Interviewing Lou Hawthorne – founder and CEO of NaNotics, biotech / longevity company making a novel subtractive nanoparticles that treat disease by capturing and clearing pathogenic molecules from blood- tomorrow. Let me know what questions or topics you’d love to see discussed.

February 14, 2024

This is apart of my ongoing series on longevity, which has +20, +60 minute, episodes (Aubrey de grey, George Church, Nir Barzilai, Michael levin, etc). See them all here.

Lou / NaNotics,

“Lou Hawthorne is the founder and CEO of NaNotics, a biotech company that creates nanoparticles that can soak up harmful molecules in circulation. This paradigm-shifting technology can be used to fight cancer as well as various inflammatory disorders, such as sepsis, which kills more people than cancer does. Other potential targets, familiar to everyone in the longevity field, are age-related sterile inflammation (inflammaging) and cellular senescence. Amazingly, Lou is an autodidact who earned his place in the field with his ingenuity and relentless pursuit of knowledge.” (sources below)

“Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) is an essential immune signaling molecule which, as the name implies, is toxic to cancer and other abnormal cells. Immune cells kill bad cells by delivering TNF-α to TNF receptors on the target cell membrane, inducing apoptosis (cell death). However, most if not all malignant tumors inhibit TNF-α by cleaving off the extracellular domains of their TNF receptors, producing a soluble receptor form called “sTNF-Rs”. sTNF-Rs neutralize TNF-α molecules secreted by immune cells, preventing them from inducing apoptosis in cancer cells, thereby enabling immune evasion. This bioanimation by the Company illustrates the process.
sTNF-Rs have been undruggable targets. Functional membrane TNF receptors (mTNF-Rs) are essential for a broad range of normal immune functions. A drug that neutralizes sTNF-Rs would also block mTNF-Rs, given that the binding sites of both forms are identical. Instead, NaNots deplete soluble targets – in this case sTNF-Rs – without blocking membrane forms of the same target – in this case mTNF-Rs. NaNots represent a novel form of immunotherapy, targeting an important new immunosuppressive pathway. NaNots have been tested for safety in rodents at up to 100x the planned human dose, with no observed toxicity.
The MGCC team is led by Keith Flaherty, M.D., Director of Clinical Research and a Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Flaherty is also a co-founder of multiple cancer therapeutics companies, including Loxo Oncology. Dr. Flaherty’s team includes Justin Gainor, MD, Director of Targeted Immunotherapy at MGCC.
“Despite the profound benefits of PD-1/PD-L1 antibody-based immunotherapy for approximately 10% of cancer patients, it is clear that we have not yet overcome the primary basis for immune evasion in the vast majority of cancer patients,” said Dr. Flaherty. “TNF-α has been on the very short list of desired mechanisms to leverage for decades, but has been largely forgotten because there has been no feasible way of selectively delivering TNF-α to tumor cells. The NaNotics approach overcomes this barrier by depleting the molecules that tumor cells produce and shed in order to intercept TNF-α produced by immune cells.”
“NaNotics is delighted to be collaborating with the Mass General Cancer Center in the study of NaNots against sTNF-Rs,” said Lou Hawthorne, CEO of NaNotics and the inventor of NaNots. “We’re especially excited to be working with Dr. Flaherty – a brilliant scientist and clinician with a record of innovation and success – and his colleagues at MGCC, including Dr. Gainor, an expert in immunotherapy. They bring deep scientific insight and a wealth of clinical trial experience to our collaboration, enabling translation of the NaNot platform from novel science into therapeutics of potential benefit to millions of patients suffering deadly cancers.”
As part of the collaboration, NaNotics will produce pre-clinical and then clinical NaNots against sTNF-Rs. MGCC will provide patient samples for preclinical validation of NaNots, following which the teams will work together on clinical trial design, leading to a study of NaNots against sTNF-Rs in cancer patients, centered at MGCC in 2024.” (sources below)

Source(s) /link(s)

“Lou Hawthorne, NaNotics on Cleaning Blood with Nanoparticles”
Removing inflammatory cytokines may be key to fighting many diseases.

“NaNotics to Collaborate with Mayo Clinic on Nanomedicine Cancer Treatment”

“NaNotics to Collaborate with Mass General Cancer Center (MGCC) on Novel Nanomedicine for Treating Cancer”

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220906005083/en

website

https://www.nanotics.com/

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.