Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

US20190256889A1 - Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma - Google Patents

Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20190256889A1
US20190256889A1 US16/143,017 US201816143017A US2019256889A1 US 20190256889 A1 US20190256889 A1 US 20190256889A1 US 201816143017 A US201816143017 A US 201816143017A US 2019256889 A1 US2019256889 A1 US 2019256889A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
tie2
mice
glaucoma
lymphatic
angiopoietin
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US16/143,017
Inventor
Susan E QUAGGIN
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Mannin Research Inc
Original Assignee
Mannin Research Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Mannin Research Inc filed Critical Mannin Research Inc
Priority to US16/143,017 priority Critical patent/US20190256889A1/en
Publication of US20190256889A1 publication Critical patent/US20190256889A1/en
Priority to US16/711,067 priority patent/US20200347436A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6844Nucleic acid amplification reactions
    • C12Q1/686Polymerase chain reaction [PCR]
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; AVICULTURE; APICULTURE; PISCICULTURE; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K67/00Rearing or breeding animals, not otherwise provided for; New or modified breeds of animals
    • A01K67/027New or modified breeds of vertebrates
    • A01K67/0275Genetically modified vertebrates, e.g. transgenic
    • A01K67/0276Knock-out vertebrates
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K38/00Medicinal preparations containing peptides
    • A61K38/16Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • A61K38/17Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • A61K38/18Growth factors; Growth regulators
    • A61K38/1891Angiogenesic factors; Angiogenin
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K49/00Preparations for testing in vivo
    • A61K49/0004Screening or testing of compounds for diagnosis of disorders, assessment of conditions, e.g. renal clearance, gastric emptying, testing for diabetes, allergy, rheuma, pancreas functions
    • A61K49/0008Screening agents using (non-human) animal models or transgenic animal models or chimeric hosts, e.g. Alzheimer disease animal model, transgenic model for heart failure
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K9/00Medicinal preparations characterised by special physical form
    • A61K9/0012Galenical forms characterised by the site of application
    • A61K9/0048Eye, e.g. artificial tears
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P27/00Drugs for disorders of the senses
    • A61P27/02Ophthalmic agents
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6876Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes
    • C12Q1/6883Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes for diseases caused by alterations of genetic material
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K9/00Medicinal preparations characterised by special physical form
    • A61K9/0012Galenical forms characterised by the site of application
    • A61K9/0019Injectable compositions; Intramuscular, intravenous, arterial, subcutaneous administration; Compositions to be administered through the skin in an invasive manner
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/475Growth factors; Growth regulators
    • C07K14/515Angiogenesic factors; Angiogenin

