MediQuest
Vying to Get First Drug Across FDA Goal Line, Put Raynaud’s in Your Vocabulary Blue Heron Strives to Replace
Gene-Making Grunt Work with Custom Manufacturing Tepha Announces First Human
Usage of Medical Devices Derived from New Class of Resorbable Polymers Higher crop yields, more biofuel Patent Awarded to
MediQuest Therapeutics PLx Pharma announces that 2005
Nobel Laureate Professor Barry J. Marshall, FRACP FAA FRS joins its Scientific
Advisory Board MediQuest on Cusp of Marketing
First Product Tepha, Inc. Announces $10.7
Million Venture Capital Financing Wellpartner, Inc. Completes
$7.5 Million Series C Financing Targeted Growth, Inc. Gets $22.3
Million Targeted Growth, Inc. Cancer
research may help biofuels Targeted Growth, Inc. Biodiesel
seeded by big crop yields Calypso Medical Technologies,
Inc., Advances Position with $42.2M in Private Funding Raven Biotechnologies,
Inc. to Present at the JP Morgan 25th Annual Healthcare Conference Raven Biotechnologies, Inc.
And Wyeth (WYE) Partner To Evaluate And Develop Multiple Antibody Products
Guava Technologies Names
Sanderling's Huffman CFO Calypso
Gets 510(k) For Tumor Localization Technology Gilead
Exercises Option To Pay $365M for Corus MediQuest
Therapeutics Raises $16M Series A Amnis Closes
Oversubscribed $11.25M Series C Round MediQuest Vying to Get First
Drug Across FDA Goal Line, Put Raynaud’s in Your Vocabulary Blue Heron Strives to Replace
Gene-Making Grunt Work with Custom Manufacturing Tepha Announces First Human
Usage of Medical Devices Derived from New Class of Resorbable Polymers Millipore, Guava to Integrate
Flow Cytometry Reagents, Instrumentation Under the terms of the partnership, Millipore will develop co-branded reagent kits for Guava's flow cytometers. Millipore also has exclusive rights to distribute and service Guava's non-clinical instrumentation within certain regions of North America, Europe, and Asia. The companies said they also plan to “work together to develop a new generation of instrumentation with enhanced performance and functionality.” The first co-branded products under the partnership will be released in July. Guava specializes in micro-capillary flow cytometry systems, which require smaller sample volumes, generate less waste, have lower operating costs, and are easier to set up and run than traditional flow cytometry technology, according to the company. Higher crop yields, more
biofuel Seattle plant genetics startup Targeted Growth and Texas biodiesel producer Green Earth Fuels have formed a joint venture called Sustainable Oil that will attempt to sell camelina plants to farmers for use in the production of biofuels, according to News.com. It also reports that the majority of the plants will be grown on arid land in Montana, with plans by 2010 to obtain enough camelina oil to make 100 million gallons of biodiesel. The joint venture is to be formally announced Tuesday. Targeted Growth raised $22 million earlier this year, with Chief Executive Tom Todaro saying that its genetic enhancements can increase crop yields by as much as 20 percent. At the time, Todaro estimated that it would be four or five years before its genetically-altered seeds would became commercially available. "It will be awhile before you fill up your car with our technology in it, but we believe the demand for fuel is going to be around for a reasonably long period of time," he said. Patent Awarded to
MediQuest Therapeutics The Company’s patented technology uses small molecule inhibitors to regulate a key enzyme within skin melanocytes that is responsible for producing melanin, which is the pigment found in the skin, hair, and eyes. This is the first patent awarded to the Company for skin lightening technology and additional U.S. and foreign patents are pending. Individuals affected by skin disorders in which too much pigment is present, such as age spots and melasma, could benefit. “This patent provides us with a new platform to develop topical products for dermatological and cosmeceutical purposes,” Dr. Thomas P. Dooley, chief scientific officer said. “This is another step in the Company’s progress and continued efforts in developing topical formulations to treat skin disorders.” Both prescription and non-prescription products currently on the market to lighten skin use a potentially toxic agent called hydroquinone, Dooley said. “It is our intent to develop a non-toxic way to regulate the body’s production of melanin and effectively lighten skin,” Dooley said. “If successful, there is an estimated annual market potential of hundreds of millions of dollars.” MediQuest now holds 14 U.S. patents and has filed for about
150 worldwide. Integra portfolio company
Blue Heron Biotechnology featured in NYT Article INDUSTRIAL age foundries made cast-metal parts. Information age foundries, or “fabs,” produce computer chips. Now come foundries for the biotechnology age, churning out the stuff of life itself. Such “biofabs” produce made-to-order genes, the stretches of DNA that contain the instructions for living creatures. The foundries take orders over the Internet from pharmaceutical companies or academic scientists and ship back the finished genes in as little as a week or two. The genes can be used to genetically engineer bacteria or other cells to make proteins, or in various types of biological research. Sales of the gene-synthesis industry are estimated at only $50 million a year, but they are growing rapidly. One foundry, GeneArt, in Regensburg, Germany, has gone public. It says it expects sales this year to increase at least 60 percent, to 12.5 million euros, or about $17 million. Fueling the surge is the productivity of DNA synthesis, which has increased 700-fold in the last decade, according to Bio Economic Research Associates, a consulting firm. The cost per base pair, the basic chemical unit of a DNA molecule, has dropped to less