Discoveries
1) Caspase inhibitors as host targeted therapy in COVID19 and RNA viruses:
The first description of elevated Caspase-1 levels and the role of pyroptosis in COVID19
patients. This finding has led to designing of a clinical trial to assess Caspase inhibition as a
potential treatment modality in COVID19. The Phase 1 study showed safety and signals of
efficacy in outpatient mild COVID19
Kroemer A, Khan K, Plassmeyer M, Alpan O, Haseeb MA, Gupta R, Fishbein TM.
Inflammasome activation and pyroptosis in lymphopenic liver patients with COVID-19. J
Hepatol. 2020 Jul 6: S0168-8278(20)30437-2.
Premeaux TA, Yeung ST, Bukhari Z, Bowler S, Alpan O, Gupta R, Ndhlovu LC. Emerging
Insights on Caspases in COVID-19 Pathogenesis, Sequelae, and Directed Therapies. Front
Immunol. 2022 Feb 21; 13:842740.
Plassmeyer M, Alpan O, Corley MJ, et. al. Caspases and therapeutic potential of caspase
inhibitors in moderate-severe SARS-CoV-2 infection and long COVID. Allergy. 2022
Jan;77(1):118-129.
2) Discovery of a disease-modifying treatment for Food Protein–Induced
Enterocolitis Syndrome (FPIES)
The FPIES discovery is that a pathway-targeted biologic, dupilumab (an IL-4Rα blocker
approved for eczema, asthma, etc.), can unexpectedly switch off food-triggered FPIES-type gut
reactions in a subset of patients.
It began with a single “experiment of nature”: a patient with lifelong, severe wheat-induced
FPIES who, after starting dupilumab for eczema, accidentally ingested large amounts of wheat
and had no reaction—then reliably relapsed when dupilumab was stopped and improved again
when it was restarted. We then identified additional patients with FPIES or FPIES-like food-
triggered enterocolitis who showed the same pattern: sustained tolerance to previously
offending foods while on dupilumab, with recurrence of symptoms when the drug was
withdrawn.
Together, these cases strongly suggest that at least one endotype of FPIES is driven by a type-
2 cytokine/OX40L-linked pathway that is druggable with IL-4/IL-13 blockade, opening the door
to the first mechanism-based therapy (and biomarker-guided stratification) for this historically
untreatable, non-IgE food allergy.
Matthew Plassmeyer, Ph.D. Naomi Enav,Michael Girgis, Ph.D., Mikell Paige, Ph.D., Linda Todd,
RNP, Laureana Israni, Oral Alpan, M.D. Dupilumab Opens a Therapeutic Window in Food
Protein Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome by un-licensing dendritic cells
https://www.jaci-global.org/article/S2772-8293(25)00193-6/fulltext
3) Basophils as Biosensors:
The basophil activation test (BAT) functions as a living biosensor for allergens by using
basophils from highly sensitized and reactive patients. We name this approach as
In BAT, fresh whole blood is exposed in vitro to candidate allergens—foods, drugs, or
formulas—and basophil up-regulation of activation markers such as CD63 is quantified by flow
cytometry. Because the readout is a functional response (degranulation/activation) instead of
just the presence of IgE, BAT can distinguish clinically relevant allergens. This makes BAT an
ideal biosensor platform to compare unknown or engineered products (e.g., hypoallergenic
formulas, new food ingredients) against known controls, detect trace allergen contamination,
and, in our work, provide a regulatory-grade in vitro alternative or adjunct to risky oral
challenges.
We are working with one of our partners to help reshape the U.S. regulatory pathway for
hypoallergenic infant formulas, using this process to support hypoallergenic labeling claims.
Capabilities
Ø All phases of clinical trials
Ø No CRO support needed for the proof-of-concept studies
Ø Research and CLIA/CAP lab to support all functional biomarkers studies
Ø Discovery
Ø Intellectual Property
Ø Blood draw capabilities across USA (Quest)
Ø Robust Patient Recruitment resources
Ø Active Clinical Immunology Clinic
Intellectual Property (published cases)
Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome and CRTH2. Application #: 17/440620.
Filing date: 9/17/2021
Treatment for Diseases Caused by RNA Viruses. Application #: 17/919020. Filing date:
10/14/2022
Treatment for diseases caused by RNA virus SARS-CoV-2. US12377127B2. Active.
Expiration: 04-14-2041
Time Dependent Response of Basophils to Allergens, Application #: 18/213,417. Filing
date: 23 Jun 2023