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the use of Tie2 receptor activation for treatment of open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma and cystic kidney disease, and more specifically to the use of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics to improve lymphatic drainage in the Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatic system for open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma patients, and to slow and/or reduce the growth of cysts in patients with cystic kidney disease.
  • Angiopoietin-Tie2 signaling pathway is a major regulator of vascular development, and altered expression of the Angiopoietin ligands or activity of the Tie2 receptor has been linked to a variety of vascular diseases and adverse outcomes in patients.
  • Angiopoietin2 is reported to function as a competitive antagonist of Angiopietinl/Tie2 signaling, inhibiting Angiopoietin1-mediated phosphorylation of Tie2.
  • compositions with agents which inhibit or modify kinases and therefore inhibit vascular development are used for treatment of some types of cancer as well as other diseases, such as neovascular glaucoma, abnormal ocular vasculatures and glaucoma generally as set out in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,754,209, 8,529,943, 8,476,434, 8,450,305, 8,425,469, and 8,338,455; and US patent application Ser. Nos. 14/119,532, 13/920,103, 14/131,024, and 13/652,154 (U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. 2014/0161720, 2014/0004175, 2014/0163079, and 2013/0095105, respectively), each of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • IOP intraocular pressure
  • Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness, afflicting more than 60 million people worldwide.
  • inhibitory kinases haves been used to treat glaucoma, particularly neovascular glaucoma, there is a need to know the pathway that is active and leads to open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma in order to provide better treatment and prevention of this condition.
  • Embodiments of the invention include a method of treating a patient having open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma or cystic kidney disease by administering a pharmaceutical composition comprising agents capable of TIE2 receptor activation.
  • Embodiments of the invention include a method of treating a patient having open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma or cystic kidney disease comprising administering a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics.
  • the invention includes the use of a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors and Tie2- peptomimetics for improving ocular lymphatic drainage.
  • the invention includes the use of a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors and Tie2- peptomimetics for improving drainage through Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatics.
  • the invention is a pharmaceutical composition for topical delivery to the eye comprising an effective dosage amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents.
  • Embodiments of the invention include a pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically active amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier for topical delivery to the eye.
  • the pharmaceutically acceptable carrier can be a controlled release vehicle, selected from the group consisting of biocompatible polymers, other polymeric matrices, capsules, microcapsules, nanocapsules, microp articles, nanoparticles, micro spheres, bolus preparations, osmotic pumps, diffusion devices, liposomes, lipospheres.
  • the invention is a conditional Angiopoeitin 2 knockout allele.
  • Embodiments of the invention also include the use of a conditional Angiopoeitin 2 knockout allele to produce mice lacking Angiopoeitin 2.
  • the invention also includes use of the following primers for PCR genotyping of mice: AngptlFlox, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TCAAAGCAACATATCATGTGCA-3′ (WT: 233 bp product, AngptlFlox: 328 bp), Angpt1Delete, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TGTGAGCAAAACCCCTTTC-3′ (431 bp product), Angpt2Flox, Forward 5′-GGGAAACCTCAACACTCCAA-3′; Reverse 5′-ACACCGGCCTCTAGACACAC-3′ (WT:224 bp product, Angpt2Flox: 258 bp) and Angpt2Delete, Forward 5′-AAGGCGCATAACGATACCAC-3′; and Reverse 5′-TGAGAACTCTGCAGCCTTGA-3′(Angpt2Flox: 1,372
  • the invention also includes a pharmaceutical composition for subcutaneous delivery comprising an effective dosage amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents for treatment of cystic kidney disease.
  • the invention also includes a pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically active amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier for subcutaneous delivery for treatment of cystic kidney disease.
  • FIG. 1 shows A 1 A2Flox WB ⁇ E16 5 (cKO) mice develop bilateral buphthalmos.
  • FIG. 2 shows slit lamp photography shows marked pupil dilation in A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice (a) compared to a control littermate (b) at 8 weeks of age. Pupil edge is indicated by arrows.
  • FIG. 3 shows A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice develop glaucoma due to defects in ocular drainage.
  • the optic nerve head appears abnormal in A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice (g), with thinning of the nerve fiber layer (red arrowheads) and optic nerve excavation (asterisk).
  • Semi-thin sections show thinning of the nerve fiber, ganglion, and nuclear cell layers in the central retina (b,h). Loss of nerve fibers is confirmed by Tuj1 staining (c,i).
  • Schlemm's canal is absent in A1A2 cKO mice (j).
  • A1A2 cKO mice have fewer nuclei in the retinal ganglion cell layer (o). GCL, ganglion cell layer, INL, inner nuclear layer, ONL, outer nuclear layer, RPE, retinal pigment epithelium, V, blood vessel, SC, Schlemm's canal. Red arrowheads indicate thickness of the nerve fiber layer. Scale bars indicate 200 ⁇ m in all panels except f and 1 where they represent 1mm. **P ⁇ 0.01.
  • FIG. 4 shows Foxc2 regulates Tie2 expression in lymphatic endothelium.
  • FIG. 5 shows lymphatic vessels present in extra-ocular tissues of A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice. Confocal microscopy was used to compare patterning of LYVE-1 positive lymphatic capillaries in whole mount ear tissue from (a) control and (b) A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice.
  • FIG. 6 shows the strategy used to generate the whole-body, inducible combined Angpt1/Angpt2 knockout mouse model (A1A2Flox WB mice).
  • the conditional Angpt2 knockout construct contains loxp sites flanking exon 4 and was used to target mouse embryonic stem cells. Chimeric founders were crossed to mice expressing FlpE recombinase to excise the neomycin selection cassette and produce Angpt2Flox(Neo out) mice.
  • Angpt2Flox(Neo out) mice were bred with an inducible, whole body Angpt1 knockout model to generate the A1A2Flox WB mice described in this study.
  • the ROSA26-rtTA-TetOnCre system allows robust, whole-body deletion of Angpt1 and Angpt2 upon induction with doxycycline.
  • FIG. 7 shows Lyve-l-positive lymphatic (a,b) and CD31-positive vascular (c,d) capillaries develop in the corneal limbus of mice lacking either Angpt1 or Angpt2 alone. These mice do not develop the buphthalmos phenotype observed in double knockout A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice.
  • FIG. 8 shows a control kidney cross-section at left and on the right a cross-section of a A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mouse kidney showing dramatic cysts.
  • Angiopoeitin2 (“Angpt2”) and the orphan receptor Tie1 are known to be involved in lymphatic development, but until now, roles for Tie2 and its canonical ligand Angptl have not been described.
  • Angpt1 Angiopoietin
  • KO Angiopoietin knock out mice die between E9.5 and E12.5 due to major cardiovascular defects, conditional deletion of Angpt1 after E13.5 produces no overt vascular phenotypes in adult mice.
  • Angpt2 knockout mice exhibit lymphatic valve defects and mesenteric lymphatic abnormalities resulting in chylous ascites (2), they do not develop the embryonic edema observed in A1A2Flox WB or Tie2 conditional KO mice, suggesting a compensatory role for Angptl in lymphatic development.
  • IOP intraocular pressure
  • lymphatic and vascular capillaries in the corneal limbus were studied. Vessels were examined by confocal microscopy of flat-mounted eyes, which revealed complete absence of Lyve-1 positive lymphatic endothelium in the limbus of A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice ( FIG. 3 e,k ). By contrast, CD31-positive blood vasculature is present, but exhibits disturbed patterning, with some capillary loops extending into the cornea. It is unclear if this aberrant vascular morphology is a direct effect of Angpt1 and Angpt2 deletion, or a response to loss of lymphatic drainage and/or stretching of the cornea.
  • Foxcl or Foxc2 may be responsible for regulating expression of Tie2 or angiopoietin ligands in lymphatic endothelium.
  • De Val and colleagues have reported the presence of a FOX:ETS transcriptional enhancer sequence in the Tie2 promoter region, and demonstrated Foxc2-mediated enhancer activation using an in vitro reporter system—further suggesting a link between these pathways( 20 ).
  • the possibility of Foxc-mediated Tie2 regulation was investigated using complimentary in vivo and in vitro systems, at the protein and mRNA level.
  • Foxc2 mutations or in Foxc2 knockout mice provide additional evidence of a connection between Foxc and angiopoietin/Tie2 molecular pathways.
  • Lyve-1 positive lymphatic vessels are present in non-ocular tissues of A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice, although patterning in some organs is abnormal.
  • lymphatic vessels appear sparse with variable vessel diameter and abnormal branching ( FIG. 5 a,b) similar to that described in Angpt2-null mice ( 19 ). It is possible that the specialized lymphatic vessels of the anterior chamber are more dependent on Angpt-Tie2 signaling than other lymphatic endothelia, suggesting that, like vascular endothelia, lymphatic capillaries from different organs are heterogeneous with unique functions and regulatory mechanisms.
  • Schlemm's canal has been described as a hybrid vessel with features of both blood and lymphatic endothelium, expressing blood endothelial markers CD34 and E-Selectin, and a subset of lymphatic markers including Prox1 and VegfR3 but not Podoplanin ( 22 - 24 ).
  • IOP intraocular pressure
  • A1A2Flox WB ⁇ E16.5 mice lack both Schlemm's canal and the lymphatic capillaries of the corneal limbus, leading to a dramatic increase in TOP and glaucoma.
  • therapies such as Vegfc or Angpt-Tie2 agonists provides therapies for glaucoma.
  • a pepto-mimic (peptide/nanomedicine) in an eye drop formulation is useful for treatment of open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma and the level of the resulting Tie2 activation is measurable by assessment of phosphorylation of Tie2/Tek.
  • these Tie2 receptor activators can improve ocular lymphatic drainage, and specifically improve drainage through Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatics, through topical delivery of these Tie2 receptor agonists delivered to the eye.
  • Tie2 receptor activators are: angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics. However, it will be understood that new forms of Tie2 receptor activators as developed are also applicable to the present invention.
  • Intraocular pressure was measured at 8 weeks of age using a Tonolab rebound tonometer (iCare, Vantaa, Finland) as previously described 13 .
  • Visual acuity was estimated using an Optomotor response test 14 , 15 .
  • the optomotor system used for these studies provides a maximum grating size of 0.042 cycles per degree, and mice were scored as “no response” if they were unable to respond to this stimulus.
  • A1A2Flox WB mice induced at E16.5 and littermate controls were aged 8 weeks before tissue harvest for histological studies.
  • Whole eyes were perfusion-fixed (2.5% Gluteraldehyde, 2% Formaldehyde in 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.4), embedded in Epon 812 and sectioned using an ultramicrotome. Sections were stained with Toluine blue and imaged on a compound microscope. Optic nerve sections were embedded in paraffin, sectioned and stained using haematoxylin and eosin.
  • Human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells were cultured with fetal bovine serum, antibiotics and other supplements. Cells were transfected with Foxc1, Foxc2 or control siRNAs and incubated for 48 h. At the end of incubation, cells were harvested and lysates prepared. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto PVDF membranes for western blot.
  • An Angpt2Flox targeting construct was obtained from the Sanger Institute knockout mouse project (clone #PRPGS00100_B_CO2) and used to target mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells by homologous recombination.
  • This construct introduces loxp recombination sites flanking exon 4 of the Angpt2 gene, as well as a neomycin-resistance cassette flanked by frt recombination sites for flpe recombinase ( FIG. 6 a ).
  • Blastocyst morula aggregation was performed at the Toronto Centre for Phenogenomics (Toronto, Canada), and chimeras were crossed to wild-type ICR mice.
  • F1 animals were screened by PCR and Southern blot, and those positive for the AngptlFlox(Neo in) allele were crossed to mice expressing FlpE recombinase (B6;SJL-Tg(ACTFLPe)9205Dym/J, The Jackson laboratory, Bar Harbor, Me.) to excise the Neomycin selection cassette used in ES cell cloning. FlpE excision was verified by Southern blot, and Angpt2Flox(Neo out) mice were selected for all subsequent breeding.
  • Angpt2Flox mice were crossed onto the whole-body, inducible AngptlFlox/ROSA26-rtTA/TetOnCre line previously generated in our laboratory ( 3 ) to create Angptl/Angpt2/ROSA26-rtTA/TetOnCre line (A1A2FloxWB mice).
  • Angpt1 and Angpt2 deletion was induced by addition of 0.5% Doxycycline to the drinking water of pregnant dams at day 16.5 of gestation to generate A1A2Flox WB.E.16.5 offspring.
  • Knockout mice were genotyped by PCR, using the following primers: Angpt1Flox, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TCAAAGCAACATATCATGTGCA-3′ (WT: 233 bp product, Angpt1Flox: 328 bp), Angpt1Delete, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TGTGAGCAAAACCCCTTTC-3′ (431 bp product), Angpt2Flox, Forward 5′-GGGAAACCTCAACACTCCAA-3′ ; Reverse 5′-ACACCGGCCTCTAGACACAC-3′ (WT: 224 bp product, Angpt2Flox: 258 bp) and Angpt2Delete, Forward 5′-AAGGCGCATAACGATACCAC-3′; Reverse 5′-TGAGAACTCTGCAGCCTTGA-3′ (Angpt2Flox: 1,37
  • Intraocular pressure was measured at 8 weeks of age using a Tonolab rebound tonometer (iCare, Vantaa, Finland). Mice were restrained in a soft plastic cone and ocular pressure for each eye was averaged from three sets of six recordings. Each mouse was measured on two subsequent days and the results were averaged to obtain the reported IOP values. Visual acuity was measured using an Optomotor response test as previously described ( 10 , 12 ). Briefly, animals were placed on an elevated platform surrounded by four LCD monitors. Monitors displayed vertical gratings as moving visual stimuli. Mice were observed and head movement following the direction of moving gratings was scored as positive optomotor response.
  • A1A2Flox WB.E.16.5 mice and littermate controls were sacrificed following anesthesia by i.p. injection of 2, 2, 2-Tribromoethanol. Eyes were dissected and immersion fixed (4% Formaldehyde, 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.4). For flat mounts, fixed eyes were bisected sagittally, retinas and optic nerves were removed and hemispheres stained as whole-mounts.
  • E15.5 control Foxc2 flox/flox
  • lymphatic-specific Foxc2 knockout Foxc2 flox/flox ;Prox1CreERT2 mice embryos were stained for Lyve-1 and CD31 and subjected to FACS as previously described ( 29 ). Briefly, E15.5 embryos were harvested in Hank's balanced salt solution (HBSS, Sigma-Aldrich) and then chopped for an overnight digestion with collagenease I/II. The colleagenase-treated cell suspension was incubated with RBC (Red blood cell) lysis buffer (StemCell Technologies, Vancouver, Canada). Following centrifugation, cell pellets were incubated with anti-Lyve-1 antibody (Abcam) for 20 min at 40C.
  • RBC Red blood cell
  • lysis buffer StemCell Technologies, Vancouver, Canada
  • qPCR was run using an ABI 7500 real-time thermocycler using the following primers: Tie2Fwd: 5′-ACACTGTCCTCCCAACAGCTTCTT-3′, Tie2Rev: 5′-TGATTCGATTGCCATCCAACGCAC-3′, PpiaFwd: 5′-CAAATGCTGGACCAAACACA-3′, PpiaRev: 5′- TGCCATCCAGCCATTCAGTC-3′.
  • Human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells were cultured in EBM media
  • siRNAs Scrambled (Qiagen, #1027281), Foxcl (Thermo Scientific, #L-009318-00-0005), Foxc2 (Thermo Scientific #ATTAA-004016).
  • Primary antibodies Rabbit anti-mouse Tie2 (Santa Cruz #SC-324, reported by the supplier to recognize Tie2 of human and mouse origin), Rabbit anti-mouse ⁇ Actin (Abcam #ab8227), Sheep anti-human FoxC2 (R&D Systems #AF5044).

