed Phylomer Libraries Phenotypic screen in mammalian cells Target identification Validate target Structural studies to determine binding interface Phylomer against intracellular targets 30 Activator protein-1 (AP-1) signalling pathay MAL/TLR signalling pathway AP-1 is a transcription factor involved in cancer and inflammatory diseases MAL is implicated in a range of infectious and other diseases Sonic hedgehog pathway Sonic hedgehog is involved in cancer and other diseases Phylomer against extracellular targets 31 Screening Phylomers® to inhibit the function of targets that play a crucial role in inflammation : TNFα CD40 CD28 receptor GM-CSF Phage display identifies target-specific hits Evaluation of relative binding and specificity using Phage ELISA Interests 32 Highest functional hit rates for peptides Higher stability More structural diversity (contain multiple scaffold classes) Can be used for intracellular and extracellular disease targets Alternative delivery potential (Patient Friendly) inhaled, buccal, transdermal, nasal, oral delivery routes Easy to Synthesis: Reduced costs Bio-informatic advantages 33 Partnership • • • Technology partners Pharmaceutical partner License and agreement 34 Technological partners WHY? 1) Stability 2) Structural diversity 3) Optimization 1) Stability 35 Computer model of a PASylated Fab fragment German biotech company The revolutionary 'PASylation' technology : a biological alternative to PEGylation for biopharmaceuticals with extended plasma half-life ‘PASylation’ = Pro/Ala-rich Sequences composed of Proline, Alanine, and Serine L- amino-acids PAS left can be fused with a therapeutic protein or peptide 1) Stability 36 Similar to PEG: PAS sequences adopt a stable random structure with large hydrodynamic volume size of the resulting fusion protein size beyond the threshold of kidney filtration prolongation of the half-live PASylation with 200-600 residues leads to a plasma half life extension by a factor of 10-100 ! Drawbacks of PEG: - Expensive - PEGylation can change the protein properties - In vitro: additional procession and purification steps (lower the yield, raise the cost) - Decomposition by oxidation upon storage, not biodegradable side effects 1) Stability 37 2) Structural diversity 38 Dutch biopharmaceutical firm focusing on protein mimicry technology CLIPS technology To optimise novel therapeutic Phylomer drug candidates against CD40-ligand for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and other disease-associated targets CLIPS = Chemical Linkage of Peptides onto Scaffolds To mimic discontinous active sites Performance of a peptide: binding activity and/or a proteolytic stability Majority of small peptides (20-30 AA) : lack a well-defined secondary structure in solution CLIPS : a conformation story 39 CLIPS technology…allows protein to be locked into a desired biologically active conformation including alpha-helice, loop, double loop, triple loop A little chemistry… 40 The orange ball is a synthetic peptide Reaction: lasts no longer than 30 min runs at room temperature no catalysis hight yields one step Scaffolds : they have to be composed of: 1 phenyl ring with 2 bromo methyls groups they have to be soluble in aqueous solvents It would be preferable to use a non-chiral scaffold Pepscan = 70 different types of Clips-scaffolds varying mainly in polarity, solubility and thiol-thiol spanning distance 3) Optimization 41 UK company CIS display technology: rapid construction of new peptide, polypeptide and antibody libraries and the selection of lead compounds. Aim of the cooperation: Optimize the performance of three of Phylogica’s lead optimize the exact chemical and three dimensional structure improving drug properties such as affinity, stability and potency Cis display 42 CIS display is an acellular, in vitro display technology Uses biochemical process of E. coli No cloning, therefore larger librairies (> 1013) are rapidly generated CIS display is a powerful discovery engine for peptides and other protein scaffolds Cis display 43 Pharmaceutical Partners Payment December 2009 Aim cell-penetrating peptides for delivery across the blood-brain barrier. Extended in May 2011 August 2010 $1.5 millions to discover novel antibiotic peptides for the treatment of hospital acquired infection December 2010 $0.5 millions 11/12: Phylogica received an undisclosed milestone payment for successfully completing the first stage of the collaboration to discover novel peptide vaccines December 2011 $1.7 millions to develop multiple Phylomer -based drug candidates using novel cell-penetrating