Tenaya Therapeutics Publishes Preclinical Data in Science Translational Medicine Detailing Discovery of HDAC6 Inhibitor for Treatment of Heart Failure
Tenaya Therapeutics, Inc., a biotechnology company with a mission to discover, develop and deliver curative therapies that address the underlying causes of heart disease, announced the publication of preclinical research in the July 6 issue of Science Translational Medicine. The article, titled “Phenotypic screening with deep learning identifies HDAC6 inhibitors as cardioprotective in a BAG3 mouse model of dilated cardiomyopathy,” describes the discovery of histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) as a promising therapeutic target. These insights led to the development of the company’s lead small molecule candidate, TN-301, a highly selective HDAC6 inhibitor initially being developed for the potential treatment of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF).
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“While cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of death worldwide, innovation in therapeutic discovery has suffered from the challenge of identifying targets with validation in human tissue that can address underlying mechanisms of heart disease. The success of our approach using disease models based on human cells plus machine learning algorithms to discover promising new therapeutic targets for heart diseases provides reason to believe that this methodology may be broadly applicable to accelerating target and drug discovery of other disease-modifying therapies,” said Timothy Hoey, Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer of Tenaya Therapeutics. “Research presented in this paper highlight the exquisite target selectivity and cardioprotective qualities of our HDAC6 inhibitors. We look forward to advancing TN-301, the first product candidate in our pipeline to be discovered and validated using this approach, into clinical studies.”
Key Research Findings
The publication in Science Translational Medicine details Tenaya’s distinct Precision Medicine platform approach of applying phenotypic screening and deep learning to human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte (iPSC-CM) disease models. Tenaya developed and validated a BAG3 knock-down human iPSC-CM model of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a genetic cardiomyopathy that can lead to enlargement of the heart and heart failure in humans, for target identification and screening of novel cardiovascular disease candidates. In the BAG3-deficient human iPSC-CM models, HDAC6 inhibition was shown to protect against damage of the sarcomere, one of the basic building blocks of heart muscle present in all cardiomyocyte cells. Tenaya then developed a series of novel HDAC6 inhibitors through medicinal chemistry efforts that includes TYA-018 and TN-301, which are structurally and functionally similar. TYA-018 is used in Tenaya’s preclinical in vitro and in vivo studies of HDAC6 inhibition, while TN-301 is being advanced into clinical studies.
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To further validate the potential of HDAC6 inhibition, Tenaya translated its initial in vitro findings to a BAG3 cardiomyocyte knockout mouse model of DCM. BAG3 loss-of-function mutations have been linked to DCM and, in preclinical animal models, result in a steady loss of heart function leading to death from heart failure that simulates the progressive decline observed in human disease, providing a relevant model by which to study the results of targeted intervention.
When evaluated in a BAG3 knock-out mouse model of DCM, HDAC6 inhibition with TYA-018:
- Demonstrated exquisitely selective enzyme inhibition, with greater than 2500-fold preference for HDAC6 over other members of the HDAC family
- Reduced sarcomeric damage, improved heart dilation, and conferred protection of left ventricular function from rapidly progressive decline.
- Enhanced cardiac energetics, mitochondrial membrane potential and reserve respiratory capacity, which contribute to maintaining improved heart function.
Studying the mechanism of action of HDAC6 inhibition in these in vitro and in vivo DCM models provided additional insights that subsequently led to the discovery that HDAC6 inhibition may be highly effective in the setting of HFpEF with a multi-model mechanism of action. Based on extensive preclinical evaluation, Tenaya will seek to initially develop TN-301 for the potential treatment of HFpEF. Tenaya is on track to submit an Investigational New Drug (IND) application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the second half of 2022.
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