than $1, from about $30. The ability to make genes has given rise to a field called synthetic biology, which might lead to artificial life in a few years. For now, though, most of the biofabs’ business is coming from transforming the practice of 30-year-old “conventional” genetic engineering. “The prices have come down to the point where it is less expensive for many researchers to have a gene synthesized than to make the equivalent molecule themselves,” said John Mulligan, chairman and chief scientist at Blue Heron Biotechnology, a gene-synthesis company in Bothell, Wash. Genetic engineers generally extract a gene from an organism. Then they might modify it or put it in a different organism. The gene for insulin, for instance, can be extracted from human cells and put into bacteria, which will produce insulin for use by diabetics. It is a cut-and-paste operation, like writing a phrase by snipping the necessary words out of magazines and gluing them together in the proper order. Gene synthesis, by contrast, is like typing the phrase on a word processor. Scientists specify the sequence of the desired gene and have it “printed” at the foundry. They can do this because the complete genome sequences of humans and many other species are available in databases. Peter Kuhn, an associate professor at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, has been studying the proteins made by the virus that causes SARS, which killed nearly 800 people in 2003. Before the introduction of gene synthesis, Mr. Kuhn had to isolate the genes from the virus itself, then put them into bacteria to have them produce the proteins. Now he orders the genes from DNA2.0, a foundry. “If we were starting this today, I wouldn’t even bother trying to get any of this from the natural source,” Mr. Kuhn said. “I would just order everything.” DNA is made up of four chemical units called bases, usually represented by the letters A, C, G and T. The bases are paired to form the rungs of the twisted ladder structure of DNA. The first mail-order DNA companies sprung up about two decades ago, selling short, single-stranded pieces of DNA, usually 20 bases to 60 bases long. These strands, called oligonucleotides, or oligos, are used to help find and amplify full genes. Sales of DNA oligos are about $700 million a year, according to BioInformatics, a market research firm, though some executives say that figure is too high. Production is automated and competition is cutthroat, with prices of 10 cents to 50 cents a base. Customers “want to have it delivered to them the next day and they really don’t want to pay much for this custom service,” said Mary Buchanan, a business manager at Invitrogen, a leading supplier of oligos. Other major participants include Integrated DNA Technologies and Operon Biotechnologies. The newer biofabs make complete double-stranded genes, usually hundreds to about 2,000 base pairs long, though in a few cases, longer than 10,000. Leaders in this business include GeneArt, Blue Heron, DNA2.0, which is in Menlo Park, Calif., and Codon Devices of Cambridge, Mass. Customers usually place orders — a sequence of hundreds of As, Cs, Gs and Ts — through a biofab’s Web site or by e-mail. “It’s really not possible to take an order like that over the phone or even by fax,” said Jeremy Minshull, president of DNA2.0. Manufacturing is a prime example of what is called mass customization, highly automated production with every single product being different. The machines that string together bases make so many mistakes that they cannot make a full gene flawlessly. So the companies make shorter oligos and splice them together. Error checking is crucial. A new opportunity for foundries could come from synthetic biology, which involves designing cells almost from scratch to perform specific tasks, like producing biofuel. Synthetic biologists envision writing the DNA code for such cells the way computer programmers write software. Then the DNA would be manufactured and put into cells. Ultimately, it might be possible to create artificial life. The scientist J. Craig Venter is trying to do that by synthesizing the 580,076-base genome of a simple bacterium, which would be inserted into some other bacterium. Some biofabs are distancing themselves from such talk, fearing it could arouse public distrust. “We are not in the business at Codon of creating life,” said John P. Danner, president of Codon Devices. There is concern that DNA synthesis might be used to make pathogens. In 2002, scientists at Stony Brook University announced that they had synthesized the polio virus, using its published genome sequence and mail-order oligos. It took them three years, but a sequence that long, 7,500 bases, can now be made in weeks. The foundries say they screen orders against a database of pathogen DNA sequences and verify that customers are from reputable institutions. The leading companies have formed a consortium to write other safeguards and regulations. But critics say governments should devise the regulations. ETC Group, a technology watchdog, said that regulations were needed to prevent ill-advised or careless applications, not just nefarious ones. “The danger is not just bioterror,” ETC said in a report earlier this year, “but ‘bioerror.’ ” PLx Pharma announces that 2005
Nobel Laureate Professor Barry J. Marshall, FRACP FAA FRS joins its Scientific
