New startup to research novel cancer vaccines
Med tech business
New startup to research novel
cancer vaccines
University of Auckland - Media Release
- 17 January 2017
The University of Auckland is
partnering with an American drug development company to
launch a biotech start-up that will research novel cancer
vaccines.
The new start-up, SapVax was formed by scientists from the University of Auckland and BioMotiv, an accelerator company in Cleveland in Ohio that is part of a $300 million initiative for advancing medicine.
SapVax will develop a suite of first-in-class cancer vaccines based on a novel peptide platform technology.
It is based on intellectual property licensed from the University of Auckland, developed by Distinguished Professor Margaret Brimble and Dr Geoff Williams in Chemistry, and Professor Rod Dunbar, a physician-scientist, in the School of Biological Sciences.
All of the academic scientists will continue to be involved in the clinical development of the platform.
“The Auckland team’s discoveries present a novel platform for overcoming traditional barriers to developing cancer vaccines,” says Baiju R. Shah, Chief Executive Officer of BioMotiv. “We look forward to accelerating their work into breakthrough therapies through SapVax.”
“We are delighted to be partnering with BioMotiv to launch SapVax and develop this exciting new platform into clinical candidates, to further the exciting promise of cancer immunotherapy”, says Will Charles, the General Manager of Technology Development at UniServices (the University of Auckland’s commercialisation company).
“Our partnership demonstrates the value of University seed funds that can invest early and quickly to rapidly make inventions ready for further follow-on investment and partnering.”
SapVax has a pipeline of similar vaccines in development with lead vaccines targeting a key antigen expressed in a broad range of cancers and Epstein-Barr virus proteins strongly associated with certain cancers, including nasopharyngeal cancer, lymphoma, and gastric cancer.
The research was funded by the Maurice Wilkins Centre of Research Excellence at the University of Auckland.
Auckland UniServices managed the transitional and early preclinical research program, which was supported by the University of Auckland Inventors’ Fund and the New Zealand government’s Pre-Seed Accelerator Fund.
The University of Auckland, represented by UniServices, was advised on the funding and licensing transaction by Innovator Capital, the London based, life sciences and sustainable technology specialist investment bank.
ENDS
Notes for Editors
BioMotiv is the
mission-driven accelerator associated with The Harrington
Project for Discovery and Development, a $300 million
initiative for advancing medicine centered at University
Hospitals in Cleveland. The focus is to accelerate
breakthrough discoveries from research institutions into
therapeutics for patients through an innovative model that
efficiently aligns capital and collaborations. For more
information, go to www.biomotiv.com.
Auckland
UniServices Ltd is the commercial research, knowledge
transfer and custom education company of the University of
Auckland. It is dedicated to connecting the University’s
capabilities to business and investors, Government and the
community. UniServices is the manager of the University of
Auckland’s seed fund, the University of Auckland
Inventors’ Fund, a $20 million fund dedicated to investing
in technology and start-ups developed by the staff and
students of the University. For more information, go to:
www.uniservices.co.nz/
Many University of Auckland academics are also inventors and entrepreneurs. According to The Reuters Top 75 list of Asia’s most innovative universities in 2016, the University ranks as the most innovative university in Australasia. For more information, go to: https://www.auckland.ac.nz
ends