Archive for the ‘Epizyme’ Category
May
18
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Beth Seidenberg,
Biotech Venture Capital,
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Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers,
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Beth Seidenberg, Investment Partner--Source: KPCB |
Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers has closed the books on a new $525 million fund. And a chunk of that treasure is earmarked for early-stage life science companies promising to satisfy Kleiner Perkins' trademark appetite for disruptive new technologies.
"Portfolio companies in KPCB 15 will benefit from the firm's holistic approach to company building that we pioneered more than a decade ago," said Ted Schlein, partner at KPCB, in a statement. "We will identify promising early-stage companies in our areas of focus and bring value-added resources in key areas to help early-stage companies grow and succeed. This includes applying our considerable industry, operational and financial expertise and network of relationships to help entrepreneurs build lasting enterprises."
Among the group of partners with a key to the cash box is Beth Seidenberg, the former chief medical officer at Amgen ($AMGN) who has been handling the fund's investments in Tesaro, Epizyme, iPierian and Auxogyn, among others. KPCB has also invested in Foundation Medicine and Celladon.
Seidenberg's interest in biotech goes well beyond the boardroom. She's been one of the leading forces at the Medical Innovation and Competitiveness Coalition, which joined up with the National Venture Capital Association to apply pressure on the FDA to change. The lobbying effort has helped inspire new legislation aimed at speeding drug approvals while putting the FDA on the defensive about its regulatory track record.
"The major problem is the lack of predictability, which leads to delayed timelines," Seidenberg told The Wall Street Journal last fall. "Entrepreneurs are smart people, and they want to get their products to patients. And because of the lack of transparency, and the lack of consistency (at FDA), they are moving to Europe, setting up their organizations and creating jobs overseas."
- here's the press release
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Apr
25
Posted under
Blog,
Celgene,
Companies,
Diagnostics,
epigenetics,
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Epizyme has scored its richest pact yet, raking in $90 million in an upfront fee and equity payment from Celgene ($CELG) in return for an option to partner on the technology while gaining ex-U.S. rights to one of its key programs for genetically defined cancers. The pact includes a commitment to pay tens of millions more in milestones for any successful therapies that come out of the deal.
The partnership gives Celgene dibs on histone methyltransferases (HMT) inhibitors for a period of three years, with an option to extend that by a year. At the heart of the deal is DOT1L, a preclinical program that could play a role in a subtype of acute leukemias called mixed lineage leukemia (MLL). Epizyme will get a shot at up to $160 million in milestones--as well as double-digit royalties--on each program that pushes through the clinic.
Epizyme, a 2011 Fierce 15 company, has been making a reputation for itself in the hot epigenetics arena. Its technology promises to find small molecules that will bind to and control specific enzymes, helping orchestrate activity of a range of genes and proteins. Early in 2011 Epizyme made a name for itself with back-to-back development pacts with GlaxoSmithKline ($GSK) and Eisai. And business development chief Jason Rhodes says this third commercial pact--Epizyme also has deals in place with two disease groups--was carefully tailored to provide the biotech with a fresh and substantial injection of cash while leaving it with U.S. rights and a joint governance approach to the partnership.
Epizyme's goal, says Rhodes, is to "build a new biopharma company and commercialize in the U.S. ourselves." And this new deal was designed to further those goals, bringing its total funds raised so far to $189 million, most of it in cash waiting to fund multiple programs. The new money will help finance the biotech's continuing growth. Rhodes says the fulltime staff has reached the mid-40s range, with around 90 contributing support work in facilities around the globe as part of its semi-virtual approach to development.
There's still no specific timeline available on when Epizyme plans to get its first program into the clinic. But they've set up one of the best collections of preclinical deals in the business.
- here's the press release
Special Report: Epizyme - 2011 Fierce 15
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Epizyme making big plans for pioneering epigenetics platform
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Jan
16
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Constellation Pharma,
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Epigenetics is a new field in drug discovery. But one of the pioneers of the science has already struck a lucrative partnership pact with Roche's Genentech that could pave the way to a buyout. Constellation Pharmaceuticals--a 2008 Fierce 15 upstart originally operated by Third Rock's Mark Levin--said this morning that it has struck a deal to collaborate with Genentech on new epigenetic drug programs, earning $95 million in an upfront fee and committed research payments over a three-year period.
For now, Cambridge, MA-based Constellation will continue to stay in charge of its two lead in-house programs, able to earn "substantial" but undefined development and commercial milestones on any successful efforts it undertakes with Genentech. And Genentech now has the right to gobble up Constellation whole, including its two programs, if the company likes what it sees.
Constellation CEO Mark Goldsmith tells FierceBiotech that the developer plans to have its first lead program in the clinic by the end of this year, giving the company its own options in the event the new Genentech relationship doesn't end in marriage. Goldsmith is staying mum about a number of items in the deal, though, including how much Genentech would pay if it goes ahead with an acquisition. But it amounts to a potentially "highly attractive return" for the investors.
A big return would require the kind of cash reserves that Genentech can call on. Constellation brought its total venture haul to $70 million with last summer's B round, which came from Third Rock Ventures, The Column Group, Venrock Associates, SR One and Altitude Life Science Ventures. Well funded, it's been growing its staff rapidly over the past three years. Today's announcement also contributes to a strong early endorsement of its strategy to approach epigenetics from a more "holistic" standpoint, focusing on three different types of enzyme targets that play a role in switching genes on and off and earning a reputation for its expertise in chromatin biology along the way.
Constellation's science related to a variety of disease categories, but it has primarily concentrated on cancer. One of its lead programs is focused on EZH2, which is also a hot topic at cross-town rival Epizyme.
- here's the press release
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