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Proteomics, Peptides & Aminoacids (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Bioinformatics & Cheminformatics (AREA)
  • Genetics & Genomics (AREA)
  • Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
  • Pharmacology & Pharmacy (AREA)
  • Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
  • Epidemiology (AREA)
  • Immunology (AREA)
  • Biotechnology (AREA)
  • Ophthalmology & Optometry (AREA)
  • Microbiology (AREA)
  • Molecular Biology (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Biophysics (AREA)
  • Biochemistry (AREA)
  • Pathology (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Gastroenterology & Hepatology (AREA)
  • Vascular Medicine (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Nuclear Medicine, Radiotherapy & Molecular Imaging (AREA)
  • Medicines That Contain Protein Lipid Enzymes And Other Medicines (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Diabetes (AREA)
  • Biomedical Technology (AREA)
  • Biodiversity & Conservation Biology (AREA)
  • Endocrinology (AREA)
  • Rheumatology (AREA)

Abstract

This invention relates to the production and genotyping of mice lacking both Angiopoietin 1 and Angiopoietin 2. This invention also relates to the use of Tie2 receptor activation for treatment of open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma and cystic kidney disease, and more specifically to the use of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics to improve lymphatic drainage in the Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatic system for open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma patients, and to slow and/or reduce the growth of cysts in patients with cystic kidney disease.