Advisory Board PLx Pharma is pleased to announce that Professor Barry J. Marshall, co¬recipient of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for the elucidation of the role of Helicobacter pylori in gastric ulcerogenesis, and recipient of many internationally distinguished awards including the Albert Lasker Award, has agreed to serve on its Scientific Advisory Board. “I am intrigued by the promise of a G-I safer NSAID which has been demonstrated by PLx’s NSAID-PC technology in at risk osteoarthritis patients and look forward to assisting them as they continue with the development of additional NSAID-PC products such as Naproxen-PC and Aspirin-PC” said Professor Marshall. “PLx’s pipeline of NSAID-PC products has the potential to provide GI safer alternatives to products now being taken by millions of patients.” Barry Marshall is Clinical Professor of Microbiology and Medicine at the University of Western Australia. He graduated from the University of Western Australia in 1975 and performed internship and residencies in internal medicine at the Queen Elizabeth II Medical Center (Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital) and Royal Perth Hospital where he met pathologist Dr J. Robin Warren and they made their Nobel Prize winning discovery in 1982. Dr Marshall continued his research into Hp at the University of Virginia in the USA. Pursuing an interest in the commercialization of technology he successfully collaborated with Proctor and Gamble on a bismuth drug and with Tri-Med on the diagnostic tests CLOtest® and Pytest®. He is now devoting time to a new venture, Ondek, that is developing a vaccine based on his innovative technology. He moved back to Perth with his family in 1995 to take up his current position at the University of Western Australia. “We are very pleased to have Professor Marshall joining Dr. Ferid Murad, also a prominent Nobel Laureate, and our other internationally recognized NSAID and gastroenterology experts on PLx’s Scientific Advisory Board,” said David Anderson, PLx’s Chairman of the Board. “Our advisors recognize the critical need for GI safer pain medications and we are gratified that they are willing to contribute their time, expertise and years of experience in assisting us in commercializing our pipeline of NSAID-PC products.” Professor Marshall joins Ferid Murad, Ph.D., M.D.,
Professor, University of Texas Medical School and Director of the Institute
of Molecular Medicine, Haile Debas, M.D., Executive Director of Global
Health Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, Brendan Whittle,
Ph.D., internationally recognized expert in gastrointestinal pharmaceutical
research and development, Kim Rainsford, Ph.D., recognized expert and
author of many books and publications related to NSAIDs, Joe Wernicke,
Ph.D., M.D., Sr. Research Physician, Eli Lilly and Company, Sandor Szabo,
Ph.D., M.D., Chief of Staff and Chairman of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine,
VA Medical Center - Long Beach and Associate Dean and Professor, UC-Irvine,
and Gilbert Castro, Ph.D., a recognized expert on gastrointestinal mucosal
inflammation and now retired from senior leadership positions within the
University of Texas System, on the PLx Scientific Advisory Board. MediQuest
on Cusp of Marketing First Product Vascana, the proposed name for MediQuest's upcoming drug, can be applied to the fingers to fend off or treat a Raynaud's attack. The disease causes a painful sudden restriction of blood flow to the fingers and toes, causing them to turn white. After the attack dies down, blood rushes back, creating red, tingly digits. More than 2 million people in the U.S. seek treatment each year for the disease, and MediQuest expects the market for its new drug to be worth more than $700 million. As the company prepares to commercialize Vascana, it plans to grow to more than 100 employees within the next 12 months. MediQuest was founded in 1994 under the name Oridigm Corp. to research cancer therapies. Its scientists developed compounds that were soon deemed problematic -- a certain quality prevented the active ingredient from being absorbed into the bloodstream and carried to the problem spot. From 1994 to 2002, not one of the compounds or discoveries made it through the animal testing phase; the company was kept afloat with the help of angel investors. When Dechow joined, he realized that those compounds would be more effective in treating diseases of the skin and nails. "What I did was change the focus of the company so we could take advantage of that property," Dechow said. "Instead, what you do is apply it where the problem spot is." Today, the company holds 14 U.S. patents and has filed for about 150 worldwide. Dechow suffers from a mild form of Raynaud's himself in his toes, he explained, a result of frostbite that struck him as a child in northern Michigan. In 2006, the company secured $16.4 million in venture capital, and the company is seeking more. It hopes to raise between $20 million and $40 million for its second round, Dechow said. Integra Ventures in Seattle and Novo A/S of Denmark co-led
the first round, which also included money from Masa Life Science Ventures
and Janus. In a lab tour this week, Dechow showed a formulation that is thicker than a lotion but more fluid than an ointment. The substance, slightly fragrant, leaves no residue and carries active therapy ingredients through thick skin and nails. Being able to deliver therapy directly to an affected spot, rather than in the form of a pill, is what sets the company apart, he said. The Raynaud's treatment, for example, would compete with several other drugs that, according to the Mayo Clinic, are ingested as tablets and usually used to treat high blood pressure. In another of the lab rooms, he showed a contraption that
measures how much of a drug can penetrate skin. Researchers place toenails
from cadavers or human skin samples -- sometimes taken from tissue of
people who've had elective surgery -- in a small glass jar. Then scientists
test the water that is flushed below the sample to see how much of the
drug passes through the skin. Dechow, who has a doctorate in physical chemistry, has spent his career in the pharmaceutical industry and has run three companies before MediQuest. "Here's a guy, who, on very little money can
get fairly large market opportunities," said Piper, who has been
