Pharmaceutical Business review

Boehringer Ingelheim, Gubra to validate new Peptides for obesity

Boehringer Ingelheim and Gubra partnered to develop innovative Peptides to treat obesity. (Credit: Tumisu from Pixabay.)

Boehringer Ingelheim has entered into a new research and licensing agreement with biotech company Gubra to identify and validate innovative peptides to treat obesity.

The new partnership builds upon the companies’ previous successful relationship and combines Gubra’s streaMLine platform with Boehringer Ingelheim’s lead optimisation and clinical development expertise.

The agreement further expands Boehringer Ingelheim’s research into approaches with first in class potential for obesity treatment.

Under the partnership, Gubra is responsible for the early discovery activities.

Boehringer Ingelheim will further develop the projects and bring promising candidates into non-clinical and clinical development.

Gubra CEO Henrik Blou said: “Over the past four years our two companies have built a strong drug discovery relationship. In this third collaboration, Gubra is responsible for the early discovery of peptides – now applying our proprietary target and drug discovery platform streaMLine.

“After initial maturation, projects are handed over for further development to Boehringer Ingelheim. This approach, we believe, has the potential to take obesity treatment to the next level for the benefit of patients around the world.”

According to Boehringer Ingelheim, approximately half of the US population is estimated to have obesity by 2030.

Obesity is a complex chronic disease which requires long-term management and is among the leading risk factors for several cardio-metabolic diseases including heart disease, ischemic stroke, liver diseases.

With growing global prevalence, the disease has limited treatment options which are also not sufficiently effective or are associated with adverse events.

Gubra and Boehringer Ingelheim share the goal to provide new obesity therapies with increased tolerability which support greater weight loss compared to therapy options that are currently available.