Description

    FIELD OF THE INVENTION
  • This invention relates to the use of Tie2 receptor activation for treatment of open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma and cystic kidney disease, and more specifically to the use of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics to improve lymphatic drainage in the Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatic system for open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma patients, and to slow and/or reduce the growth of cysts in patients with cystic kidney disease.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • The Angiopoietin-Tie2 signaling pathway is a major regulator of vascular development, and altered expression of the Angiopoietin ligands or activity of the Tie2 receptor has been linked to a variety of vascular diseases and adverse outcomes in patients. In blood vascular endothelium, Angiopoietin2 is reported to function as a competitive antagonist of Angiopietinl/Tie2 signaling, inhibiting Angiopoietin1-mediated phosphorylation of Tie2.
  • Pharmaceuticals with agents which inhibit or modify kinases and therefore inhibit vascular development are used for treatment of some types of cancer as well as other diseases, such as neovascular glaucoma, abnormal ocular vasculatures and glaucoma generally as set out in U.S. Pat. Nos. 8,754,209, 8,529,943, 8,476,434, 8,450,305, 8,425,469, and 8,338,455; and US patent application Ser. Nos. 14/119,532, 13/920,103, 14/131,024, and 13/652,154 (U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. 2014/0161720, 2014/0004175, 2014/0163079, and 2013/0095105, respectively), each of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • Knowledge of pathways regulating vascular development has been used to develop drugs for controlling this development. Knowledge of pathogenetic and molecular pathways leading to disease conditions can reveal methods of treating or preventing such conditions. For example, increased intraocular pressure (IOP) due to impaired aqueous humor drainage is a major risk factor for development of glaucoma, and determining the pathway by which this occurs would be helpful in finding other treatments. Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness, afflicting more than 60 million people worldwide.
  • Although inhibitory kinases haves been used to treat glaucoma, particularly neovascular glaucoma, there is a need to know the pathway that is active and leads to open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma in order to provide better treatment and prevention of this condition.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • Embodiments of the invention include a method of treating a patient having open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma or cystic kidney disease by administering a pharmaceutical composition comprising agents capable of TIE2 receptor activation. Embodiments of the invention include a method of treating a patient having open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma or cystic kidney disease comprising administering a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics.
  • In embodiments, the invention includes the use of a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors and Tie2- peptomimetics for improving ocular lymphatic drainage. In embodiemtns, the invention includes the use of a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors and Tie2- peptomimetics for improving drainage through Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatics.
  • In embodiments the invention is a pharmaceutical composition for topical delivery to the eye comprising an effective dosage amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents. Embodiments of the invention include a pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically active amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier for topical delivery to the eye. The pharmaceutically acceptable carrier can be a controlled release vehicle, selected from the group consisting of biocompatible polymers, other polymeric matrices, capsules, microcapsules, nanocapsules, microp articles, nanoparticles, micro spheres, bolus preparations, osmotic pumps, diffusion devices, liposomes, lipospheres.
  • In embodiments, the invention is a conditional Angiopoeitin 2 knockout allele.
  • Embodiments of the invention also include the use of a conditional Angiopoeitin 2 knockout allele to produce mice lacking Angiopoeitin 2.
  • The invention also includes use of the following primers for PCR genotyping of mice: AngptlFlox, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TCAAAGCAACATATCATGTGCA-3′ (WT: 233 bp product, AngptlFlox: 328 bp), Angpt1Delete, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TGTGAGCAAAACCCCTTTC-3′ (431 bp product), Angpt2Flox, Forward 5′-GGGAAACCTCAACACTCCAA-3′; Reverse 5′-ACACCGGCCTCTAGACACAC-3′ (WT:224 bp product, Angpt2Flox: 258 bp) and Angpt2Delete, Forward 5′-AAGGCGCATAACGATACCAC-3′; and Reverse 5′-TGAGAACTCTGCAGCCTTGA-3′(Angpt2Flox: 1,372 bp product, Angpt2Delete: 426 bp).
  • The invention also includes a pharmaceutical composition for subcutaneous delivery comprising an effective dosage amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents for treatment of cystic kidney disease. The invention also includes a pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically active amount of Tie2 receptor activating agents and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier for subcutaneous delivery for treatment of cystic kidney disease.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
  • These and other aspects of the present invention will be apparent from the brief description of the drawings and the following detailed description in which:
  • FIG. 1 shows A 1 A2FloxWBΔE16 5 (cKO) mice develop bilateral buphthalmos.
  • While control eyes (a, c,e,g) appear normal, 8-week old A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice (b,d,f,h) show enlargement of the anterior chamber due to increased intraocular pressure (i). Optomotor response tests (j) show impaired vision in mutant animals. Scale bars represent 1 mm (e,f) and 500 μM (g,h). Error bars indicate s.e.m. *P<0.05, **P<0.01,***P<0.001 determined by two-tailed t test. NR (no response) indicates an optomotor response of <0.042 cycles/degree.
  • FIG. 2 shows slit lamp photography shows marked pupil dilation in A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice (a) compared to a control littermate (b) at 8 weeks of age. Pupil edge is indicated by arrows.
  • FIG. 3 shows A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice develop glaucoma due to defects in ocular drainage. Compared to controls (a), the optic nerve head appears abnormal in A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice (g), with thinning of the nerve fiber layer (red arrowheads) and optic nerve excavation (asterisk). Semi-thin sections show thinning of the nerve fiber, ganglion, and nuclear cell layers in the central retina (b,h). Loss of nerve fibers is confirmed by Tuj1 staining (c,i). Unlike littermate controls (d), Schlemm's canal is absent in A1A2 cKO mice (j). Anterior chamber drainage is further diminished by a loss of Lyve-1 positive lymphatic capillaries in the corneal limbus (e,k). Lymphatic vasculature is present in non-ocular tissues, but exhibits disturbed patterning as shown here in the dermis of the ear (f,l). Mice lacking Angptl or Angpt2 individually develop lymphatics in the corneal limbus (m,n). Compared to controls, A1A2 cKO mice have fewer nuclei in the retinal ganglion cell layer (o). GCL, ganglion cell layer, INL, inner nuclear layer, ONL, outer nuclear layer, RPE, retinal pigment epithelium, V, blood vessel, SC, Schlemm's canal. Red arrowheads indicate thickness of the nerve fiber layer. Scale bars indicate 200 μm in all panels except f and 1 where they represent 1mm. **P<0.01.
  • FIG. 4 shows Foxc2 regulates Tie2 expression in lymphatic endothelium. (a)
  • Tie2 mRNA expression was measured by real-time PCR in lymphatic endothelial cells isolated from E15.5 Foxc2Flox/Flox (Ctrl) or Foxc2flox/flox;Prox1CreERT2 (Foxc2 cKO) mouse embryos. N=6 control and 6 Foxc2 cKO embryos. (b) Human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells were cultured in the presence of specific siRNAs targeting Foxcl, Foxc2 or a scrambled siRNA control. Compared to scrambled control siRNA (lane 1) or Foxc 1 siRNA (lane 2), siRNA targeting Foxc2 (lane 3) caused a reduction in Tie2 protein expression. Error bars indicate s.e.m. *P<0.05 determined by two-tailed t test.
  • FIG. 5 shows lymphatic vessels present in extra-ocular tissues of A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice. Confocal microscopy was used to compare patterning of LYVE-1 positive lymphatic capillaries in whole mount ear tissue from (a) control and (b) A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice.
  • FIG. 6 shows the strategy used to generate the whole-body, inducible combined Angpt1/Angpt2 knockout mouse model (A1A2FloxWB mice). (a) The conditional Angpt2 knockout construct contains loxp sites flanking exon 4 and was used to target mouse embryonic stem cells. Chimeric founders were crossed to mice expressing FlpE recombinase to excise the neomycin selection cassette and produce Angpt2Flox(Neo out) mice. (b) Angpt2Flox(Neo out) mice were bred with an inducible, whole body Angpt1 knockout model to generate the A1A2FloxWB mice described in this study. (c) The ROSA26-rtTA-TetOnCre system allows robust, whole-body deletion of Angpt1 and Angpt2 upon induction with doxycycline.
  • FIG. 7 shows Lyve-l-positive lymphatic (a,b) and CD31-positive vascular (c,d) capillaries develop in the corneal limbus of mice lacking either Angpt1 or Angpt2 alone. These mice do not develop the buphthalmos phenotype observed in double knockout A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice.
  • FIG. 8 shows a control kidney cross-section at left and on the right a cross-section of a A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mouse kidney showing dramatic cysts.
  • DESCRIPTION
  • Embodiments of the invention are discussed in detail below. In describing embodiments, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. However, the invention is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected. While specific exemplary embodiments are discussed, it should be understood that this is done for illustration purposes only. A person skilled in the relevant art will recognize that other components and configurations can be used without parting from the spirit and scope of the invention. All references cited herein are incorporated by reference as if each had been individually incorporated.
  • Angiopoeitin2 (“Angpt2”) and the orphan receptor Tie1 are known to be involved in lymphatic development, but until now, roles for Tie2 and its canonical ligand Angptl have not been described. Surprisingly, while Angiopoietin (“Angpt1”) knock out (“KO”) mice die between E9.5 and E12.5 due to major cardiovascular defects, conditional deletion of Angpt1 after E13.5 produces no overt vascular phenotypes in adult mice.
  • However, while the blood vascular role of the pathway has been extensively studied, the function of angiopoietins in lymphatic endothelium is uncertain.
  • To determine if there is unrecognized cooperation between Angpt1 and Angpt2 in vivo, which might provide compensation in mice lacking Angpt1, a conditional Angpt2 knockout allele was generated and produced mice lacking both major Angiopoietin ligands (A1A2FloxWB). Strikingly, simultaneous deletion of both ligands at midgestation phenocopies deletion of Tie2—demonstrating cooperativity between Angpt1 and Angpt2 in vivo. Whole-body deletion of the Tie2 receptor or both Angpt1 and Angpt2 at E12.5 leads to gross subcutaneous edema in embryos, with associated patterning defects in dermal lymphatic vessels. While Angpt2 knockout mice exhibit lymphatic valve defects and mesenteric lymphatic abnormalities resulting in chylous ascites (2), they do not develop the embryonic edema observed in A1A2FloxWB or Tie2 conditional KO mice, suggesting a compensatory role for Angptl in lymphatic development.
  • Deletion of the Tie2/ Tek ligands angiopoietin 1 and 2 in mice (A1A2FloxWB mice) results in high TOP, bupthalmos and classic features of glaucoma including retinal ganglion degeneration and vision loss. Eyes from A1A2FloxWB mice lack drainage pathways including Schlemm's canal and lymphatic capillaries in the corneal limbus, which share expression of Prox1, VEGFR3, and the Foxc transcription factors that are linked to glaucoma and lymphatic disorders in patients. In contrast to blood endothelium where Angpt2 is an antagonist of Angpt1, it is shown that both ligands cooperate to regulate Tie2 in the lymphatic network of the eye. While A1A2FloxWB mice develop high IOP and glaucoma, expression of Angpt1 or Angpt2 alone is sufficient for ocular drainage. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that loss of Foxc2 from lymphatics results in Tie2 downregulation, suggesting a mechanism for ocular defects in patients with Foxc mutations. These data reveal a new pathogenetic and molecular basis for glaucoma, demonstrating the importance of angiopoietin ligand cooperation in lymphatic endothelium.
  • To investigate combined role(s) of Angiopoietin 1 and 2 in adult mice, both ligands were deleted at E16.5. A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice are born in normal Mendelian numbers and are indistinguishable from control littermates during the first 3 weeks of life. However, eyes of mutant animals begin to protrude noticeably 21-28 days after birth. As shown in FIGS. 1a to d, bilateral buphthalmos worsens with age, and by 8 weeks, mice have difficulty closing their eyelids. Gross examination reveals corneal enlargement and increased anterior chamber depth as is shown in FIGS. 1e to h. Pupils of A1A2FloxWB mice appear fully dilated (FIG. 2), suggesting that anterior segment enlargement is due to high intraocular pressure (IOP)(9). IOP was measured at 10 weeks using a rebound tonometer(10). While control animals had intraocular pressure readings within the normal range, IOP of mutant littermates was significantly elevated, ranging from 24-52 mmHg (FIG. 1i ). Using an optomotor response test(11, 12) A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice were found to have severely impaired vision, with visual acuity <0.042 cycles/degree in all animals examined (FIG. 1j ). Histological analysis of eye sections revealed excavation of the optic nerve head (FIG. 3a,g ) and other characteristic features of glaucomatous eye disease. Mutant retinas have reductions in thickness of retinal cell layers including the ganglion and inner nuclear layers and loss of the nerve fiber layer (FIG. 3 b,c,h,i,o; FIGS. 3,4). Unlike human glaucoma, which is rarely associated with photoreceptor loss (13), A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice show thinning of the outer nuclear layer which worsens toward the retinal periphery. This outer retina damage is similar to that described in laser-induced models of high-IOP mouse glaucoma, suggesting the possibility of pressure-related or ischemic effects (14). While loss of photoreceptors may be partially responsible for the vision loss observed, this degree of photoreceptor atrophy is not sufficient to explain the dramatic decrease in visual acuity seen in A1A2Flox cKO mice. Taken together, these data confirm that A1A2FloxWB mice represent a new model of glaucoma.