MediQuest's chairman of the board since May 2006. MediQuest has "really
been under the radar screen of other VCs and the financial community." Tepha, Inc. Announces $10.7
Million Venture Capital Financing Tepha, Inc., a privately held medical device company, today announced that it had closed a $10.7 million financing led by The Vertical Group. Also participating in the financing were Integra Ventures, Novartis Venture Fund, and Westfield Life Sciences Fund. The funds will be used to support the further development of Tepha's unique biopolymer technology platform including materials processing, device testing, and regulatory submissions. Simon Williams, President and CEO of Tepha, stated "We are very pleased to complete this significant financing which will permit us to sustain the momentum that has been generated by recent FDA 510(k) releases. We also are pleased to welcome Westfield Life Sciences as a new investor in Tepha, and we look forward to the benefit of their expertise in life sciences and medical technology to develop Tepha's breakthrough biopolymer technology." The TephaFLEX(R) biopolymer technology, licensed from Metabolix, Inc. (Nasdaq: MBLX) and based on research done at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), significantly extends the range of material properties available for the development of absorbable medical devices. In February 2007, Tepha received FDA 510(k) clearance for its TephaFLEX Absorbable Suture, and in April 2007, the Company received its second 510(k) clearance for the TephaFLEX Surgical Mesh indicated for hernia, pelvic floor, and other soft tissue temporary wound support. Several leading medical device companies are currently working with Tepha to apply the new biopolymer technology to the development of other medical devices, taking advantage of the TephaFLEX biopolymer properties that include flexibility and toughness, coupled with the ability to form some of the world's strongest absorbable fibers. Products under development include surgical meshes, anti-adhesion films, hemostats, intra-cardiac devices, absorbable stents, ligament and tendon repair devices, embolization agents, and drug delivery systems. Tepha's current corporate partners include: Aesculap AG, HemCon Medical Technologies, LifeCell Corporation, NMT Medical, and Tornier, Inc. Tepha Receives FDA Clearance
for 1st Medical Device Derived from New Biopolymers Tepha, Inc., a privately held medical device company, today announced that the FDA has cleared its TephaFLEX(R) Absorbable Suture product for marketing in the U.S. The TephaFLEX Absorbable Suture is the first medical device derived from a new class of biopolymers that is the product of patented recombinant DNA technology developed by Tepha and licensed from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The TephaFLEX material has biological and mechanical properties that are uniquely suited for implantable medical devices. Tepha and its corporate partners are pursuing a wide array of medical device applications for the TephaFLEX technology. Dr. Simon Williams, President and CEO of Tepha, stated, "We are delighted that the FDA has cleared the TephaFLEX Absorbable Suture, and determined that devices of this type will be regulated as class II (510k) devices. The Company's novel biopolymer technology can now be further applied to the development of a range of medical devices to meet unmet clinical needs." TephaFLEX polymer is a member of a new class of biopolymers with mechanical and biological properties that are uniquely applicable to implantable medical devices when compared to conventional synthetic and biologically derived polymers. Compared to synthetic polymers such as polylactic acid (PLA) and polyglycolic acid (PGA), TephaFLEX material is tougher and more flexible with an absorption rate and degradation profile that are compatible with human tissue repair and replacement applications. However, unlike other biopolymers such as collagen and hyaluronate, TephaFLEX polymer is a thermoplastic and can be fabricated into virtually any shape or form -- including fibers, films, tubes, foams, textiles, microspheres, and molded constructs -- using a wide range of conventional melt and solvent processing techniques. The TephaFLEX Absorbable Suture is engineered to be one of the strongest absorbable fibers known, offering up to 50% greater tensile strength than currently marketed monofilament absorbable sutures. In addition to high strength, the TephaFLEX Absorbable Suture also offers surgeons improved flexibility, good knot security, and prolonged strength retention when implanted. The new class of biopolymers to which the TephaFLEX polymer belongs is a product of Tepha's patented recombinant DNA technology. This technology allows the Company to engineer materials with a range of biological and mechanical properties for specific tissue repair and replacement applications. After the repair process, the biopolymers degrade in the body to natural metabolites in a biocompatible, cell-friendly manner. Professor Anthony Sinskey of the MIT Department of Biology, and a co-inventor of the recombinant DNA technology, commented: "This breakthrough technology will allow Tepha and its partners to progress beyond the constraints of traditional medical device materials to offer new solutions for the unmet needs of physicians and their patients." Several leading medical device companies have recognized the unique properties profile of TephaFLEX material for human tissue repair and replacement applications. Tepha's current corporate partners are pursuing a wide array of products including sutures, surgical meshes for orthopedic and hernia repair, anti-adhesion films, hemostats, intra-cardiac devices, absorbable stents, ligament and tendon repair and replacement devices, embolization agents, and drug delivery systems. Tepha's current partners include