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Completed SBIR-STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Development of the UValidate platform for the profiling of topically applied chemical agents.

$8.09M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES
Recipient Organization Amelia Technologies, Llc
Country United States
Start Date Sep 20, 2022
End Date Aug 31, 2024
Duration 711 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10484288
Grant Description

Project Summary Skin is the first line of defense against the outside environment. When the skin barrier is breached by UV irradiation (UVR) or toxic chemicals, living cell layers including epidermal keratinocytes, melanocytes and dermal fibroblasts are subjected to DNA damage. If unrepaired, this damage can lead to photoaging and cutaneous

carcinogenesis. In fact, skin cancer is by far the most common malignancy, accounting for more cases of cancer in the US and other countries than all other organs combined. Sunscreens have been used extensively with some success, but newer chemical filters suffer from serious shortcomings that make currently available

products undesirable, and can be a risk to human health. Current strategies that examine the effectiveness and safety of organic UV filters need to be reassessed. These new strategies should test the biology of UVR in the presence of sunscreens. Further, they need to be high-throughput (HTP) in order to examine combinations of

different chemical blockers that are present in most formulations, work in cultured cells for ease of screening, and be animal-friendly. In Phase I we showed proof-of-principle for a novel UVR HTP screening platform called “UValidate, employing mixed populations of isogenic keratinocytes and melanocytes derived from a single donor,

exposed to two-compound combinations of sunscreen active ingredients in the presence and absence of short wave (UVB; 285-320), and long wave solar UVR (UVA1; 340-400 nm). These screens measure reactive oxygen species (ROS), DNA damage (CPDs), and micronuclei and show a complex interplay between solar UV

wavelength, sunscreen blockers, and cell types. This highlights the pressing need for our platform, compared to currently-utilized assays that measure only the amount of UV that is blocked by spectrometry. In the proposed Phase II, we plan to test known chemical UV blockers for the cosmetic and skin-care markets as a contracting

service, using a panel of donor-derived isogenic keratinocytes, melanocytes and fibroblast. At the completion of Phase II, if funded, UValidate will be offered as a service particularly suited for companies at the early stages of drug discovery, regulatory bodies and established pharma seeking to optimize formulation. Advances in this

proposal include fluoro-tagging isogenic patient cell lines, establishing 2D and 3D cell cultures to determine individual responses to solar UV irradiation, utilization of reagents and assays to rapidly determine the types of DNA lesions and their repair, and design of AI software to more accurately determine damage. Control cells,

generated using CRISPR technology, will reproduce DNA repair-compromised skin cells and 3D skin equivalents will also be included to ensure experimental rigor and reproducibility. The present crisis due to the lack of non- toxic sunscreens has led to class action lawsuits, banning of sunscreens in growing numbers worldwide, and

recall of formulations from the market. Therefore, this technology is timely and needed with great expediency to address the urgent need for the discovery and testing of safe and effective UV blockers to prevent the most common, and often debilitating and deadly cancers that we face.

All Grantees

Amelia Technologies, Llc

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