  • To determine the cause of high intraocular pressure and glaucoma in A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice, the aqueous humor drainage system of the eye was studied. While the trabecular meshwork and ciliary body were indistinguishable between knockouts and controls, Schlemm's canal (“SC”) was absent in 8/8 A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 eyes examined (FIG. 3e,f ). SC was present in all control littermates. Although SC is a major route of aqueous humor drainage from the iridocorneal angle, defects in SC formation have not been reported to raise IOP in mice. Transgenic mice haploin sufficient for the transcription factor Foxcl have been reported to exhibit small or absent SC, yet do not develop high IOP (15). Previous studies of aqueous humor dynamics in mice have suggested that only 20% of total fluid drainage is carried out via SC, suggesting that alternate drainage routes including the uveoscleral and lymphatic routes may be able to increase flow in compensation for defects in SC (16).
  • To better understand alternate drainage pathways of the anterior chamber, lymphatic and vascular capillaries in the corneal limbus were studied. Vessels were examined by confocal microscopy of flat-mounted eyes, which revealed complete absence of Lyve-1 positive lymphatic endothelium in the limbus of A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice (FIG. 3e,k ). By contrast, CD31-positive blood vasculature is present, but exhibits disturbed patterning, with some capillary loops extending into the cornea. It is unclear if this aberrant vascular morphology is a direct effect of Angpt1 and Angpt2 deletion, or a response to loss of lymphatic drainage and/or stretching of the cornea. Mice lacking Angpt1 or Angpt2 alone develop normal lymphatic vasculature in the corneal limbus (FIG. 3 m,n, FIG. 7), suggesting the presence of inter-ligand compensation in the lyphatic endothelium. Corneal neovascularization and glaucoma have been described in patients with Axenfeld-Rieger syndrome due to mutations in Foxc1, and Foxc1 haploinsufficient mice exhibit defects in the anterior chamber and Schlemm's canal, suggesting a link to this molecular pathway(15). Intriguingly, the downstream targets of Foxc1 responsible for these anterior chamber defects have not been elucidated. Given the matching expression pattern of Foxc 1 and 2 with Tie2 and Angpt2 in lymphatics, as well as the overlapping phenotypes (18, 19), Foxcl or Foxc2 may be responsible for regulating expression of Tie2 or angiopoietin ligands in lymphatic endothelium. De Val and colleagues have reported the presence of a FOX:ETS transcriptional enhancer sequence in the Tie2 promoter region, and demonstrated Foxc2-mediated enhancer activation using an in vitro reporter system—further suggesting a link between these pathways(20). The possibility of Foxc-mediated Tie2 regulation was investigated using complimentary in vivo and in vitro systems, at the protein and mRNA level. Lymphatic endothelial cells were isolated from lymphatic-specific Foxc2 knockout (Foxc2flox/flox;Prox1CreERT2 (21)) embryos at embryonic day 15.5 using fluorescent activated cell sorting (FACS). mRNA was isolated, and real-time PCR revealed a 74.5% reduction (N=6 animals per group, P=0.015) in Tie2 mRNA expression relative to controls (FIG. 4a ). This result was verified at the protein level using an in vitro siRNA system in human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells. Using this system, siRNA targeting of Foxc2 was found to cause marked reduction in Tie2 protein expression compared to Foxc1 or scrambled siRNAs (FIG. 4b ).
  • These results suggest a mechanism for lymphatic phenotypes in patients with
  • Foxc2 mutations or in Foxc2 knockout mice, and provide additional evidence of a connection between Foxc and angiopoietin/Tie2 molecular pathways.
  • Surprisingly, Lyve-1 positive lymphatic vessels are present in non-ocular tissues of A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice, although patterning in some organs is abnormal. In the dermis of the ear, lymphatic vessels appear sparse with variable vessel diameter and abnormal branching (FIG. 5 a,b) similar to that described in Angpt2-null mice (19). It is possible that the specialized lymphatic vessels of the anterior chamber are more dependent on Angpt-Tie2 signaling than other lymphatic endothelia, suggesting that, like vascular endothelia, lymphatic capillaries from different organs are heterogeneous with unique functions and regulatory mechanisms. Indeed, Schlemm's canal has been described as a hybrid vessel with features of both blood and lymphatic endothelium, expressing blood endothelial markers CD34 and E-Selectin, and a subset of lymphatic markers including Prox1 and VegfR3 but not Podoplanin (22-24).
  • The cardiovascular phenotypes reported in Angpt1 and Tie2 knockout models highlight the important function of these molecules in cardiac development and angiogenesis. In older animals, the data suggest Angiopoietin-Tie2 signaling is less critical in quiescent blood vasculature, but continues to play a major role in lymphatic endothelium. At the outset, it was hypothesized that A1A2FloxWB mice would develop severe vascular defects, revealing a compensatory role for Angpt2 in the blood vasculature of mice lacking Angpt1. Instead, it was observed that lymphatic defects reported in Angpt2-null mice are enhanced by the additional loss of Angpt1, demonstrating cooperation between ligands in lymphatic endothelium.
  • While the overall mechanism responsible for human glaucoma remains obscure, the most important risk factor is elevated intraocular pressure (25). IOP is determined by the relative rates of aqueous humor drainage and formation, and the majority of glaucoma treatment has focused on lowering TOP by targeting these systems (26). Aqueous humor is thought to drain through two major pathways, the trabecular meshwork leading to SC, and the uveoscleral pathway. In humans, studies have estimated that the uveoscleral pathway accounts for 46-54% of total outflow, with the remainder carried through SC (27). The contribution of lymphatic vessels to each pathway has not been reported, but recent studies in sheep have suggested they do play an important role in allowing fluid to escape from the anterior chamber (28). As increased TOP observed in A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice is more severe than that of other models with abnormal SC, it was hypothesized that lymphatic vessels are essential for maintaining aqueous humor flow through the uveoscleral route.
  • It was shown that A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice lack both Schlemm's canal and the lymphatic capillaries of the corneal limbus, leading to a dramatic increase in TOP and glaucoma. These data show that promotion of lymphangiogenesis with therapies such as Vegfc or Angpt-Tie2 agonists provides therapies for glaucoma.
  • It was also found that dramatic cysts are observed in mice lacking Angiopoietin 1 and 2 (FIG. 8 with A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 kidney shown on right).
  • Given that the A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice lack both Schlemm's canal and the lymphatic capillaries of the corneal limbus and also have dramatic kidney cysts, current activators of the Tie2 system will be helpful in treatments for people with open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma as well as those with cystic kidney disease. For patients with open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma Tie2 activation improves the size of Schlemm's canal and improvement of drainage, respectively. A pepto-mimic (peptide/nanomedicine) in an eye drop formulation is useful for treatment of open angle glaucoma and congenital glaucoma and the level of the resulting Tie2 activation is measurable by assessment of phosphorylation of Tie2/Tek. In glaucoma these Tie2 receptor activators can improve ocular lymphatic drainage, and specifically improve drainage through Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatics, through topical delivery of these Tie2 receptor agonists delivered to the eye.
  • Loss of Angpt1 and Angpt2 concurrently or their canonical receptor Tie2/Tek results in dramatic cystic formation in the kidney. Activation of Tie2 will reverse these phenotypes. Delivery of these Tie2 receptor activators is by subcutaneous injection for cystic kidney disease.
  • Currently available Tie2 receptor activators are: angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2- peptomimetics. However, it will be understood that new forms of Tie2 receptor activators as developed are also applicable to the present invention.
  • Examples Supporting FIGS. 1, 3, 4
  • Study approval
  • All animal experiments were approved by the Animal Care Committees at the Center for Comparative Medicine of Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill., USA).
  • Mice and Breeding
  • To create the doxycycline-inducible, whole-body Angpt1; Angpt2 double knockout mouse used in this study, a new Angpt2Flox mouse was generated which was crossed onto the ROSA-rtTA;Tet-On-Cre, whole-body Angpt1 knockout line previously developed in our laboratory (3). Whole-body Cre recombinase expression was induced by treating pregnant dams with doxycycline at embryonic day 16.5 (E16.5) to generate A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 pups.
  • Live-Animal Studies
  • Intraocular pressure was measured at 8 weeks of age using a Tonolab rebound tonometer (iCare, Vantaa, Finland) as previously described 13. Visual acuity was estimated using an Optomotor response test 14,15. The optomotor system used for these studies provides a maximum grating size of 0.042 cycles per degree, and mice were scored as “no response” if they were unable to respond to this stimulus.
  • Tissue Collection and Histology
  • A1A2FloxWB mice induced at E16.5 and littermate controls were aged 8 weeks before tissue harvest for histological studies. Whole eyes were perfusion-fixed (2.5% Gluteraldehyde, 2% Formaldehyde in 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.4), embedded in Epon 812 and sectioned using an ultramicrotome. Sections were stained with Toluine blue and imaged on a compound microscope. Optic nerve sections were embedded in paraffin, sectioned and stained using haematoxylin and eosin.
  • Immunofluorescence
  • Eyes dissected from A1A2FloxWBΔE16.5 mice and littermate controls were bisected and immersion fixed (4% Formaldehyde, 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.4). After fixation, retinas and optic nerves were removed and hemispheres stained as whole-mounts.
  • Fluorescent Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) and Real-Time PCR of Mouse Lymphatic Endothelial Cells
  • Cells isolated from E15.5 control (Foxc2flox/flox) and lymphatic-specific Foxc2 knockout (Foxc2flox/flox;Prox1CreERT2) mouse embryos were stained for Lyve-1 and CD31 and subjected to FACS as previously described (29). RNA was extracted from sorted lymphatic endothelial cells, cDNA was synthesized and qPCR was run using an ABI 7500 real-time thermocycler.
  • Lymphatic Endothelial Cell Culture, siRNA Transfection, and Western Blot
  • Human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells were cultured with fetal bovine serum, antibiotics and other supplements. Cells were transfected with Foxc1, Foxc2 or control siRNAs and incubated for 48 h. At the end of incubation, cells were harvested and lysates prepared. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto PVDF membranes for western blot.
  • Statistics and Figures
  • Throughout, indicated P-values were obtained using a two-tailed Student's t-test. P-values are shown in figures using the following notation: * P<0.05, ** P<0.01 and *** P<0.001.
    • Examples Supporting FIGS. 2, 5, 6 and 7
    Mice and Breeding
  • All animal experiments were approved by the Animal Care Committees at the Center for Comparative Medicine of Northwestern University (Evanston Ill., USA) and the Toronto Centre for Phenogenomics (Toronto, Ontario, Canada). Animals housed at either center were allowed unrestricted access to standard rodent chow (Harlan #7912) and water. To create the conditional Angpt1, Angpt2 double knockout mouse line used in this study, a new Angpt2Flox mouse was generated which was crossed onto the inducible, whole-body Angptl knockout line previously developed in our laboratory (3). An Angpt2Flox targeting construct was obtained from the Sanger Institute knockout mouse project (clone #PRPGS00100_B_CO2) and used to target mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells by homologous recombination. This construct introduces loxp recombination sites flanking exon 4 of the Angpt2 gene, as well as a neomycin-resistance cassette flanked by frt recombination sites for flpe recombinase (FIG. 6a ). Blastocyst morula aggregation was performed at the Toronto Centre for Phenogenomics (Toronto, Canada), and chimeras were crossed to wild-type ICR mice. F1 animals were screened by PCR and Southern blot, and those positive for the AngptlFlox(Neo in) allele were crossed to mice expressing FlpE recombinase (B6;SJL-Tg(ACTFLPe)9205Dym/J, The Jackson laboratory, Bar Harbor, Me.) to excise the Neomycin selection cassette used in ES cell cloning. FlpE excision was verified by Southern blot, and Angpt2Flox(Neo out) mice were selected for all subsequent breeding. Newly created Angpt2Flox mice were crossed onto the whole-body, inducible AngptlFlox/ROSA26-rtTA/TetOnCre line previously generated in our laboratory (3) to create Angptl/Angpt2/ROSA26-rtTA/TetOnCre line (A1A2FloxWB mice). Angpt1 and Angpt2 deletion was induced by addition of 0.5% Doxycycline to the drinking water of pregnant dams at day 16.5 of gestation to generate A1A2FloxWB.E.16.5 offspring. Knockout mice were genotyped by PCR, using the following primers: Angpt1Flox, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TCAAAGCAACATATCATGTGCA-3′ (WT: 233 bp product, Angpt1Flox: 328 bp), Angpt1Delete, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TGTGAGCAAAACCCCTTTC-3′ (431 bp product), Angpt2Flox, Forward 5′-GGGAAACCTCAACACTCCAA-3′ ; Reverse 5′-ACACCGGCCTCTAGACACAC-3′ (WT: 224 bp product, Angpt2Flox: 258 bp) and Angpt2Delete, Forward 5′-AAGGCGCATAACGATACCAC-3′; Reverse 5′-TGAGAACTCTGCAGCCTTGA-3′ (Angpt2Flox: 1,372 bp product, Angpt2Delete: 426 bp).
