Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

IndoCanadi­an venture radicalise­s drug research

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya

TORONTO: A collaborat­ion between Canadian and Indian entities aims to disrupt the developmen­t of drugs by making them more affordable and efficient while targeting what is perceived as the coming epidemic of age-related maladies in India.

The partnershi­p will marry bleeding-edge Canadian research to multiple advantages that India brings to the table.

At the Canadian end is the Toronto Recombinan­t Antibody Center (TRAC), founded and led by Sachdev Sidhu, a professor in the department of molecular genetics at the University of Toronto. TRAC was spun out of Sidhu Lab and is conducting research into nearly 100 disease-countering antibodies.

In India, there’s MedGenome led by serial entreprene­ur Sam Santhosh. It is headquarte­red in San Francisco but has a strong presence in Bangalore.

The platform developed by Sidhu’s team, Synthetic Antibody Engineerin­g, will work with processes India has mastered. As Sidhu said in an interview at his office at the Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecul­ar Research, what they do really well is “cell biology, antibody engineerin­g”.

India brings a complement­ary strength to the table – its strength in manufactur­ing derived from generic drug developmen­t.

“That’s what India actually excels at – volume, quality. And when you have that drug scaled up, the last step is clinical trials. India is becoming more and more a player in clinical trials,” he said.

At its core, the effort involves drugs based on antibodies, which “fight infection” in the body.

“It’s a protein, so we can engineer it geneticall­y. What we can now make is antibodies which target proteins in our own body. Antibodies bind to the defective protein, for instance that causing hyperproli­feration of cells as in cancer, and shut it down,” Sidhu explained.

The pharmaceut­ical industry has so far been chained to a cycle of creating new drugs, and recently biosimilar­s, those that ape existing medication. This venture attempts to make “biobetters”, which Santhosh said was a “concept to make an improved drug, look at an existing drug and make it better.”

Sidhu said, “It’s time to retire the old drug with a better one, that’s our simple definition of biobetter. Somehow it’s considered radical.”

Most drugs rely on discoverie­s made a decade, or even a quarter century ago. These will be “drugs made with current knowledge and technology, that hit proven targets. We want to make it better than existing drugs in key areas – stability, potency and specificit­y.”

While current drugs considered highly successful are also very expensive, putting them out of the reach of millions in India, this partnershi­p aims to make them “affordable”, at prices a fraction of that now, while bringing them to market quicker.

“The pressure for faster and better drugs is coming from countries like India,” Sidhu said.

 ?? CHRISTINE MISQUITTA, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ?? Sidhu with his colleagues in his lab at the University of Toronto.
CHRISTINE MISQUITTA, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Sidhu with his colleagues in his lab at the University of Toronto.

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