Friedreich´ ataxia is an autosomal recessive inherited neurodegenerative disease affecting 2-5 individuals for every 100.000 depending on the specific population and as such it is considered a rare disease. However, of all the ataxias, it is the most frequent. Symptoms generally begin between the ages of 5 and 15. The first symptom are usually difficulty walking or gait ataxia due to coordination problems such as clumsiness, movements instability. The ataxia gradually worsens and the symptoms gradually show in the arms and then the trunk. The mutation that causes the disease is found in the frataxin gene encoding a critical protein for the function of the mitochondria, the powerhouse of the body. This mutation, consisting of an expanded GAA code in the intron 1 of the gene, interferes with frataxin expression resulting in decreased protein levels and function. Patients then have low frataxin activity and consequently develop iron metabolism and mitochondria dysfunction which underlies neurodegeneration. Therefore, a protein replacement therapeutic approach is merited in this disease.
Biointaxis S.L. has developed a gene therapy for Friedreich ataxia, BTX-101 (expected commercial name FRATAXAV) to restore frataxin levels in patients. BTX-101 reaches most affected tissues, shows long-term expression, and a good safety profile as seen in pre-clinical research work. For further development into clinical stages, the manufacturing process and quality controls must be clearly defined. Therefore, the objectives of this project aimed to define up-scale manufacturing activities, develop assays to test the potency of different lots, Verified efficacy in a Friedreich ataxia mice mode of a scale-up lotl, and determined the biodistribution and safety profile in Macaca fascicularis. Moreover, regulatory assessment, FTO study, and dissemination activities supports the development of BTX-101 and Biointaxis´ growth and innovation activities.
This project significantly impacts the development of BTX-101 by de-risking the process of scale-up production and the characterization of different lots. Friedreich ataxia at this time counts only with palliative treatments, while gene therapy has the potential for long-term impact on patients´ quality of life.