  • Live-Animal Studies
  • Intraocular pressure was measured at 8 weeks of age using a Tonolab rebound tonometer (iCare, Vantaa, Finland). Mice were restrained in a soft plastic cone and ocular pressure for each eye was averaged from three sets of six recordings. Each mouse was measured on two subsequent days and the results were averaged to obtain the reported IOP values. Visual acuity was measured using an Optomotor response test as previously described (10, 12). Briefly, animals were placed on an elevated platform surrounded by four LCD monitors. Monitors displayed vertical gratings as moving visual stimuli. Mice were observed and head movement following the direction of moving gratings was scored as positive optomotor response. Spatial frequency of the moving gratings was gradually increased, and visual acuity was scored as the highest frequency triggering a response. Optomotor tests on each mouse were repeated on consecutive days, and results for each mouse were averaged to obtain the final visual acuity value. The optomotor response system used for these studies provides a maximum grating size of 0.042 cycles per degree, and mice were scored as “no response” if they were unable to respond to this stimulus. For statistical comparison, animals with no optomotor response were assigned a score of 0.042 c/d.
  • Tissue Collection and Histology
  • A1A2FloxWB mice induced at E16.5 (A1A2FloxWB.E.16.5) and littermate controls were aged 8 weeks before tissue harvest for histological studies. Mice were anesthetized by i.p. injection with 2, 2, 2-Tribromoethanol. Tissues were cleared (PBS, 1 mg/ml lidocaine, 10 u/ml heparin) and fixed (2.5% Gluteraldehyde, 2% Formaldehyde in 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.4) by cardiac perfusion. Eyes were dissected and postfixed for an additional 8 hours at 4°. Whole eyes were embedded in Epon 812 and 0.5 μM sections were prepared. Sections were stained with Toluine blue and imaged on a compound microscope. Histological studies were performed using groups of 4 mice per genotype, and several sections were examined from each animal.
  • Immunofluorescence
  • A1A2FloxWB.E.16.5 mice and littermate controls were sacrificed following anesthesia by i.p. injection of 2, 2, 2-Tribromoethanol. Eyes were dissected and immersion fixed (4% Formaldehyde, 0.1M phosphate buffer pH 7.4). For flat mounts, fixed eyes were bisected sagittally, retinas and optic nerves were removed and hemispheres stained as whole-mounts.
  • Samples were blocked overnight (5% Donkey serum, 0.5% Triton X100, TBS pH 7.4) before incubation with appropriate primary and fluorochrome-labeled secondary antibodies (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, California). Stained tissues were flat-mounted and imaged using a Nikon C2+ confocal microscope. Due to the thickness of whole-mount limbus tissue, 30 μM Z-stacks were collected and maximum intensity projections were used in the present manuscript. Primary antibodies used: goat anti-mouse Lyve-1 (R&D Systems AF2125), rat anti-mouse CD31 (BD Pharmingen 550274).
  • Fluorescent Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) and Real-Time PCR of Mouse Lymphatic Endothelial Cells
  • Cells isolated from E15.5 control (Foxc2flox/flox ) and lymphatic-specific Foxc2 knockout (Foxc2flox/flox;Prox1CreERT2) mouse embryos were stained for Lyve-1 and CD31 and subjected to FACS as previously described (29). Briefly, E15.5 embryos were harvested in Hank's balanced salt solution (HBSS, Sigma-Aldrich) and then chopped for an overnight digestion with collagenease I/II. The colleagenase-treated cell suspension was incubated with RBC (Red blood cell) lysis buffer (StemCell Technologies, Vancouver, Canada). Following centrifugation, cell pellets were incubated with anti-Lyve-1 antibody (Abcam) for 20 min at 40C. After washing with PBS, the cells were then stained with PE conjugated anti-CD31 antibody (BD Pharmingen) and Alexa 488-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.). After gauze filtration with a cell strainer (40 μm BD Biosciences) to obtain a single cell suspension, Lyve-1+/CD31+LECs were sorted using BD FacsAria SORP 4-Laser. RNA was extracted from sorted LEC using TriZol (Invitrogen), cDNA was synthesized using the cDNA synthesis kit (Biorad) according to manufacturer's instructions. qPCR was run using an ABI 7500 real-time thermocycler using the following primers: Tie2Fwd: 5′-ACACTGTCCTCCCAACAGCTTCTT-3′, Tie2Rev: 5′-TGATTCGATTGCCATCCAACGCAC-3′, PpiaFwd: 5′-CAAATGCTGGACCAAACACA-3′, PpiaRev: 5′- TGCCATCCAGCCATTCAGTC-3′.
  • Lymphatic Endothelial Cell Culture, siRNA Transfection, Protein Extract Preparation and Western Blot
  • Human dermal lymphatic endothelial cells were cultured in EBM media
  • (LONZA, Basel, Switzerland) with 10% fetal bovine serum, antibiotics and other supplements. The cells were transfected with Foxc1, Foxc2 or control siRNAs using Lipofectamine RNAiMAX (Invitrogen) and incubated for 48 h. At the end of incubation, cells were harvested and whole cell lysates were prepared using RIPA buffer. Protein lysates were separated by SDS-PAGE and blotted onto PVDF membranes (Bio-Rad). Membranes were blocked (TBS with 5% donkey serum, 2.5% BSA, 0.05% Tween-20) and incubated with appropriate primary and HRP-tagged secondary (Jackson Immunoresearch) antibodies. Signals were detected using ECL reagents (Bio-Rad). siRNAs: Scrambled (Qiagen, #1027281), Foxcl (Thermo Scientific, #L-009318-00-0005), Foxc2 (Thermo Scientific #ATTAA-004016). Primary antibodies: Rabbit anti-mouse Tie2 (Santa Cruz #SC-324, reported by the supplier to recognize Tie2 of human and mouse origin), Rabbit anti-mouse βActin (Abcam #ab8227), Sheep anti-human FoxC2 (R&D Systems #AF5044).
  • Statistics and figures
  • Throughout this study, plotted values are shown as means +/−standard error (SEM). Statistical comparisons were performed using Graphpad Prism 5.0 (Graphpad Software Inc. San Diego, CA). Indicated P-values were obtained using a two-tailed Student's t-test unless otherwise noted in the manuscript. P-values were indicated in figures using the following notation: * P<0.05, ** P<0.01 and *** P<0.001. Figures were assembled using Graphpad Prism 5.0, Photoshop CS5 (Adobe Software, San Jose Calif.) and InDesign CS5 (Adobe Software).
  • From the above detailed description of the invention, the operation and construction of same should be apparent. While there are herein shown and described example embodiments of the invention, it is nevertheless understood that various changes may be made with respect thereto without departing from the principle and scope of the invention as measured by the following claims.
  • REFERENCES
  • Each of the following references below is hereby incorporated by reference in the entirety.
    • 1. Dumont D J, Gradwohl G, Fong G H, Puri M C, Gertsenstein M, Auerbach A, and Breitman M L. Dominant-negative and targeted null mutations in the endothelial receptor tyrosine kinase, tek, reveal a critical role in vasculogenesis of the embryo. Genes & Development. 1994; 8(16):1897-909.
    • 2. Gale N W, Thurston G, Hackett S F, Renard R, Wang Q, McClain J, Martin C, Witte C, Witte M H, Jackson D, et al. Angiopoietin-2 Is Required for Postnatal Angiogenesis and Lymphatic Patterning, and Only the Latter Role Is Rescued by Angiopoietin-1. Developmental Cell. 2002; 3(3):411-23.
    • 3. Jeansson M, Gawlik A, Anderson G, Li C, Kerjaschki D, Henkelman M, and Quaggin S E. Angiopoietin-1 is essential in mouse vasculature during development and in response to injury. The Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2011; 121(6):2278-89.
    • 4. Conroy A L, Glover S J, Hawkes M, Erdman L K, Seydel K B, Taylor T E, Molyneux M E, and Kain K C. Angiopoietin-2 levels are associated with retinopathy and predict mortality in Malawian children with cerebral malaria: a retrospective case-control study*. Crit Care Med. 2012; 40(3):952-9.
    • 5. Vikkula M, Boon L M, Iii K L C, Calvert J T, Diamonti A J, Goumnerov B, Pasyk K A, Marchuk D A, Warman M L, Cantley L C, et al. Vascular Dysmorphogenesis Caused by an Activating Mutation in the Receptor Tyrosine Kinase TIE2. Cell. 1996; 87(7):1181-90.
    • 6. Augustin H G, Young Koh G, Thurston G, and Alitalo K. Control of vascular morphogenesis and homeostasis through the angiopoietin-Tie system. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2009; 10(3):165-77.
    • 7. D'Amico G, Korhonen E A, Waltari M, Saharinen P, Laakkonen P, and Alitalo K. Loss of endothelial Tiel receptor impairs lymphatic vessel development-brief report. Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology. 2010; 30(2):207-9.
    • 8. Suri C, Jones P F, Patan S, Bartunkova S, Maisonpierre P C, Davis S, Sato T N, and Yancopoulos G D. Requisite Role of Angiopoietin-1, a Ligand for the TIE2 Receptor, during Embryonic Angiogenesis. Cell. 1996; 87(7):1171-80.
    • 9. Charles S T, and Hamasaki D I. THe effect of intraocular pressure on the pupil size. Archives of Ophthalmology. 1970; 83(6):729-33.
    • 10. John S W, Hagaman J R, MacTaggart T E, Peng L, and Smithes O. Intraocular pressure in inbred mouse strains. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 1997; 38(1):249-53.
    • 11. Prusky G T, Alam N M, Beekman S, and Douglas R M. Rapid Quantification of Adult and
  • Developing Mouse Spatial Vision Using a Virtual Optomotor System. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 2004; 45(12):4611-6.
    • 12. Feng L, Zhao Y, Yoshida M, Chen H, Yang J F, Kim T S, Cang J, Troy J B, and Liu X. Sustained Ocular Hypertension Induces Dendritic Degeneration of Mouse Retinal Ganglion Cells That Depends on Cell Type and Location. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 2013; 54(2):1106-17.
    • 13. Kendell K R, Quigley H A, Kerrigan L A, Pease M E, and Quigley E N. Primary open-angle glaucoma is not associated with photoreceptor loss. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 1995; 36(1):200-5.
    • 14. Cuenca N, Pinilla I, Fernandez-Sanchez L, Salinas-Navarro M, Alarcon-Martinez L, Aviles-Trigueros M, de la Villa P, Miralles de Imperial J, Villegas-Perez M P, and Vidal-Sanz M. Changes in the inner and outer retinal layers after acute increase of the intraocular pressure in adult albino Swiss mice. Exp Eye Res. 2010; 91(2):273-85.
    • 15. Smith R S, Zabaleta A, Kume T, Savinova O V, Kidson S H, Martin J E, Nishimura D Y, Alward W L M, Hogan B L M, and John S W M. Haploinsufficiency of the transcription factors FOXC1 and FOXC2 results in aberrant ocular development. Human Molecular Genetics. 2000; 9(7):1021-32.
    • 16. Crowston J G, Aihara M, Lindsey J D, and Weinreb R N. Effect of Latanoprost on Outflow Facility in the Mouse. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 2004; 45(7):2240-5.
    • 17. Lehmann O J, Tuft S, Brice G, Smith R, Blixt Å, Bell R, Johansson B, Jordan T, Hitchings R A, Khaw P T, et al. Novel Anterior Segment Phenotypes Resulting from Forkhead Gene Alterations: Evidence for Cross-Species Conservation of Function. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 2003; 44(6):2627-33.
    • 18. Norrmén C, Ivanov K I, Cheng J, Zangger N, Delorenzi M, Jaquet M, Miura N, Puolakkainen P, Horsley V, Hu J, et al. FOXC2 controls formation and maturation of lymphatic collecting vessels through cooperation with NFATc1. The Journal of Cell Biology. 2009; 185(3):439-57.
    • 19. Dellinger M, Hunter R, Bernas M, Gale N, Yancopoulos G, Erickson R, and Witte M. Defective remodeling and maturation of the lymphatic vasculature in Angiopoietin-2 deficient mice. Developmental Biology. 2008; 319(2):309-20.
    • 20. De Val S, Chi N C, Meadows S M, Minovitsky S, Anderson J P, Harris I S, Ehlers M L, Agarwal P, Visel A, Xu S M, et al. Combinatorial regulation of endothelial gene expression by ets and forkhead transcription factors. Cell. 2008; 135(6):1053-64.
    • 21. Srinivasan R S, Dillard M E, Lagutin O V, Lin F-J, Tsai S, Tsai M-J, Samokhvalov I M, and Oliver G. Lineage tracing demonstrates the venous origin of the mammalian lymphatic vasculature. Genes & Development. 2007; 21(19):2422-32.
    • 22. Witmer A N, van Blijswijk B C, Dai J, Hofman P, Partanen T A, Vrensen G F J M, and Schlingemann R O. VEGFR-3 in adult angiogenesis. The Journal of Pathology. 2001; 195(4):490-7.
    • 23. Watanabe Y, Hamanaka T, Takemura T, and Murakami A. Involvement of Platelet Coagulation and Inflammation in the Endothelium of Schlemm's Canal. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 2010; 51(1):277-83.
    • 24. Truong T N, Li H, Hong Y-K, and Chen L. Novel Characterization and Live Imaging of Schlemm's Canal Expressing Prox-1. PLoS ONE. 2014; 9(5):e98245.
    • 25. Coleman A L, and Miglior S. Risk Factors for Glaucoma Onset and Progression. Survey of Ophthalmology. 2008; 53(6, Supplement):S3-S10.
    • 26. Pandey A N, and Sujata S. Study of long term structural and functional changes in medically controlled glaucoma. International journal of ophthalmology. 2014; 7(1):128-32.
    • 27. Toris C B, Yablonski M E, Wang Y L, and Camras C B. Aqueous humor dynamics in the aging human eye. Am J Ophthalmol. 1999; 127(4):407-12.
    • 28. Kim M, Johnston M G, Gupta N, Moore S, and Yücel Y H. A model to measure lymphatic drainage from the eye. Experimental Eye Research. 2011; 93(5):586-91.
    • 29. Fatima A, Culver A, Culver F, Liu T, Dietz W H, Thomson B R, Hadjantonakis A-K, Quaggin S E, and Kume T. Murine Notchl is required for lymphatic vascular morphogenesis during development. Developmental Dynamics. 2014.

