NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - Nov 19, 2015) - iBio, Inc. (
Dr. Tetsuya Nishimoto, a post-doctoral fellow in the laboratory of Dr. Carol Feghali-Bostwick, the SmartState® and Kitty Trask Holt Endowed Chair and Professor of Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina, in an ACR-invited oral presentation, described recent new and unpublished data and insights about how peptides derived from endostatin can block or reduce fibrosis in a variety of tissues. In summary, proteolytic pathways (proteolysis being the breakdown of proteins into smaller polypeptides or amino acids) induced by endostatin-related peptides contained within IBIO-CFB03 stimulate the production of enzymes which degrade the extracellular matrix that is produced in excess in fibrotic diseases such as scleroderma. This enables IBIO-CFB03 to not only arrest fibrosis, but to potentially reverse ongoing fibrotic pathology.
iBio owns exclusive worldwide rights to IBIO-CFB03 and patents covering endostatin-derived peptides for the treatment of fibrotic diseases. Dr. Feghali-Bostwick's laboratory is collaborating with iBio for the development of products against fibrotic diseases. Support for its work has recently been supplemented by the award of an STTR grant from the National Institutes of Health to aid the development of IBIO-CFB03 as a treatment for fibrotic disease.
"Research teams at the Medical University of South Carolina, Novici Biotech, and iBio have been working diligently and successfully to decipher the mechanism by which endostatin-derived peptides improve fibrosis," said Terence Ryan, Ph.D., iBio's Chief Scientific Officer. "Data on this mechanism of action have been confidentially disclosed to the FDA and details will be publicly disclosed in an upcoming peer-reviewed scientific publication."
In addition to the ACR-selected oral presentation by Dr. Nishimoto, an additional oral presentation, based on Dr. Feghali-Bostwick's research, discussed epigenetic differences in identical twins which may modulate scleroderma disease, and a poster describing the role of lysyl oxidase in promoting fibrosis was also presented by the Feghali-Bostwick lab.
About iBio, Inc.
iBio is developing proprietary products for the treatment of a range of fibrotic diseases including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, systemic sclerosis, and scleroderma. IBIO-CFB03, produced using the company's iBioLaunch gene expression platform, is the first product candidate from this program being advanced for IND development. The company also offers proprietary products and product licenses to others, based on its proprietary iBioLaunch gene expression and iBioModulator™ thermostable immunomodulator protein platforms, providing collaborators full support for turn-key implementation of its technology for protein therapeutics and vaccines.
In Brazil, iBio has formed a subsidiary company, iBio do Brasil Biofarmaceutical Ltda., and has been collaborating with the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) to develop a recombinant yellow fever vaccine based on iBio technology. Further information is available at: www.ibioinc.com.
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