InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 84
Posts 32240
Boards Moderated 85
Alias Born 03/22/2005

Re: None

Monday, 07/09/2007 11:31:33 AM

Monday, July 09, 2007 11:31:33 AM

Post# of 32
7-8-07 NY Times article on Sirtris

>>> July 8, 2007
Slipstream
An Age-Defying Quest (Red Wine Included)
By JASON PONTIN

SIRTRIS PHARMACEUTICALS wants to sell you the elixir of youth. Yet the company’s founders are neither cranks nor quacks, but include a well-regarded Harvard scientist and a serial entrepreneur.

Imagine a pill, derived from a compound found in something as benign as red wine, that treated the most feared and debilitating diseases of aging: illnesses like diabetes, neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, and many forms of cancer. Imagine, furthermore, that this pill had no injurious side effects. Imagine, finally, that the pill’s only side effect conferred what human beings have always wanted: an increase in life span. That’s what Sirtris wants to create.

Christoph Westphal, the chief executive of Sirtris, who has an M.D. and a Ph.D. in biology from Harvard Medical School, was previously a venture capitalist at Polaris Ventures and was a founder of Acceleron Pharma, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals and Momenta Pharmaceuticals, among other companies. The last two companies, which are publicly traded, have a combined market value of more $1.4 billion.

Sirtris was founded in the spring of 2004 by Dr. Westphal to commercialize the research of David Sinclair, a professor of pathology at Harvard Medical School and the director of the Glenn Laboratories for the Biological Mechanisms of Aging. Mr. Sinclair, who at the relatively youthful age of 37 is already renowned for his investigations into how we grow old, discovered in 2003 that a molecular compound called resveratrol, found in red wine and other plant products, extends the life span of mice by as much as 24 percent and the life span of other animals, such as flies and fish, by as much as 59 percent.

Dr. Westphal, a self-described “geek” who relaxes by reading papers in academic journals like Nature and Science, was stunned by Mr. Sinclair’s discovery, and visited him in his lab to discuss the implications for drug development. The two soon decided to start a company.

“I figured if there’s going to be one chance that I’d take an 80 percent pay cut to be the C.E.O. of a company rather than general partner in a venture firm, then this was it,” Dr. Westphal, 39, told me when I visited Sirtris’s offices in Cambridge, Mass. “If we’re right on this one, everyone’s going to want to take these drugs and they’re going to treat many of the major diseases of Western society.”

Since founding the company, Dr. Westphal and Mr. Sinclair have raised more than $103 million in venture funding, from various investors like Polaris Venture Partners, the Novartis Bioventures Fund and the Genzyme Corporation. In May, Sirtris completed a successful initial public offering, raising an additional $62 million in capital. Thus, Sirtris now has $140 million in cash and annual expenses of only $37 million, according to Dr. Westphal. “We can control our destiny,” he says. “We can actually go for this crazy idea that you can target genes that control the aging process.”

Mr. Sinclair believes that resveratrol works by activating a gene called SIRT-1, which many biologists think plays a fundamental, if still obscure, role in regulating life span in mammals. Scientists have shown that increasing the activity of SIRT-1 in animals slows down aging and postpones or eliminates diseases of old age. No one really knows why SIRT-1 has the effect it does. One theory, proposed by Leonard Guarente, Mr. Sinclair’s mentor, who discovered the sirtuin genes (as they are collectively known) and is a biology professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is that SIRT-1 is activated by caloric restriction.

Biologists have known for 70 years that mice will live much longer when they are fed a nutritious diet with 30 to 40 percent fewer calories than they would normally eat. (Mr. Guarente and Mr. Sinclair think that this could be an ancient evolutionary adaptation to scarcity and starvation.) Resveratrol may therefore be mimicking caloric restriction without an arduous diet that few people can maintain for very long.

“Nobody knows why we age,” Mr. Sinclair explained to me. “We’re working on genes that increase fitness and defenses against diseases. The body mounts those defenses when it’s under adversity. Caloric restriction is one of those triggers and the molecules we’re developing are also one of those triggers.”
Dr. Westphal and Mr. Sinclair stress that they are not working to “cure” aging, a condition that, so far at least, is common to all humanity and that most physicians do not consider a disease. “Curing aging is not an endpoint the federal drug agency would recognize,” Dr. Westphal says dryly. Instead, both men say, they are working to ameliorate the diseases of aging.
While Mr. Sinclair has bragged that resveratrol is as “close to a miraculous molecule as you get,” much uncertainty surrounds his research and the commercialization of his discovery faces many challenges.

Quite apart from any scientific debate about why resveratrol works and whether it will have the same beneficial effect in humans that has been demonstrated in animals with short life spans, no one knows if resveratrol will be toxic when taken in therapeutic doses. Mr. Sinclair argues that the compound is unlikely to be toxic because it is modulating enzymes “that naturally go up and down according to diet.”

In any case, he says, mice have consumed as much as 400 milligrams of resveratrol per kilogram of body weight without ill effect. On the contrary, the rodents became sleek, slim and powerfully athletic. (A human would have to drink 10,000 bottles of wine a day to consume the same quantity of resveratrol.)

But Phillip A. Sharp, a 1993 Nobel laureate in medicine and physiology who has advised Sirtris, strongly disagrees: “Mice are not men, and even if you treat a mouse he can’t tell you if there’s something wrong with his paw,” said Mr. Sharp, who is also the director of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at M.I.T. “Until you go into long-term human studies, there will always be unknown risks.”

SIRTRIS has begun such studies. The company has one compound, called SRT501, an improved formulation of resveratrol that is in early clinical trials for the treatment of diabetes. Later this year, Dr. Westphal says, the company will also begin clinical trials with SRT501 to treat Melas syndrome, a disorder of the cell’s mitochondria, in which sufferers age with unnatural haste.

The company is also developing other “sirtuin activators” that are unrelated to resveratrol, and which Dr. Westphal describes as “one thousand times” as powerful as SRT501. In theory, drugs derived from such compounds would be more effective at lower doses. Sirtris hopes to have its first drugs in commercial production by 2012 or 2013. While that may seem far off, it’s wonderfully fast for the biopharmaceutical industry, where development is onerously slow, difficult and uncertain.
This speed of research and development owes much to Dr. Westphal’s energy and Mr. Sinclair’s ambition.

“For as long as I can remember, I’ve wanted to develop drugs that combat diseases of aging,” Mr. Sinclair says. “As soon as I realized I was mortal, I started to worry. I set a goal to see if we could make drugs that would target the diseases of aging in my lifetime. I didn’t know it would be possible at all — and I didn’t know it would happen so quickly.”
Jason Pontin is the editor in chief and publisher of Technology Review, a magazine and Web site owned by M.I.T. E-mail:
pontin@nytimes.com <<<