TechCrunch News 2024年10月30日
Archon emerges from stealth with $20M and ‘antibody cages’ to power up drug development
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Archon Biosciences是一家利用AI设计新型生物分子的生物技术初创公司,刚获得2000万美元种子资金。该公司旨在利用特殊设计的蛋白质“笼”增强抗体治疗效果,为药物开发带来新机遇。这是从华盛顿大学贝克实验室衍生出的首家公司,其技术具有开创性。

🎯Archon Biosciences利用AI设计新型生物分子,获2000万美元种子资金。公司从华盛顿大学贝克实验室衍生,该实验室由计算生物学家大卫·贝克领导,其团队的研究为行业奠定基础。

💊公司旨在通过特殊设计的蛋白质“笼”增强抗体治疗效果,解决抗体治疗中存在的问题,如难以控制抗体与目标的结合程度,而蛋白质“笼”可显著提高结合的几率。

🛠Archon的蛋白质设计平台使用贝克实验室创建并授权的工具,其成果蛋白质“笼”可能有多种效果,且制造不需要特殊方法,能大规模生产蛋白质和抗体的地方就能生产蛋白质“笼”。

💰2000万美元的融资由Madrona Ventures领投,多家机构参与。此外,公司还获得一些机构和政府部门约700万美元的资助。

Archon Biosciences, a biotech startup putting AI to work designing novel biomolecules, has just emerged from stealth with an impressive $20 million in seed funding. The company aims to supercharge antibody treatments using specially designed protein “cages” that multiply their effects, opening up new opportunities in drug development.

This is the first company to be spun out of Baker Lab, the University of Washington research outfit overseen by pioneering computational biologist and recent Nobel Prize winner David Baker. His team’s work on generative protein design using AI and other means has been foundational in the fast-evolving industry, and Archon is taking a specific aspect of it to market.

One shortcoming of antibody treatments (and research into effective treatments) is that, like all molecular biology, the process depends a bit on chance. It’s difficult to control how much an antibody or protein actually binds to its target on a cell or other surface.

What Archon’s antibody cages, or AbCs, do (as documented in this paper published in Science) is offer a scaffold for modifying and multiplying their effectiveness. A free-floating antibody may have only a small chance of binding to a target protein, but if you were to stick a dozen of them together in a big dodecahedron, that significantly and perhaps profoundly improves that chance.

This may be the difference between being able to tell if a medication works or not.

“There are many high-profile cases where we understand not only a target’s biology but also why past attempts to drug the target have failed in the clinic. These key disease levers are at our fingertips, but we lack the tools to safely and effectively engage them,” explained James Lazarovits, co-founder and CEO of Archon in a press release. “We have developed a proprietary protein design platform coupled with rapid in-house manufacturing and testing to revolutionize how biologics are developed.”

The startup’s protein design platform uses the generative protein creation and simulation tools created at and licensed from Baker Lab, and the resulting AbCs could have a variety of effects. And they don’t need any exotic manufacturing methods — if you can produce proteins and antibodies at scale, you can probably make AbCs too.

The $20 million round was led by Madrona Ventures with participation from DUMAC Inc., Sahsen Ventures, WRF Capital, Pack Ventures, Alexandria Venture Investments, and Cornucopian Capital; it comes on top of some $7 million in grants from a number of institutes and government agencies.

Archon is, like UW and Baker Lab, based in Seattle. TechCrunch will be visiting soon to learn and share more about this promising spinout.

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Archon Biosciences AI设计 生物分子 抗体治疗
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