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Diagnosis and Personalized Acne Therapy

Technology Benefits
The invention embodies a significant advancement in understanding the underlying culprit to acne, P. acnes. This approach facilitates the development of therapies tailored to the bacterial makeup of each patient. The invention thus creates new strategies for diagnosis, treatment, and prevention as described above, under potential applications.
Technology Application
DIAGNOSIS Kit development to isolate DNA/RNA from patients. Diagnosis for specific bacterial type of acne. TREATMENT P. acnes strain-specific drug development. Probiotic treatment through "seeding" of healthy bacterial strains that will re-balance the bacterial population to a healthier phenotype. Phage therapy: The bacterial lineages have different host specificities to phages, allowing therapy through genetic transformation. PREVENTION Vaccine development against acne-causing strains of P. acnes. Prophylactic acne treatment through probiotic creams.
Detailed Technology Description
Researchers in the laboratory of Dr. Huiying Li in the department of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology at UCLA have developed a protocol to quickly and efficiently determine the microbiome type of acne subjects. Through quantitative methods, the researchers have identified ten major lineages of P. acnes and five major microbiome types within human subjects. Interestingly, specific strains were highly associated with acne, while others were associated with healthy skin. This technology allows "typing" of individual patients and opens the door to strain-specific drug targeting and vaccines, as well as probiotic treatments to seed healthy bacteria on acne prone skin.
Supplementary Information
Inventor: Schiemann, William P.
Priority Number: US7749958B2
IPC Current: A01N003718 | A61K003800 | A61K003818 | C07K000500 | C07K0014475 | C07K001481
US Class: 5140094 | 514002 | 5140157 | 530300 | 530324
Assignee Applicant: National Jewish Healthnver
Title: Cystatin C as an antagonist of TGF-β and methods related thereto | Cystatin C as an antagonist of TGF-β and methods related thereto
Usefulness: Cystatin C as an antagonist of TGF-β and methods related thereto | Cystatin C as an antagonist of TGF-β and methods related thereto
Summary: The homologue and methods are useful for treating cancer, preferably metastatic cancer, and for treating a patient having a proliferative or fibrotic condition or disease mediated at least in part by TGF-β expression or activity (all claimed).
Novelty: New Cystatin C homologue that inhibits transforming growth factor-beta (TGFβ) biological activity, useful for treating metastatic cancer, and patients having proliferative and fibrotic conditions
Industry
Disease Diagnostic/Treatment
Sub Category
Cancer/Tumor
Others

State Of Development

The investigators have devised the method to isolate DNA/RNA from pores and the protocol to rapidly and accurately identify the microbiome type. The typing protocol is PCR-based and is therefore rapid and cost-effective. The genomic sequences analyzed and corresponding primers have been uniquely defined by the investigators.

Background

To date, acne and associated morbidity represent an unmet clinical need. While the production of acne products has been prolific, the standard of treating acne with antibiotics and retinoid has not changed. Both antibiotic and retinoid-based treatments have varying efficacy and side effects between acne patients, driving continued research for the $3B acne market. Propionibacterium acnes, the bacterium implicated in causing acne, is the intended target of most antimicrobial-based acne treatments. However, those treatments do not consider the genetic diversity between P. acnes strains nor their distribution within pores of the skin, which undoubtedly differs between individual patients. Thus, employing the principles of personalized medicine to treat acne will potentially improve treatment and diminish the social and psychological impacts of the disease.

Tech ID/UC Case

22464/2012-558-0


Related Cases

2012-558-0

*Abstract
UCLA scientists have discovered novel, bacterial genomic markers that facilitate the personalization of diagnosis and treatment for acne patients.
*Applications
  • DIAGNOSIS
    • Kit development to isolate DNA/RNA from patients.
    • Diagnosis for specific bacterial type of acne.
  • TREATMENT
    • P. acnes strain-specific drug development.
    • Probiotic treatment through "seeding" of healthy bacterial strains that will re-balance the bacterial population to a healthier phenotype.
    • Phage therapy: The bacterial lineages have different host specificities to phages, allowing therapy through genetic transformation.
  • PREVENTION
    • Vaccine development against acne-causing strains of P. acnes.
    • Prophylactic acne treatment through probiotic creams.
*Principal Investigator

Name: Huiying Li

Department:


Name: Shuta Tomida

Department:


Name: Sorel Fitz Gibbon

Department:


Name: Jeffery Miller

Department:


Name: Robert Modlin

Department:

Country/Region
USA

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