Aesculap AG, HemCon Medical Technologies, LifeCell Corporation (Nasdaq: LIFC), NMT Medical (Nasdaq: NMTI), and Tornier, Inc. The development of the TephaFLEX Absorbable Suture was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the U.S. Department of Commerce's National Institute of Standards and Technology Advanced Technology Program (NIST ATP). Tepha was formed as a sister company to Metabolix, Inc. (Nasdaq: MBLX). Both companies are engaged in commercializing new polymers derived from recombinant DNA technology licensed from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Tepha is focused specifically on in vivo medical applications of the technology. Metabolix, which recently had its initial public offering (IPO), is focused on using the technology in the development of environmentally sustainable alternatives to petrochemical-based plastics, fuels, and chemicals. Tepha's institutional investors include The Vertical Group, a New Jersey based venture capital firm specializing in medical devices and biotechnology; Integra Ventures, a life science venture capital firm located in Seattle, WA; The Novartis Venture Fund, based in Basel, Switzerland, the venture capital arm of Novartis -- one of the world's largest life science companies; and Westfield Life Sciences Fund, a Boston-based fund specializing in health care companies since 2000. Wellpartner, Inc. Completes
$7.5 Million Series C Financing This financing will allow us to expand the breadth of our product and service offerings to Commercial payers and State Medicaid organizations as well as the growing network of health care providers that serve our least fortunate population," said W. Michael Wright, Wellpartner CEO. "We are rapidly establishing a leadership position with innovative approaches to help increase access to medications and lower overall costs for America’s underserved and we are excited to have new partners in our growth.“ Wellpartner serves a variety of commercial health plans, Medicaid health plans and safety-net providers with pharmacy fulfillment, pharmacy administration and professional service solutions. The Company has particular expertise in the Public Health Service 340B program, a drug discount program created by the federal government to provide medications to America’s most vulnerable individuals at substantially reduced prices. Wellpartner is the largest provider of 340B contract pharmacy services in the country, a market with over $3.5 billion in drug sales annually. As part of this financing round, David Shapiro of 3i, Todd Marker of Buerk Dale Victor, Hans Lundin of Integra Ventures and Keith Mullins of Greenwoods Capital have joined Wellpartner’s Board of Directors. “Wellpartner has a strong management team and is broadly recognized as a thought leader in developing programs to bring prescription drug coverage to the 47 million Americans who lack adequate access to health insurance,” noted Todd Marker. “With this latest round of financing, the company is well positioned to strengthen its role as a preferred provider in the rapidly changing market for prescription drug coverage.” “Today, an estimated 41 percent of working age Americans with moderate to middle incomes lack adequate health coverage in this country,” said David Shapiro. “As more and more employers abandon traditional health insurance coverage for their employees, these individuals will need the innovative distribution and management programs that Wellpartner excels in to gain access to lower cost medications.” Hans Lundin concurs. “Virtually every governor in the nation this year is seeking ways in which they can provide expanded health coverage for residents of their states. Health care delivery, and particularly, pharmacy benefit delivery, in this country is changing and companies like Wellpartner that excel in transparent cost- based drug fulfillment programs are positioned to capitalize on this shift.” About Wellpartner Wellpartner has been recognized as one of the fastest growing private companies in the U.S. and was recently ranked #119 in Inc. Magazine’s list of the 500 fastest growing companies in the U.S. for 2006. Targeted Growth Gets $22.3M Targeted Growth said Thursday it has raised $22.3 million in private-equity funding for a technology that can boost yields of biofuel crops by about 20 percent. Investors included Capricorn Management, AllianceBernstein, GrowthWorks Canadian Fund, Integra Ventures, WRF Capital, and Investment Saskatchewan. The round, Targeted Growth’s fifth, brings its total funding to $39.7 million. Ethanol and biodiesel industries are limited by the supply of farm crops, so technology to increase the amount that farmers can grow per acre could play an important role in growing those industries. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, 20 percent of the land in Europe and the United States would be needed to grow crops to replace 5 percent of transportation fuel with biofuel. Rising corn and soybean prices, as well as an Earth Policy Institute study finding ethanol will require twice the corn as previously expected in 2008 (see Ethanol=Soaring Corn Prices?), has raised pressure for the industry to solve the “food vs. fuel” problem. Tom Todaro, CEO of Targeted Growth, said the company can modify the gene that controls plants’ growth to increase yields of the corn, soy, and canola used to make ethanol and biodiesel. “If we want to help reduce stress on the competition between food vs. fuel, the best mid-term solution is just to make more of it [crops],” he said. “If you increase yields by 20 percent, you reduce the pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers by 20 percent—which is very good for the environment—and you also relieve some of the pressure on food vs. fuel.” Cells have a natural signal that tells them when to stop or slow their dividing process, he explained. Targeted Growth