Claims (12)

1. A method of treating a patient having open angle glaucoma, congenital glaucoma or cystic kidney disease comprising administering a pharmaceutical composition comprising agents capable of TIE2 receptor activation.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the agent is selected from one or more angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors, and Tie2-peptomimetics.
3. A method for improving ocular lymphatic drainage in a subject in need thereof, comprising administering to the subject a pharmaceutical composition comprising one or more of angiopoietin 1 recombinant proteins, peptides, VE-PTP phosphatase inhibitors and/or Tie2-peptomimetics.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein ocular lymphatic drainage through Schlemm's canal and corneal limbal lymphatics is improved.
5. (canceled)
6. A pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically active amount of one or more Tie2 receptor activating agents and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier for topical delivery to the eye.
7. The pharmaceutical composition according to claim 6 wherein the pharmaceutically acceptable carrier is a controlled release vehicle, selected from the group consisting of biocompatible polymers, other polymeric matrices, capsules, microcapsules, nanocapsules, microparticles, nanoparticles, microspheres, bolus preparations, osmotic pumps, diffusion devices, liposomes, lipospheres.
8. (canceled)
9. (canceled)
10. The use of the following primers for PCR genotyping of mice: TABLE-US-00001 Angpt1Flox, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TCAAAGCAACATATCATGTGCA-3′ (WT: 233 bp product, Angpt1Flox: 328 bp), Angpt1Delete, Forward 5′-CAATGCCAGAGGTTCTTGTGAA-3′; Reverse 5′-TGTGAGCAAAACCCCTTTC-3′ (431 bp product), Angpt2Flox, Forward 5′-GGGAAACCTCAACACTCCAA-3′; Reverse 5′-ACACCGGCCTCTAGACACAC-3′ (WT: 224 bp product, Angpt2Flox: 258 bp) and Angpt2Delete, Forward 5′-AAGGCGCATAACGATACCAC-3′; and Reverse 5′-TGAGAACTCTGCAGCCTTGA-3′ (Angpt2Flox: 1,372 bp product, Angpt2Delete: 426 bp).
11. (canceled)
12. A pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically active amount of one or more Tie2 receptor activating agents and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier for subcutaneous delivery for treatment of cystic kidney disease.
US16/143,017 2014-07-03 2018-09-26 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma Abandoned US20190256889A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US16/143,017 US20190256889A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2018-09-26 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma
US16/711,067 US20200347436A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2019-12-11 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201462020868P 2014-07-03 2014-07-03
US14/790,884 US9719135B2 (en) 2014-07-03 2015-07-02 Conditional angiopoietin-1/angiopoietin-2 double knock-out mice with defective ocular drainage system
US15/631,806 US20170314063A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2017-06-23 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma
US16/143,017 US20190256889A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2018-09-26 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15/631,806 Continuation US20170314063A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2017-06-23 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/711,067 Continuation US20200347436A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2019-12-11 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20190256889A1 true US20190256889A1 (en) 2019-08-22

