US Patent

US7838531 — Farnesyltransferase inhibitors for treatment of laminopathies, cellular aging and atherosclerosis

Method of Use · Assigned to University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · Expires 2029-07-26 · 3y remaining

Vulnerability score 68/100 Moderate — design-around opportunities exist

What this patent protects

This patent protects the use of farnesyltransferase inhibitors for treating laminopathies, cellular aging, and atherosclerosis.

USPTO Abstract

Although it can be farnesylated, the mutant lamin A protein expressed in Hutchison Gilford Progeria Syndrome (HGPS) cannot be defarnesylated because the characteristic mutation causes deletion of a cleavage site necessary for binding the protease ZMPSTE24 and effecting defarnesylation. The result is an aberrant farnesylated protein (called “progerin”) that alters normal lamin A function as a dominant negative, as well as assuming its own aberrant function through its association with the nuclear membrane. The retention of farnesylation, and potentially other abnormal properties of progerin and other abnormal lamin gene protein products, produces disease. Farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs) (both direct effectors and indirect inhibitors) will inhibit the formation of progerin, cause a decrease in lamin A protein, and/or an increase prelamin A protein. Decreasing the amount of aberrant protein improves cellular effects caused by and progerin expression. Similarly, treatment with FTIs should improve disease status in progeria and other laminopathies. In addition, elements of atherosclerosis and aging in non-laminopathy individuals will improve after treatment with farnesyltransferase inhibitors.

Drugs covered by this patent

FDA Patent Use Codes

When a patent is method-of-use, FDA lists it once per applicable indication ("U-code"). Each U-code carves out a specific therapeutic use that generic filers must either license or design around.

CodeDescriptionDrug
U-3070 Zokinvy
U-3070 Zokinvy

Patent Metadata

Patent number
US7838531
Jurisdiction
US
Classification
Method of Use
Expires
2029-07-26
Drug substance claim
No
Drug product claim
No
Assignee
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Source
FDA Orange Book + USPTO grounding via Google Patents

Bibliographic data sourced from FDA Orange Book + USPTO public records. Plain-English summary generated by AI grounded in source text. Patent term extensions (PTR, SPC, pediatric) may shift the effective expiry. Not legal advice.

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