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Small Molecule VAV3 Inhibitor as Novel Cancer Therapeutic
A proprietary inhibitor binds to VAV3 thereby inhibiting the activation of RAC downstream of several oncogenes
Background
Market Overview:
- Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: About 6000 new cases/year, and 1500 deaths/year, in the US.
- Breast Cancer: over 330,000 new cases per year in the US.
- Triple Negative Breast Cancer: about 33,000 new cases per year in the US.
Technology Overview
The VAV3 oncogene is a drug target for leukemia, breast, pancreatic, skin, gastric, prostate cancers, and glioblastoma. Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center researchers have identified the first small molecule inhibitor of VAV3, a key cellular signaling molecule and an activator of the small GTPase RAC. Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s proprietary inhibitor binds tightly to VAV3, inhibits RAC activation, and induces apoptosis. This inhibitor is efficacious at low dose on patient-derived xenografts
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