Generating antibodies for a Pneumocystis Pneumonia vaccine

$210
Raised of $6,000 Goal
4%
Ended on 7/11/13
Campaign Ended
  • $210
    pledged
  • 4%
    funded
  • Finished
    on 7/11/13

About This Project

Pneumocystis pneumonia is a disease which kills immunocompromised children and adults. MiniVax is currently producing an antigen/protein that will be the basis for the creation of a therapeutic antibody and vaccine to treat and prevent this life-threatening infection. If you help MiniVax now, you will help save victims of this deadly fungal pneumonia in the future.

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What is the context of this research?

Pneumocystis pneumonia is a disease which kills immunocompromised children and adults. MiniVax is currently producing an antigen or protein that will be the basis for the creation of a therapeutic antibody and vaccine to treat and prevent this life-threatening infection. The antibody and vaccine have the capability of curing the disease and preventing the mortality associated with the infection. MiniVax needs your help to raise the $6,000 to procure a specialized centrifuge rotor and disposable laboratory supplies that are necessary to complete the production of the antigen/protein.

What is the significance of this project?

Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) is the #1 opportunistic infection in HIV/AIDS patients with a high mortality rate. MiniVax's pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) research validates that this disease is important due to the following data: .....[1. Growing at-risk patient populations: a) HIV b) Organ transplant c) Cancer d) Congenital immunodeficiency diseases] .....[2. Most patients develop PCP due to inability of patient to generate antibody response] .....[3. Current Treatment: Antibiotics only so better therapies are needed] .....[4. Size of market : 15,000 hospitalizations / year in US & 20,000 in Europe] .....[5. Average cost of hospitalization is ~$90,000] .....[6. 20% mortality (can be high as 40% depending on condition)] .......The following demonstrates why now and why MiniVax: .....[1. MiniVax research and therapeutic antibody can provide the antibody therapy to overcome the disease] .....[2. Classifies as an "orphan disease" which gets expedited FDA approval] .....[3. Initial research shows we can reduce hospitalizations and mortality rates with our therapeutic antibody]

What are the goals of the project?

In order to generate a therapeutic antibody and vaccine, the antigen/protein must be produced in a large quantity. This would require several iterations of a Baculovirus expression procedure, which requires specific reagents and materials that MiniVax currently does not have the capability to procure. These materials include various size pipet tips, centrifugation tubes of varying sizes, 6 and 24 well tissue culture plates, several different types of media required for the Baculovirus protein expression system, and purification systems. These laboratory materials total to $2,500.

In addition, some of the steps in the aforementioned expression and purification procedures require the centrifugation of specific volume samples at specific speeds. MiniVax currently has access to a centrifuge but lacks a rotor that is capable of housing these samples and centrifuging them at the necessary speed(s). This specialized centrifuge rotor costs $3,500.

Budget

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MiniVax has been funded up to this point by a National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID) Small Business Innovation (SBIR/STTR) Phase I grant. The grant helped MiniVax investigate a number of antigens/proteins that could be best candidate for a therapeutic antibody and vaccine; however, the grant funds are running out. The antigen/protein that MiniVax is now trying to produce is the most promising and MiniVax needs your help to continue the research. MiniVax is applying for the Phase II portion the SBIR/STTR grant; however, if awarded, the funds from this grant would not be accessible until late 2013. MiniVax would like to continue its promising work without delay and, in order to do this, needs the laboratory materials and specialized rotor.

Meet the Team

Dr. A. Ray Chaudhuri
Dr. A. Ray Chaudhuri
CEO

Affiliates

BS in Biology - University of New Orleans - 1995; PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology - University of Nevada, Reno / NHLBI, NIH - 1999; MBA in Finance - George Washington University - 2002
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Team Bio

I am the co-founder and CEO of MiniVax, a biotechnology company based in New Orleans, Louisiana that is working to develop a therapeutic antibody and vaccine for a Pneumocystis pneumonia. I have over a decade of experience in government and early stage biotechnology companies. Prior to MiniVax, I was the Chief Financial Officer for Biological Mimetics Inc (BMI), a vaccine company based in Frederick, Maryland for five years. Before that, I worked at the Neuroscience Institute at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and helped manage and coordinate a large $30 million dollar multicenter neurological project for two years. Before joining NIH, I was the VP of Business Development at Actis Biologics for three years where he helped establish the Asian subsidiary of a California based biotechnology company. Previously, I was an Associate at Toucan Capital, a Maryland based venture capital firm for two years where I assisted in sourcing deals and financing approximately six startup life science companies. I have a PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology from the University of Nevada, Reno and an MBA in Finance from the George Washington University in Washington D.C.

Dr. A. Ray Chaudhuri

I am the co-founder and CEO of MiniVax, a biotechnology company based in New Orleans, Louisiana that is working to develop a therapeutic antibody and vaccine for a Pneumocystis pneumonia. I have over a decade of experience in government and early stage biotechnology companies. Prior to MiniVax, I was the Chief Financial Officer for Biological Mimetics Inc (BMI), a vaccine company based in Frederick, Maryland for five years. Before that, I worked at the Neuroscience Institute at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and helped manage and coordinate a large $30 million dollar multicenter neurological project for two years. Before joining NIH, I was the VP of Business Development at Actis Biologics for three years where he helped establish the Asian subsidiary of a California based biotechnology company. Previously, I was an Associate at Toucan Capital, a Maryland based venture capital firm for two years where I assisted in sourcing deals and financing approximately six startup life science companies. I have a PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology from the University of Nevada, Reno and an MBA in Finance from the George Washington University in Washington D.C.

Additional Information

Here are links to some journal articles regarding the technology we are working with and the success we have seen already: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16308571; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11714738

Project Backers

  • 2Backers
  • 4%Funded
  • $210Total Donations
  • $105.00Average Donation
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