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NatSci professor receives MSU Innovation award

College of Natural Science (NatSci) chemist Jetze Tepe was among the honorees at the 12th annual Michigan State University Innovation Celebration on April 12.

The MSU Innovation Center recognized researchers, faculty and students for their highly innovative technologies, intellectual property creation and technology transfer activity.

Image of Jetze Tepe sitting in his office in front of a computer screen.
Jetze Tepe, a professor in the NatSci Department of Chemistry, received the 2022 MSU Innovator of the Year award for his research on the synthesis of natural products and medicinal chemistry. Credit: Innovation Center

Tepe, a professor in the Department of Chemistry and the MSU Innovation Center’s 2022 Innovator of the Year award winner, focuses his research on the synthesis of natural products and medicinal chemistry. His drug discovery work seeks to identify innovative therapeutics for neurogenerative diseases and cancer.

To do that, he does a kind of recycling.

Tepe is studying the proteasome – a machine in every cell that works to degrade and recycle the amino acids from proteins that have been tagged for removal from the cell. His synthetic chemistry program aims to develop inhibitors or activators of the proteosome, which would be useful in altering several disease states. He is pursuing activators — small molecules that target and activate the proteosome, to accelerate the degradation of proteins that build up to create plaque in the brains of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease patients. The proteasome activation should help prevent or reverse the toxic accumulation of these proteins, to prevent or delay the symptoms of these terrible diseases.

“These were undruggable proteins,” Tepe said. “It’s an area people have tried to target for decades, and they haven’t been able to do that with small molecules. We thought taking a completely different approach would be interesting to investigate, and that seemed to work.”

Tepe said he’s particularly excited when his research has an immediate application to people’s health. “When it works, that’s a big reward,” he said. And moving those innovations to market enhances the reward further.

MSU Technologies has played a key role in commercializing Tepe’s research.

“The MSU Innovation Center and the Drug Discovery Center in the pharmacology and toxicology department have been enormously helpful pushing this forward,” Tepe said. “When we first had this idea, it was difficult to get funded. Then we got more preliminary data with the help of internal funding from MSU which got us the data we needed, and almost immediately we got three NIH grants as well as significant interest from outside investors.”

Combined, the grants from the National Institutes of Health awarded Tepe’s team approximately $1 million per year for the next few years to explore this new therapeutic strategy.

Jetze Tepe working in his lab with students.
Students have played key roles in Tepe's research and are part of his new company, Portera Therapeutics, which launched last November. Credit: Innovation Center.

Students have played key roles in this work, and Tepe wanted to ensure they would be included in the patents. Now, they’re poised to take an exciting next step together.

“We were approached by one of the top five largest pharmaceutical companies globally that gave us the funding to start our own company,” Tepe said. Portera Therapeutics was founded in November 2021.

“The cool thing is, there really appears to be a direct application to the work the students did. They’re going to stay involved with the company and beyond, pushing this research further," he added.

“This whole process has been so rewarding,” Tepe said. “Whether my students have a passion toward a cure for Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s or just for the discovery of the science itself, just having the application for the research be clear to them when they’re spending these long hours working on it is very rewarding.”

Other award winners at this year’s Innovation Celebration included Richard Lunt, a professor in the College of Engineering, who received the Tech Transfer Achievement Award; Madonna Benjamin, an assistant professor in the College of Veterinary Medicine, who received the Innovation of the Year Awarad; and Matt Daum, director of the MSU School of Packing, who received the Corporate Connector of the Year Award.

For more information about the 12th Annual Innovation Celebration, including images and videos of the winners, please visit https://innovationcenter.msu.edu/events/2022-innovation-celebration/.

 

Banner image: College of Natural Science (NatSci) chemist Jetze Tepe was among the honorees at the 12th annual Michigan State University Innovation Celebration on April 12. Tepe, a professor in the Department of Chemistry, received the MSU Innovation Center’s 2022 Innovator of the Year award for his research on the synthesis of natural products and medicinal chemistry.