ActRIIB-Fc fusion (~77.5 kDa) Phase 2 Halted

ACE-031

A recombinant ActRIIB-Fc fusion protein that traps myostatin and related TGF-β ligands; Phase II DMD trial halted in 2011 due to vascular adverse events driven by off-target BMP9/10 sequestration.

In Plain English: ACE-031 is a large fusion protein — not a short peptide — made by attaching the binding domain of the activin type IIB receptor (ActRIIB) to a human antibody backbone (IgG1 Fc). It works like a sponge: floating in the bloodstream and catching myostatin, the molecule your body uses to cap muscle growth. In clinical trials on boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, it produced encouraging lean-mass increases and slowed decline on the 6-minute walk test. The trials were stopped in 2011 when participants developed nosebleeds and small dilated blood vessels (telangiectasia), later traced to ACE-031 also catching BMP-9 and BMP-10 — proteins that maintain vessel wall integrity. Development was formally abandoned in 2013. Black-market vials are sold as research chemicals, but gel-electrophoresis analysis (Reichel et al., 2025) has confirmed adulteration and mislabelling in this market. WADA prohibits it in all competition, in and out of season.

Research Maturity Phase 2 Halted (47 PubMed papers on ACE-031 / ActRIIB-Fc; 2 human RCTs (Phase 1 + halted Phase 2)+ Studies)
Quick Facts
Focus
Body Composition Muscle Wasting Disorders
Route
IV SubQ
Origin
Recombinant fusion protein produced in CHO (Chinese hamster ovary) cells. Comprises the extracellular domain of human activin receptor type IIB (ActRIIB / ACVR2B) fused via a linker to the Fc region (hinge-CH2-CH3) of human IgG1. Developed by Acceleron Pharma (programme licensed to Shire); INN: Ramatercept. CAS 1621169-52-5. PubChem CID 118732224.
Mechanism
ACE-031 acts as a soluble decoy receptor, sequestering myostatin (GDF-8) and related TGF-β superfamily ligands — including GDF-11, activin A, activin B, BMP-9, and BMP-10 — before they can bind cell-surface ActRIIA/ActRIIB receptors on skeletal muscle. Blockade prevents SMAD2/3 phosphorylation and downstream transcription of atrogenes (MuRF1, MAFbx), de-repressing protein synthesis and satellite-cell proliferation. The broad ligand-capture profile is also the source of its key adverse effect: BMP-9 (GDF-2) and BMP-10 signal through the ALK1 receptor on endothelial cells to maintain vascular homeostasis; their sequestration destabilises vessel walls, producing telangiectasia and epistaxis.
Outcome
Phase 1 (healthy postmenopausal women, single-dose, n=48, PMID 23169607): 3.3% lean-mass gain and 5.1% increase in thigh-muscle volume at 3 mg/kg; half-life 10–15 days; well-tolerated at lower doses. Phase 2 (DMD boys, multi-dose, NCT01099761, PMID 27462804): trend toward maintained 6-minute walk test distance vs. placebo decline; increased lean body mass and bone mineral density; trial terminated after second dosing cohort due to epistaxis and telangiectasias. Non-human primate study (marmoset, 2025 bioRxiv preprint, PMID 41256654): significant increases in body weight, lean mass, and EDL isometric twitch force vs. controls.

Safety Flags & Warnings

Clinical Trial Halted — Vascular Adverse Events WADA Prohibited (in & out of competition) — S2 (Peptide Hormones, Growth Factors, Related Substances) Black Market Product Quality — High Adulteration Risk Bleeding Disorder Contraindication Immunogenicity — Anti-drug Antibody Risk Broad TGF-β Ligand Blockade — Off-Target Endocrinology No Approved Therapeutic Use

Always consult a licensed physician. Research purposes only.

130.0 / mg