is able to change the signal, encouraging the cell to keep dividing longer, he said. The Seattle-based company, founded in 1998, has spent seven years and “tens of millions of dollars” developing the technology, he said. He added that Targeted Growth can also modify the plants to get them to yield more starch, more protein, or whatever is needed to make them ideal for specific applications, including food. “This is a wonderful example of how technology can be applied to solving our energy crisis in innovative ways, and if the technology delivers as promised looks to be a very smart investment,” said John Balbach, a managing partner at the Cleantech Venture Network. “There is another facet to consider; namely the larger policy debate regarding the increasing use of food as fuel, an issue which we believe will grow in importance over the course of the next two years.” But not everyone approves of genetically modified crops, particularly for crops used for food. “We’re trying to convert the world’s farmland to organic for food, and if crops are going to be used for fuel, people won’t care how they are farmed,” said Rona Fried, editor of Progressive Investor, a green investing newsletter, in May (see Biofuel Firm Altra Gets $50M). “Basic crops like corn, soy, and rapeseed will be genetically modified and will invade organic crops used for food.” Mr. Todaro said Targeted Growth is the “friendly version” of genetic modification because the company modifies a gene that already exists in the plants, and isn’t introducing any foreign DNA. The company is also aggressively working on a way to make these high-yield seeds without genetic modification, he said. Anyway, more than 80 percent of corn and soybean plants are already genetically modified, he said. “We believe we can demonstrate why this is an incredibly safe and benign technology and is enormously socially advantageous,” he said. Targeted Growth says it’s testing its plants in demonstration and regulatory trials in 10 locations in North American and another half dozen in South America. The company expects to commercialize the plants in four to six years. Mr. Todaro said he doesn’t yet know how much the plants will cost. Targeted Growth also has plans further into the future.
It’s developing a crop specifically for biodiesel production—canolina,
an even oilier relative of canola that’s not generally eaten as
food—and also is working on crops could help break down their own
cellulose and lignin so ethanol manufacturers will be able to turn currently
unusable plant parts into more ethanol. Cancer research may help biofuels The result was Targeted Growth, a company that has come up with techniques for increasing crop yields with canola, corn and other crops. In their natural state, these crops stop growing after a certain point in the season. Targeted Growth manipulates a plant's genetic code so the cells continue to divide past their ordinary stopping point. In the end, the genetic manipulation leads to increased seed size and seed count. In experiments, the technique has increased overall crop yield by as much as 20 percent. It also works in a similar fashion in different plants. "It turns out that cell cycle regulating pathways are genetically similar," he said in an interview. "Cell division is the fundamental component in life, if you think about it." This week Capricorn Management, the investment firm of former eBay President Jeff Skoll, led a $22.3 million investment in the company. With the influx of cash, Targeted is going to test out how its technology works in a wider variety of crops in a diverse range of ecosystems. The company, which licenses technology from the Hutchinson Center but also has devised its own technologies, does not integrate foreign genes into a plant, which creates so-called transgenic plants. Instead, it removes genes from a species, modifies them and then reinserts them. Founded in 1999, the company has primarily worked with agribusiness concerns like Monsanto but in the past few years has begun to more closely examine using its technology for ethanol and biodiesel production. Alternative fuels have become a major focus of interest for universities, governments, the public and researchers. There is one big problem, though: they currently cost more than gas. If oil stays below $55 a barrel, most alternative car fuel technologies stop making economic sense, according to Dan Arvizu, director of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Oil has bounced between $50 and $60 a barrel recently. As a result, most biofuels are currently supported by subsidies. Genetic modification helps ameliorate the problem by allowing farmers to generate more starch, which can be converted to ethanol or biodiesel, per acre. The company has already grown a dozen or so fields each of canola, corn, soybeans and camolina, a similar plant to canola. "Now I want four dozen for each, and I want to do them worldwide," he said. Commercially, fuels enhanced by Targeted's technology may hit pumps in four years or so. Genetic modification, Todaro admits, isn't popular with the public, but it enjoys strong support in many parts of the scientific community. It cuts down pesticide use, can help farmers earn more profits, and the evidence that it hurts humans is shaky at best. "One of my favorite stats is that more people are killed by falling coke machines every year than genetically modified foods," he said. "Eighty percent of the corn and soy sold worldwide has biotech inside of it. You ate a transgene at breakfast this morning if you had cereal; I guarantee it." Skoll's investment is also another example of eBay alumni in action. Many former executives of the company and its PayPal subsidiary have participated in each other's ventures since the go-go Internet days. Skoll, for instance, is also in an investor in Tesla Motors, partly founded by PayPal founder Elon Musk. Todaro came out of PayPal. Biodiesel seeded by big crop