peptides Extended in january 31, 2013 44 License and agreement 45 September 12, 2012 Phylogica has licensed its skin-repair Phylomer® peptide PYC35 for use in cosmetics products. anti aging cream February 05,2013 Phylogica has entered an agreement to commercialise a family of anti inflammatory Phylomer® peptides for pharmaceutical use. 46 Examples of applications • • AP1 Brain Skin Antimicrobial Phylomer AP1 47 Neuroprotection: AP1 inhibitory peptides Study of their efficacy in preventing cell death in cortical neuronal cultures following glutamate excitotoxicity 48 Glutamate excitotoxicity Activation of JNK Dimerization c-Jun/c-Fos Transcriptional activation of AP1 APOPTOSIS Various neurological disorders, neuronal cell death Two-hybrid screen identification of 19 AP-1 inhibitory peptides, fused to the cell penetrating peptide TAT These peptides bind to the c-Jun dimerization domain and down regulate AP1 transcription AP1 neuroprotection 49 Neuronal viability Dosedependent neuroprotection 5 peptides (PYC19D-TAT, PYC35D-TAT, PYC36D-TAT, PYC38D-TAT, PYC41D-TAT) display neuroprotective activity in both L- and retro-inverso D-isoforms with increasing levels of neuroprotection peaking at 83% AP1 : wound healing 50 Phylomer® peptide C-Jun Cost associated with burn injury: +++ Need for treatments that can reduce the tissue damage and subsequent scarring Peptide: isolated by a reverse yeast-2 hybrid screen for peptide disruptors of c-Jun dimerization 51 Peptide was tested for interaction with c-Jun by • Co-Immuno precipitation • Inhibition of AP-1 reporter gene activity in the K562 cell line Results 52 TUNEL is a common method for detecting DNA fragmentation that results from apoptotic signaling cascades Wound Rep Reg (2008) 16 58–64 Anti microbial Phylomer ® 53 Screen Screening Biopanned Phylomer-T7 Phage Library Against Live Bacteria Synthesis Activity Synthesise hits in Pepset Format Screen for Antimicrobial Activity Structure 23 aa peptide with 5-6 aa progression Haemolytic Activity Mechanism Average of 3-4 Pepsets/sequence Mammalian toxicit Analysis Selection of Phylomer® peptides inhibit the growth Significant antibacterial activity by screening for cell binding of bacteria 54 Bactericidal activity was confirmed in live cell plating assays Assessment of antimicrobial activity and haemolytic activity 55 56 Financial situation Evolution of Income Statement Variation of commercial income 2500000 2000000 Commercial income, 1918368 $ 1500000 1000000 500000 0 2009 2010 2011 Government grant income, 0 2012 Financial Situation o Licence skin repair peptide to « le métier de la beauté » o Milestones from existing partners o New deals Plan to lay off Stock Exchange 33,33% each year, during 2014 to 2016 The Stock Exchange does not offer any more one sufficient liquidity to the shareholders. Quotation very theoretical : http://www.zonebourse.com/PHYLOGICA-LIMITED-8528277/cotations/ The quoted market price do not reflect the intrinsic value of the company. Gamble to benefit at lower cost of most part of the future value of the company. Comparison with other biotechnology company 62 63 Strategy Don’t contract any loan Strategy focus on communication Deals with little firms Not big financial interest… …But publicity impact? Problems Not ambitious enough Not enough fund (no loan) Too much time with no return on their investment No source of income (share price are worth) Force to inject cash in their the capital. Solutions ? 66 SWOT 67 Strengths Opportunities • • • • • Strong patent position in Phylomer peptide library No known direct competitors in Phylomer technology Strong management and deal making Successful in early partnering with big pharma which reduces overall business risk Weakness • • Partnerships and license agreement with large pharmaceuticals and early stage bio-tech companies. Transition from conservative business model to potential drug developer allows for potential significant valuation re-rating Potential markets for phylomer peptides for therapeutic use are enormous Threats • Uncertainty with regards to patent protection • Early partnering reduces potential and proprietary rights. revenues after commercialization phase • Uncertainty of the outcome of Phylogica’s • Most of the products are still at the initial research result. development phase • Uncertainty about the outcome of • negotiations with future partners. Higher level of expenditure than budgeted 68 Point of view 69 THE END Any questions ? 70 Example: PAS 201 16126,8 Monodisperse ESI mass spectrum a single peak MM: 16126,8 Da +/- 0,18 (16126,89 Da)