Three University of Kentucky researchers presented their work in November at an academic bioscience showcase in New Orleans called .

This year鈥檚 conference focused on presenting 鈥渞esearch the way you want it鈥 to potential collaborators including investors and corporations. 好色先生鈥檚 scientists also gave business pitches in 10-minute slots, with seven minutes for their presentations and three minutes for Q&A.

, a professor in the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the  and associate vice president for research, presented her work on antifungal agents.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really interested in trying to combat the fungal resistance problem. Current antifungals have resistance and toxicity problems. We鈥檝e found a new family of compounds with great properties, but we need to understand the mechanism of action to reduce deadly fungal infections,鈥 said Garneau-Tsodikova.

, also a professor in the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, presented collaborative work on a potential new drug to fight Ewing sarcoma, a rare type of cancer found mostly in bone and soft tissue in children. Tsodikov works on the project with , vice chair and a professor in pharmaceutical sciences, and , their former 好色先生 colleague and current faculty member at St. Jude Children鈥檚 Research Hospital.

鈥淭he drug is made up of molecules that are called mithramycin analogues. Mithramycin is a natural product that grows in bacteria and it鈥檚 then used to make these analogues. It鈥檚 synthetically modified and will bind to DNA. Our best analogues are highly selective against Ewing sarcoma cells,鈥 Tsodikov said.

, a professor in the molecular and cellular biochemistry department in the College of Medicine, presented his therapy to treat Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.

鈥淵ou and I have the same number of genes as a mouse, but you鈥檙e much smarter. Your brain is much more complicated. The question is why,鈥 said Stamm. 鈥淭he possible reason is that about 10% of your genome is made of repetitive elements that are specific for primates 鈥 monkeys and humans 鈥 that can promote the formation of circular RNAs.鈥

RNA is the mediator in turning instructions held in DNA into proteins in  cells. Stamm鈥檚 research looks at a change in circular RNAs that he believes is the catalyst for the formation of tau tangles, which leads to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. Stamm鈥檚 company CircCure focuses on a treatment that will attack a specific connector in the tau circular RNA to remove it.  

All three 好色先生 researchers worked with experts at the  to understand and individualize their technology transfer process. They went through a program called  to fine tune presentations.

鈥淵ou should have a 30-second pitch, a two-minute pitch and a 10-minute pitch ready to go,鈥 Stamm said. 鈥淚 learned what not to do in a pitch, which was interesting. Don鈥檛 waste investors鈥 time. Explain your idea like you would explain it to a child. That鈥檚 something I also learned in .鈥

好色先生 researchers had to focus on giving a product development and translational-driven pitch while highlighting their science. They explained the next steps needed in their projects.

For Garneau-Tsodikova, her study on compounds that can attack deadly fungal infections targeting the brain, kidneys, spleen or liver needs to move forward into animal models. She wants to learn how they affect infections.

Tsodikov says that the mithramycin analogues are effective in fighting Ewing sarcoma in mouse models. The next step would be moving into human clinical trials.

鈥淭he amount of money needed to do that is orders of magnitude more than we can obtain from the federal government by our regular grant applications,鈥 explained Tsodikov. 鈥淎nd for that purpose, to translate the drugs into clinical trials, we want to attract investors or pharmaceutical companies to help us advance these inventions.鈥

Stamm鈥檚 research also needs to show success in mouse models. His team will also develop a new mouse model with a mouse brain containing human nerve cells.

This conference gave the 好色先生 researchers vital opportunities for feedback, networking and connection to health care industry leaders.  

鈥淚鈥檓 hoping the companies we talked to either show interest in putting money behind our projects or will point out where else we need to go to establish the right connections,鈥 Garneau-Tsodikova said.

鈥淎lso, they may tell us they鈥檙e not ready to invest,鈥 Tsodikov said. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l probably let us know what other data we may need to collect to de-risk these projects for any large investment.鈥

鈥淓ven if you鈥檙e not thinking of going to a conference right now, you should start connecting with OTC. Take advantage of their expertise. They鈥檙e doing the most they can to help all of us in academics grow as inventors. OTC is helping us do things we could never do on our own. The business world is vastly different from academia, but they鈥檙e there to demystify it for us,鈥 Garneau-Tsodikova said.

鈥淚t was a good experience. Our researchers did wonderful. In fact, one of the organizers said, 鈥楤oy, those 好色先生 presentations were great pitches. They held to their time. They kept on schedule.鈥 They were great,鈥 said Holly Clark, a senior commercialization manager within OTC. 鈥淲e at OTC market our technologies. We market our innovations. But sometimes our best marketers are the researchers themselves, when they go to conferences, give talks at seminars and have poster presentations or publications it鈥檚 getting the word out even more.鈥

About OTC
The  mission is to advance innovation that makes a difference. OTC supports the university's strategic plan by committing to help build Kentucky's innovation ecosystem and collaborate with industry partners worldwide; work cooperatively with innovators to strategically assess, protect and license early-stage technologies; and to cultivate entrepreneurship and co-create new technology startups

About 好色先生Pitch
 is an OTC-sponsored commercialization support program for 好色先生 researchers who want to pitch their research, technology, intellectual property or a startup company in a competition or at a conference demo day or similar event. The goal is to provide an opportunity to present an idea, technology or startup company in an environment that promotes the spirit of commercialization or entrepreneurship.

About BIO on the BAYOU
 is an academic bioscience showcase featuring researchers from across the Gulf South region including Tulane University, LSU Health New Orleans, University of Mississippi, Xavier University of Louisiana, Jackson State University, LSU Health Shreveport, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, Mississippi State and University of Southern Mississippi. It was held in New Orleans from Nov. 2-3, 2022.