On January 4, 2023 Bloom Science, a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing novel medicines for neurological diseases and conditions, and Yeda Research and Development Co Ltd, the Weizmann Institute of Science’s technology transfer arm to advance science for the benefit of humanity, reported to have entered into an agreement in which Bloom obtained from Yeda an exclusive, worldwide license to use specific microbial strains in developing and commercializing live biotherapeutic products (LBPs) to ameliorate amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) symptoms (Press release, Bloom Science, JAN 4, 2023, View Source [SID1234625792]).
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There is a large unmet need for patients who have not responded to existing therapies for ALS, a disease that causes nerve cells to die, which breaks the neural pathways, and causes extreme mobility loss over time. Bloom’s systematic approach to developing a new generation of therapeutics starts with the gut microbiome.
"The gut microbiome’s influence on the brain offers incredible potential for healing," said Bloom Science founder and CEO Christohper Reyes, PhD. "Bloom’s collaboration with Yeda enables us to advance our program to modulate the gut microbiome interaction with the brain and provide ALS patients with new therapeutic options that help restore brain function."
Bloom’s final lead orally-administered LBP candidate selection for ALS, BL-002, started in 2022 with animal models and will advance towards human clinical trials in 2023. The company is testing multiple drug candidates for ALS.
Bloom’s BL-002 is built on evidence that oxidative stress drives ALS by causing the loss of motor neurons and the dysfunction of mitochondria. Nicotinamide, an important NAD+ pathway metabolite and a derivative of vitamin B3, can counter the effects of ALS.
BL-002 produces this vitamin and Bloom has shown it attenuates motor-neuron loss, and increases lifespan and motor coordination, in ALS model mice.