Muscle-aging is defined by progressive declines in mass and strength that poses a high risk for falls, fatal injury, and trauma-related fractures among older Americans (age 60+). Each year, >30% of older adults suffer a fall, resulting in ~2.8 million traumatic fractures that significantly reduce mobility, independence, overall health, and quality of life for the elderly. Among fall-related injuries, hip fractures are the most prevalent and serious; the 300,000 elderly Americans hospitalized each year with hip fracture repairs face long-term post-surgery rehabilitation with a low probability of returning to independent living and a 1-year mortality rate that staggers around 10-30%. Dampened muscle strength predisposes to and predicts poor recovery among the elderly following hip fracture. Standard-of-care including resistance exercise and protein-rich diets only marginally improve muscle strength and functional outcomes post hip fracture. Attempts to improve muscle strength in elderly individuals using pharmacotherapies have not succeeded to date. To address this challenge, Ridgeline Therapeutics has developed first-in-class small molecule nicotinamide N-methyltransferase inhibitors (NNMTis) that reactivate aged muscle stem cells (muSCs). As skeletal muscle and muSCs age, they increasingly express NNMT that interferes with NAD biosynthesis and the downstream events that control muSC regenerative function and cellular energy metabolism. Thus, NNMT is a vital contributing factor to aging muSC dysfunction and associated declines in muscle strength. Since muSCs are fundamental to regeneration and repair, rejuvenation of aged muSCs (including using NNMTi) has proven useful to boost muscle regenerative capacity and improve muscle strength and function in aged mice. Ridgeline’s therapeutic development efforts have swiftly progressed from discovery, to lead optimization, mechanistic and preclinical proof-of-concept validations in clinically relevant aged muscle injury models. Treatment of aged, injured mice with the lead NNMTi RT-001 showed 2-fold increase in muSC activity and myofiber fusion index, 35-80% increase in muscle growth, and 70% increase in muscle strength. Robust efficacy and early safety index demonstration for RT-001 have de-risked and positioned it for late-stage preclinical and IND-enabling studies. Ridgeline is advancing RT-001 as a safe and effective small molecule therapeutic for clinical use in improving muscle strength and function among older adults following hip fracture surgical repairs. The objectives of this project directly aligns with this goal and focuses on completing necessary in vivo PK/PD studies to optimize oral dosing regimens, scale up synthesis of a 2 kilogram batch of RT-001, and non-GLP and GLP toxicity studies; accessory metabolism and clinically relevant biomarker assessments will be completed to complement and support IND filing and first-in-human clinical trials.