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Altus Pharmaceuticals: Turning Protein Crystals into Therapeutic Gems
By Laurie Sullivan

Synthetic small-molecule drugs have long-been delivered in stable crystal forms. Conversely, only one large biomolecule—insulin—has successfully been crystallized for therapeutic delivery. Altus Pharmaceuticals is overcoming the boundaries that have heretofore hampered the convenient delivery of large biomolecules such as proteins. Read how Altus’ proprietary protein crystallization and cross-linking technology is enabling proteins to withstand the degradative biochemical conditions of the gastrointestinal tract for oral delivery to treat metabolic and gastrointestinal diseases.  

Altus is unleashing proteins’ full potential to serve as therapeutic agents, with the first technology allowing commercially scalable, bulk protein crystallization. Alexey Margolin, Altus’ Senior Vice President, Research and Pre-clinical Development/Chief Scientific Officer, quickly points out that their technology is very different from X-ray crystallography. 

“As soon as you mention crystallization of proteins, people immediately think X-ray crystallography,” he says. Whereas X-ray crystallography requires a high-quality crystal to deduce structural information about proteins, “Our goals are somewhat different,” Margolin explains. “We use crystallization as a tool for purification, formulation, and delivery.”  

Bigger Molecules, Bigger Challenges  

The benefits of crystallization are well documented. Crystals’ advantages include stability, purity, greater concentration, ease of handling and manufacturing, explaining why most classical, small-molecule drugs are produced and delivered in crystal form. In stark contrast, of all the biotechnology products (e.g., proteins and other large molecules) that are on the market or in late-stage development, only one such compound is produced in crystal form—insulin, which was crystallized 80 years ago largely by accident.  

Protein therapies have not been afforded the use of the crystalline state because protein crystallization is believed to be significantly more complex than small-molecule crystallization and for this reason it has not historically been a commercially scalable process.  

“Recognizing this discrepancy, we developed technology to close the gap,” notes Margolin. “While many large biomolecules have been crystallized, none has been developed as a crystalline therapeutic product—that’s what differentiates Altus.”

Image courtesy of Altus Pharmaceuticals.

In addition to the aforementioned advantages, crystallization of large molecules can give them an extended-release profile. For example, Altus’ investigational compound ALTU-238 is a once-a-week growth hormone; it is also the subject of a large business development deal Altus recently struck with Genentech. While there are many growth hormone products already on the market, they are parenteral formulations requiring daily injections. “Crystallizing a growth hormone enabled us to formulate ALTU-238 for extended release, requiring delivery only once a week. So it’s a very significant advancement in terms of compliance,” says Margolin. “That’s only one example of what crystallization can give you.”  

Being able to pack high concentration into a single dose, another of crystallization’s perks, is particularly important in the development of therapeutic antibodies, which currently represent an enormous area of research and development. More than 20 antibodies have reached the market, and hundreds more are in development. Antibodies are high-dose compounds, meaning that therapeutic doses of antibodies must be in the range of 1–15 milligrams per kilogram of body weight. Such a high dose generally requires intravenous delivery, “Because there is no way you can squeeze so much protein into a small volume of a syringe—the protein would start aggregating and losing activity,” Margolin explains. But crystallizing proteins allows for the formulation of highly concentrated suspensions that are capable of being delivered via subcutaneous injection. “Protein crystallization thus offers the opportunity to move from intravenous to subcutaneous delivery—that would be an enormous advance and advantage for antibody-based drugs,” Margolin notes.  

Altus’ lead program, ALTU-135, is indicated for pancreatic insufficiency, exemplified by diseases like cystic fibrosis or chronic pancreatitis. In these cases, the pancreas does not produce enough enzymes, leading to a host of ill effects including insufficient nutrition stemming from the inability to break down food properly. Using its crystallization technique, Altus can stabilize protein enzymes to withstand low pH in the stomach and high proteolysis in the intestines. “That means we can orally deliver a lipase to hydrolyze fat as substitution therapy for the enzyme not being produced by the pancreas,” Margolin explains. “For oral indications, the big difference is that we are not only crystallizing the products, we are also cross-linking them, which brings us to the second step of our process.”  

Cross-Linking: An Enabling Technology for Oral Delivery  

Even crystallized proteins can dissolve very quickly under harsh gastrointestinal (GI) conditions (e.g., in response to changes in pH levels or salt concentrations), necessitating further chemical modification to enhance their stability in the gut. For parenteral formulations, it’s an unnecessary step. But for oral indications, taking for example ALTU-135, the protein lipase is not only crystalline but cross-linked too.  

Cross-linking offers a huge advance as it confers the stability against degradative GI conditions necessary to enable the oral delivery of large protein molecules. Yet a remaining hurdle is that the complexity of the protein molecule precludes it from being absorbed through the intestinal wall and into systemic circulation, as small molecules are. Because of this challenge, Altus strategically focuses on diseases that can be treated with therapies that exert a therapeutic effect in the lumen of the GI tract or which create a gradient across the intestinal wall to facilitate removal of toxic substances from the bloodstream through enterocirculation. “It’s very important to mention that normally, when people say oral delivery, what they mean is that the compound is taken orally and it goes into circulation in the bloodstream,” Margolin explains. “In our case, we don’t want a protein to enter the bloodstream. The protein, in cross-linked form, remains in the gut, exerting its therapeutic effect, until it gets excreted.”  

Moving Proteins into Medicine  

With Genentech, Altus will jointly develop its second lead product, the once-weekly growth hormone ALTU-238, in the US and potentially in other parts of the world. The company’s goal for its lead product, ALTU-135, is to independently develop it in the US and begin commercializing it through an internal sales force. “For our earlier programs, we seek to retain commercial rights in the US, but are more flexible in terms of the rest of the world,” Margolin adds.  

Altus has two additional products in preclinical development. It hopes to start clinical trials for its hyperoxaluria and kidney stones treatment, ALTU-237, within the next six months. Altus is hopeful that the clinical program will yield positive results. “Millions of people suffer from kidney stones,” says Margolin. “Not only is it a huge market, but one that is vastly underserved.” ALTU-237 is an orally-delivered crystalline and cross-linked formulation of an oxalate-degrading enzyme.  

ALTU-236 is in preclinical development for the genetic disease, phenylketonuria; afflicted individuals lack the enzyme needed to break down the amino acid phenylalanine. Because phenylalanine is an essential amino acid found in meat and most other protein foods, people with phenylketonuria must adhere to a medical diet essentially from birth. ALTU-236 is an orally-administered enzyme replacement therapy designed to reduce the long-term effects associated with excess levels of phenylalanine.  

The Commercial Canvas  

In total, Altus has crystallized more than 70 different proteins. The challenge faced by the company is not a lack of targets—rather, it boils down to managing its strategic planning process. The company is currently evaluating its preclinical portfolio and deciding what will be internally developed projects as well as deciding which projects can be outlicensed.  

Margolin says he is not aware of any other companies within the drug development or biotechnology fields with similar technology; however, there are companies working on large-scale crystallization in the industrial field. “The source of competition would come from other companies using similar technology to try to achieve the same goals—not from the technology itself,” Margolin concludes.

  Copyright 2007, Cambridge Healthtech Institute. All Rights Reserved.