Family

ID=55016243

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/790,884 Active US9719135B2 (en) 2014-07-03 2015-07-02 Conditional angiopoietin-1/angiopoietin-2 double knock-out mice with defective ocular drainage system
US15/631,806 Abandoned US20170314063A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2017-06-23 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma
US16/143,017 Abandoned US20190256889A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2018-09-26 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma
US16/711,067 Pending US20200347436A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2019-12-11 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Family Applications Before (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/790,884 Active US9719135B2 (en) 2014-07-03 2015-07-02 Conditional angiopoietin-1/angiopoietin-2 double knock-out mice with defective ocular drainage system
US15/631,806 Abandoned US20170314063A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2017-06-23 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US16/711,067 Pending US20200347436A1 (en) 2014-07-03 2019-12-11 Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (4) US9719135B2 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10894824B2 (en) 2018-09-24 2021-01-19 Aerpio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Multispecific antibodies that target HPTP-β (VE-PTP) and VEGF
US10952992B2 (en) 2015-09-23 2021-03-23 Aerpio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Methods of treating intraocular pressure with activators of Tie-2
US11253502B2 (en) 2019-04-29 2022-02-22 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Tie-2 activators targeting the Schlemm's canal
US11814425B2 (en) 2006-04-07 2023-11-14 Eye Point Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Antibodies that bind human protein tyrosine phosphatase beta (HPTPbeta) and uses thereof
US12043664B2 (en) 2011-10-13 2024-07-23 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Methods for treating vascular leak syndrome and cancer

Families Citing this family (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7622593B2 (en) 2006-06-27 2009-11-24 The Procter & Gamble Company Human protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors and methods of use
CN105412094A (en) 2009-07-06 2016-03-23 爱尔皮奥治疗有限公司 Compounds, Compositions, And Methods For Preventing Metastasis Of Cancer Cells
US20150050277A1 (en) 2013-03-15 2015-02-19 Aerpio Therapeutics Inc. Compositions and methods for treating ocular diseases
ES2766326T3 (en) * 2013-03-15 2020-06-12 Aerpio Therapeutics Inc Compositions, formulations and methods to treat eye diseases
EP3116503A4 (en) 2014-03-14 2017-08-23 Aerpio Therapeutics, Inc. Hptp-beta inhibitors
US20190150413A1 (en) * 2016-05-04 2019-05-23 Mannin Research Inc. Ve-ptp knockout
SG11201900464TA (en) * 2016-07-20 2019-02-27 Aerpio Therapeutics Inc HUMANIZED MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES THAT TARGET VE-PTP (HPTP-ß)
CN109996440A (en) * 2016-10-21 2019-07-09 曼宁研究有限公司 VE-PTP is knocked out
US20190262321A1 (en) * 2018-02-26 2019-08-29 Aerpio Therapeutics, Inc. Methods of treating diabetic nephropathy using hptpb inhibitors
WO2019195450A1 (en) * 2018-04-03 2019-10-10 The Schepens Eye Research Institute, Inc Assessing visual function
EP3820458A1 (en) * 2018-07-13 2021-05-19 Susan Quaggin Ve-ptp inhibition in glaucoma
AU2020259450A1 (en) * 2019-04-18 2021-11-18 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Methods of treating hypertension with activators of Tie-2
WO2021091791A1 (en) * 2019-11-06 2021-05-14 Northwestern University Inhibition of the ve-ptp phosphatase protects the kidney from ischemia-reperfusion injury

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JO2913B1 (en) * 2008-02-20 2015-09-15 امجين إنك, Antibodies directed to angiopoietin-1 and angiopoietin-2 and uses thereof

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US11814425B2 (en) 2006-04-07 2023-11-14 Eye Point Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Antibodies that bind human protein tyrosine phosphatase beta (HPTPbeta) and uses thereof
US12043664B2 (en) 2011-10-13 2024-07-23 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Methods for treating vascular leak syndrome and cancer
US10952992B2 (en) 2015-09-23 2021-03-23 Aerpio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Methods of treating intraocular pressure with activators of Tie-2
US11666558B2 (en) 2015-09-23 2023-06-06 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Methods of treating intraocular pressure with activators of Tie-2
US10894824B2 (en) 2018-09-24 2021-01-19 Aerpio Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Multispecific antibodies that target HPTP-β (VE-PTP) and VEGF
US11873334B2 (en) 2018-09-24 2024-01-16 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Method of treating ocular conditions by administering an antibody that activates Tie2 and binds VEGF
US11253502B2 (en) 2019-04-29 2022-02-22 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Tie-2 activators targeting the Schlemm's canal
US12064420B2 (en) 2019-04-29 2024-08-20 EyePoint Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Tie-2 activators targeting the Schlemm's canal

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20170314063A1 (en) 2017-11-02
US9719135B2 (en) 2017-08-01
US20200347436A1 (en) 2020-11-05
US20160000871A1 (en) 2016-01-07

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20200347436A1 (en) Tie2 receptor activation for glaucoma
Thomson et al. A lymphatic defect causes ocular hypertension and glaucoma in mice
Zhang et al. Ophthalmic drug discovery: novel targets and mechanisms for retinal diseases and glaucoma
Sun et al. [WITHDRAWN] retinal vasculature in development and diseases
Aihara et al. Ocular hypertension in mice with a targeted type I collagen mutation
Weber et al. A mouse model for Sorsby fundus dystrophy
Caprara et al. HIF1A is essential for the development of the intermediate plexus of the retinal vasculature
Thanos et al. Evidence for baseline retinal pigment epithelium pathology in the Trp1-Cre mouse
Wu et al. Organogenesis and distribution of the ocular lymphatic vessels in the anterior eye
Kather et al. Transgenic mouse models of corneal neovascularization: new perspectives for angiogenesis research
ES2334231T3 (en) USE OF REGULATORY SEQUENCES FOR SPECIFIC TRANSITIONAL EXPRESSION IN CERTAIN NEURONAL CELLS.
Son et al. Formation of persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous in ephrin-A5−/− mice
US8603964B2 (en) Methods for modulating angiogenesis via dystrophin Dp71
US20190336535A1 (en) Adoptive transfer of plasmacytoid dendritic cells to prevent or treat ocular diseases and conditions
Hisatomi et al. The regulatory roles of apoptosis-inducing factor in the formation and regression processes of ocular neovascularization
US11707445B2 (en) Composition for blocking angiogenesis
Paiva et al. Licarin A as a novel drug for inflammatory eye diseases
Brash et al. VEGF188 promotes corneal reinnervation after injury
Hahn et al. KLEIP deficiency in mice causes progressive corneal neovascular dystrophy
Jadeja et al. Mouse slc9a8 mutants exhibit retinal defects due to retinal pigmented epithelium dysfunction
Zhang et al. A nonautonomous role for retinal frizzled-5 in regulating hyaloid vitreous vasculature development
Xie et al. Inhibition of heat shock protein B8 alleviates retinal dysfunction and ganglion cells loss via autophagy suppression in mouse axonal damage
Sandström et al. Degeneration of the mouse retina upon dysregulated activity of serum response factor
Yu et al. Myelin regulatory factor deficiency is associated with the retinal photoreceptor defects in mice
JP2007217347A (en) Intraocular pathologic neovascularization inhibitor, medicine for preventing and/or treating intraocular neovascularization disease, and method for screening the same

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION