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16 April 2010 - Rhenovia Receives €2.5M to Further Develop Its Biosimulation Platform GEN News Highlights
Rhenovia
Pharma won a €2.5 million (about $3.4 million) contract to advance
its Rhenepi project on antiepileptic drug development. The goal is to
develop and validate an epilepsy biosimulation platform that can be used
for the discovery of new therapies and the optimization of existing
medications.
The Rhenepi consortium is led by Rhenovia and includes SynapCell, a French
CRO, as well as two academic laboratories. SynapCell specializes in
testing of antiepileptic drugs in in vivo animal models. The two
laboratories involved are the Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle and
the Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences.
The contract covers a three-year period. It was awarded by a number
of bodies including the French Ministry of Economy and Finance, Alsace
BioValley, and Lyon Biopôle. Rhenovia and SynapCell will provide the
balance of the required funds.
The collaborators will work to construct a platform that simulates
erratic neuronal transmission leading to epileptic seizures. It will
test basic molecular and cellular mechanisms associated with epilepsy
and aims to rationalize the clinical practice of drug combination
therapy in this field.
“Rhenepi gives a significant boost to Rhenovia’s finances, allowing
us to hire six more researchers, and grow the company,” says Serge
Bischoff, CEO of Rhenovia Pharma. “What is more, it implies the
expansion of our already operational platform, Rhenoms monosynapse, to a
multiple synapse and integrated neuron platform.
“This will allow us to extend Rhenovia’s service offering to almost
all diseases of the central and peripheral nervous system as well as to
identify the safety and toxicity risks of any kind of pharmaceutical
treatment associated with a disruption of excitation/inhibition
homeostasis.”
Rhenovia believes that it has developed the first platform to
simulate mechanisms involved in learning and memory and in a variety of
brain functions related to the balance between excitation and
inhibition.
It is making this platform available in its Rheddos program, aimed at
pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies wishing to extend drug life
cycle, develop new drug combinations, and identify new targets for
therapeutic molecules.