New technology could ‘meaningfully impact’ brain trauma

According to the company, its central nervous system (CNS) CAPTON platform improves distribution and proportionate drug activity based on pathology in situ, as well as limiting drug exposure to those areas of the brain suffering pathogenic stress.

The chemistry behind the approach involves substituting an essential sulfonate group on suitably configured drugs with an activity-disqualifying thiol, yielding a small molecular therapeutic, termed Capton.

This technology could ‘meaningfully impact’ the treatment of brain disease and damage worldwide, Mercaptor said.

“Working with this platform has been the experience of a lifetime for us. It is the sort of technological leap forward that can change how therapies for the CNS are conceived and developed,” said Dr. Todd Zankel, chief scientific officer of Mercaptor.

“The recent advent of AI will provide another boost to such efforts. Given the defined SAR behind our approach, we expect that AI will allow a more thorough and efficient exploration of chemical space, accelerating the identification of promising drug candidates and streamlining the development process.”

Patients suffering from neurodegeneration, including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Huntington’s disease, as well as those subjected to brain trauma, including epilepsy, stroke, and TBI, have had little recourse to therapeutic intervention.

These largely unaddressed conditions share complex etiologies and limited pharmacological accessibility.

Captons, a new class of prodrugs discovered by Mercaptor’s team, are effectuated by sulfur-redox chemistry catalyzed by physiologically relevant transition metal ions.

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