yields One of the big hurdles with the push toward ethanol and biodiesel is that U.S. farmers can't produce enough crops to actually make a dent in the oil needs of the country. Put another way: If every acre of corn in the country were used for ethanol, it would replace only about 12 percent of our oil consumption. Targeted Growth is working on that problem. And the Seattle company -- started by scientists at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center who decided to apply lessons from human biology to botany -- just secured $22.3 million to speed up research efforts. The investment follows a $10 million venture round last spring, with Chief Executive Tom Todaro saying that the company could have raised $60 million or more. Investors include AllianceBernstein and Capricorn Management, the investment firm of former eBay President Jeff Skoll. "We had opportunities to raise substantially more than we chose to," Todaro said. Why the interest? Targeted Growth says it can increase the yields of corn, soybeans and canola -- the principal feed stock of biofuels -- by about 20 percent. That means farmers who plant the company's genetically altered seeds could grow bigger crops, which in turn would produce more of the oils used in biofuels. Increasing the amount of corn or canola grown on an acre of farmland is one of many ways in which companies are trying to tap into the alternative fuel business, said Douglas Tiffany, a research fellow at the University of Minnesota who has studied the economics of ethanol and biodiesel. "It is an incremental step in the right direction," Tiffany said. "There is certainly a market in this. But they have some competition in this game already from some major seed companies." Syngenta, DuPont and Monsanto -- big players in the agriculture industry -- are all experimenting with ways to enhance crops for the emerging biofuels market. Thousand Oaks, Calif.-based Ceres Inc., for example, is working with Monsanto to transform native prairie grasses into ethanol. Though Targeted Growth is eight years old, it is still in the early stages of development. Todaro says it could be four or five years before its seeds are commercially available. "It will be awhile before you fill up your car with our technology in it, but we believe the demand for fuel is going to be around for a reasonably long period of time," he said. The biofuel business received a boost last month when President Bush introduced a plan to reduce gasoline consumption by 20 percent in the next 10 years. In order to do that, Bush increased goals for the amount of ethanol and other alternative fuels to be blended into gasoline. However, some have questioned whether there is enough farmland to meet the new plan or those of the Energy Department, which has called for displacing 60 billion gallons of gasoline with ethanol by 2030. To do that, Michael McElroy, an environmental studies professor at Harvard University, wrote in an essay late last year, it would require harvesting crops on 225 million acres. In 2004, 73.4 million acres were used to harvest corn in the U.S., which represented 23 percent of the nation's total cultivated land, McElroy said. At current crop yields, it would be virtually impossible to meet the goals with U.S. agricultural production. "On a very practical level that can't happen, unless we have no corn for consumption or no soybean oil," Tiffany said. That would mean either importing crops for biofuels -- as Seattle-based Imperium Renewables plans to do with palm oil from Asia for its 100 million-gallon biodiesel refinery in Grays Harbor County -- or creating ways to produce more fuel from existing crops, which interests many researchers. That's the big market opportunity facing Targeted Growth, which believes it can not only boost yields but create crops that can grow on land that was previously unsuitable for farming. "If you could get 20 percent more yield in an acre of corn, that is 20 percent more that you can consume for domestic production of ethanol without increasing corn prices for consumers," Todaro said. "And if you couple that with other new technologies in the ethanol space, I think you can put a pretty substantial dent in petroleum needs domestically." The 30-person company has planted test crops in Eastern Washington, Montana, Indiana, Canada and other sites, with plans to expand trials this year to South Korea, Australia and other countries. Rigorous testing is required because the crops are genetically modified, an idea that scares some farmers and consumers. But Todaro said the company's genetic manipulation is pretty "benign as transgenic technologies go." "We are not introducing any foreign substances into the plant," he said. "All we did was find a mechanism that allows us to encourage the cells to divide for a couple days or a couple weeks longer than they normally would. And that simple change allows dramatic yield effect." At this time, the company's most advanced trials are in canola. But Todaro said that trials in corn and soybeans are not far behind, adding that the technology could be a potential solution to the "near- and mid-term energy needs." Todaro admits that challenges lie ahead. "Trying to improve the food and fuel supply of the whole world is a non-trivial event and as a consequence there are lots of things that need to be thought through carefully before they are executed," he said. "Whenever you take on a project of this magnitude, there will be potential stumbling blocks. We think that six or seven years of very dedicated work has removed the majority of those. But the thing you have to worry about is never the thing you think of." Calypso® Medical Technologies,
Inc., Advances Position with $42.2M in Private Funding Radiation therapy is used to treat approximately one million cancer patients inthe U.S. each year, and is very effective in destroying cancer cells; however,doctors must guard against damaging healthy tissues that surround the tumorcaused by misalignment and unpredictable tumor motion. In prostate cancertreatment the most common side effects arise when the radiation beam missesthe prostate but irradiates adjacent healthy organs causing urinary, rectal andsexual dysfunction side effects. Cleared by the FDA to guide radiation delivery for prostate cancer, the Calypso®4D Localization System enables doctors for the first time to objectively pinpointa tumor’s location with great accuracy and continuously monitor its positionthroughout treatment. This technology utilizes miniature electromagnetic sensors,called Beacon® transponders. Transponders are implanted in the prostate tocontinuously monitor position and motion of the organ in real-time. The firstcommercial system is installed at the Swedish Medical Center/ Swedish CancerInstitute in Seattle, Washington. “We are very pleased with the support and endorsement from both the clinicaland investment community clearly signifying the importance of managing theresponse to organ motion in radiation therapy. With this capital raise, CalypsoMedical can fully implement our business plan of offering our novel localizationplatform for the majority of patients undergoing radiation therapy and, therefore,provide greater confidence in the delivery of radiation therapy,” notes Eric R.Meier, Calypso Medical president and CEO. Dr. Timothy P. Mate, radiation oncologist with the Seattle Prostate Institute(Swedish Medical Center, Swedish Cancer Institute, Seattle, WA) and foundingmember of the Calypso Medical scientific advisory board comments, “Detectingprostate motion continuously during radiation treatment will allow doctors tomanage the delivery of radiation therapy with increased precision, accuracy andconfidence. And, importantly, we expect this technology to have a role in clinicalapplications in tumors throughout the entire body in the future. This 4Dmonitoring technology is a key building block in advancing radiation therapydelivery.” About Calypso® Medical Technologies, Inc.Calypso Medical Technologies, Inc. (“Calypso”) is a privately held, vibrant and rapidlygrowing medical device company located in Seattle, WA. The Company’s proprietarytumor localization and tracking system utilizes miniaturized implanted devices (Beacon®electromagnetic transponders) to continuously, accurately, and objectively pinpoint thelocation of tumors for improved accuracy in radiation therapy. Calypso addresses twomajor issues in modern radiation oncology: errors in treatment set-up and tumor motionduring treatment. In addition, the Calypso® 4D Localization System’s non-ionizingelectromagnetic guidance has the potential to improve work flow efficiency andtreatment room utilization. The technology is designed to enable clinicians the ability tomanage organ motion body-wide in for tumors of the prostate, breast, lung, head, neckand other radiation therapy target organs. FDA 510(k) clearance was received in 2006for use in prostate cancer. For more information, visit www.calypsomedical.com or call888-48-TRACK (1-888-488-7225). Raven Biotechnologies,
Inc. to Present at the JP Morgan 25th Annual Healthcare Conference Raven biotechnologies, inc., a privately held company focused on the development of monoclonal antibody therapeutics (MAbs) for treating cancer, announced today that George Schreiner M.D., Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer of Raven, will present at the JP Morgan 25th Annual Healthcare Conference in San Francisco. Dr. Schreiner will discuss Raven’s recent breakthroughs related to its platform for the discovery of novel monoclonal antibody therapies, and the clinical development progress of its lead product candidate, RAV12. The presentation will be delivered at the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco, Calif., on Thursday, January 11, 2007 at 2:00 p.m PST. A copy of the presentation will be available on Raven’s web site at www.ravenbio.com following the meeting. About Raven To date Raven has identified multiple candidate therapeutic MAbs for many cancer indications including lung, colon, pancreatic, prostate, breast, brain, and ovarian cancer. Contact: Raven Biotechnologies,
Inc. And Wyeth (WYE) Partner To Evaluate And Develop The agreement gives Wyeth the option to obtain an exclusive license to develop and commercialize therapies arising from the use of these designated Raven antibodies. Terms of the agreement, which include an upfront payment, milestone payments and royalties based upon the net sales of products developed from the Raven technology, were not disclosed. The antibodies included in the agreement were discovered using Raven proprietary immunization technology and tumor-derived stem-cell lines, and were screened to select antibodies that are active alone or in a conjugated form. "We are pleased to partner with Wyeth and believe this agreement further validates our approach," said George F. Schreiner, M.D., Ph.D., Raven's Chief Executive Officer. "Raven proprietary antibody discovery processes rapidly create monoclonal antibodies and allow researchers to quickly assess the importance of those proteins in the disease process." About Raven To date Raven has identified multiple candidate therapeutic MAbs for many cancer indications including lung, colon, pancreatic, prostate, breast, brain, and ovarian cancer. Contact: Guava Technologies Names Sanderling's
Huffman CFO
Calypso Gets 510(k) For Tumor Localization
Technology
Gilead Exercises Option To Pay $365M
For Corus
MediQuest Therapeutics Raises $16M
Series A
Amnis Closes Oversubscribed $11.25M
Series C Round |
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2007 Integra Ventures |
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