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From: Paul Morris cj
To: "jeffrey E." <jeevacationggmail.eom>
Subject: fyi'm sure u know [C]
Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2015 19:18:48 +0000
Classification: Confidential
To this point, the technology known as CRISPR-Cas9 has been a science project, a research tool with
enormous potential—and significant questions to answer—on which venture capitalists have placed
bets by forming a group of startups. The jackpot: CRISPR-Cas9, a method of performing precise
genetic surgery, might yield treatments for a wide array of previously intractable diseases.
We're still a long way from anybody claiming that prize, though; no CRISPR-Cas9 therapy has ever
been tested in a human being, and a whole lot could go wrong when that happens. Emerging
technologies, after all, go through their ups and downs. But today some of the biggest names on Wall
Street and elsewhere are showing that they like the odds by handing the largest round of funding yet
to a CRISPR-Cas9 startup.
Cambridge-based Editas Medicine is announcing a $120 million Series B round led by Bill Gates's
chief advisor for science and technology, Boris Nikolic. The list of financiers teaming with Nikolic reads
like a rolodex of so-called crossover investors, who invest in both public and private entities, and
corporate venture arms. Among them: Deerfield Management, Viking Global Investors, Fidelity
Management & Research, T. Rowe Price Associates, Google Ventures, Jennison Associates, Khosla
Ventures, EcoR1 Capital, Casdin Capital, Omega Funds, Cowen Private Investments, and Alexandria
Venture Investments. Editas' founding VC backers—Flagship Ventures Polaris Partners and Third
Rock Ventures-also pitched in, as did Partners Innovation Fund.
Nikolic, who is joining Editas' board, made the investment through what's been called "bng0," a new
U.S.-based investment company backed by "large family offices with a global presence and long-term
investment horizon" and formed specifically to invest in Editas. CEO Katrine Bosley confirmed that
Gates is one of the individuals investing in Editas alongside Nikolic.
To be clear, while this is a significant round, it's not even close to the largest financing round for a
biotech startup. During the latest boom, we've seen messenger RNA drug developer Moderna
Therapeutics haul in a record $450 million. And the now-public cancer immunotherapy company Juno
Therapeutics (NASDAQ: JUNO)—which Editas recently partnered with—got $310 million last year
before taking itself public.
But the round is still the largest financial investment made yet in a CRISPR-Cas9 startup, adding to
the quickly gathering momentum of the field's fledgling companies. Intellia Therapeutics and CRISPR
Therapeutics (both of which have operations in Cambridge) were both formed after Editas, and both
have made strides as well: Intellia raised a $15 million Series A last year and then cut a broad
collaboration with Novartis in January. CRISPR hauled in $64 million in April in a round that was led by
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Celgene (NASDAQ: CELG) and the venture arm of GlaxoSmithKline. Caribou Biosciences of Berkeley,
CA, too, is part of the fray, having recently raised an $11 million Series A of its own.
Editas has become the first of the group not only to attract crossover backers, but to begin discussing
the diseases that its targeting. Its first program, Bosley says, is a potential treatment for a form of leber
congenital amaurosis (LCA), a genetically driven blindness. It's a different form of the LCA than the
gene therapy company Spark Therapeutics (NASDAQ: ONCE) is targeting; Bosley says the one
Editas is going after can't be solved by gene therapy.
Beyond that, and Editas's ongoing immuno-oncology work with Juno, Editas has done some very early
work in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and is exploring ways to repair a mutant hemoglobin gene—
something that could have an impact in a range of bleeding disorders. That doesn't mean this is where
Editas will ultimately focus—Bosley notes, for instance, that there are big technical challenges of
producing an effective CRISPR-Cas9 therapy for Duchenne—but it's a glimpse into the company's
thinking.
Bosley won't estimate how long it'll be before the first Editas therapy begins human testing, noting that
the company is in the midst of preclinical work, testing its technology in patient cells. "We have a little
bit more work to do before we can really be explicit about a specific timeline," she says.
Does that mean a few years? "I don't think it'll take that long," she says. "We'll move sooner than that if
we have a construct that's good enough."
For those new to the story, CRISPR-Cas9 is a two-part system derived from a defense mechanism
that bacteria use to fend off viruses. Think of it as a pair of molecular scissors (an enzyme called
CRISPR-associated protein 9, or Cas9) being carried into a cell's nucleus by a strand of RNA that
serves as a guide (clustered, regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats, aka CRISPR). Once
there, the scissors may be able to snip out a defective gene, and perhaps replace it with a new,
functioning one. In the case of Editas's LCA program, for instance, Bosley says the company aims to
make two specific cuts in two different DNA sites to eliminate the genetic mutation causing the
disease.
This isn't the first gene editing technique to emerge; Sangamo Biosciences (NASDAQ: SGMO) and its
zinc finger nuclease platform have the most advanced gene editing candidate, a potential therapy for
HIV in Phase 2 testing. But CRISPR-Cas9 has taken the medical world by storm because of how easy
it is to use, and the broad potential it may have. CRISPR technology has already been used to modify
the genomes of plants and animals, but that ease of use has also led to some serious ethical
questions. One of the field's pioneers, UC Berkeley's Jennifer Doudna, and several others have called
for a moratorium on using CRISPR-Cas9 to edit the human germline—making changes to sperm,
eggs, and embryos that would then be passed along to future generations—and have warned against
altering humans for non-medical reasons.
There are also some practical concerns when it comes to using CRISPR-Cas9 for therapeutics. How
can a therapy using this technology be delivered into the body effectively? Will it safely do its work, or
cut DNA in the wrong places? One wrong snip—a so-called off-target effect—could cause serious
unintended consequences, and ensuring that this doesn't happen is just one of the technical
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challenges that have to be faced before a CRISPR-Cas9 drug begins human testing. One need only
look at the up and down history of gene therapy and RNA interference drugs to see the roller coaster
likely ahead as researchers try to figure out how to use CRISPR-Cas9 for therapeutics.
While Bosley acknowledges the challenges to come, she notes that part of the excitement surrounding
CRISPR-Cas9 is that it's come at a time when "our knowledge of the genome is just at a
fundamentally different place" than it was many years ago. She adds that a lot of progress has been
made to combat potential off-target effects, like figuring out the exact right size of the RNA guides and
which types of Cas9 enzymes to use. Meanwhile, Editas co-founder Keith Joung has developed a tool
called "Guide-Seq" to track instances of unintended DNA cuts.
And as for delivering these treatments, Editas "isn't trying to reinvent the wheel," Bosley says. Rather,
it's looking to proven delivery methods—at least initially. For the LCA program, it's delivering a
CRISPR/Cas9 using adeno-associated virus a delivery vector that has been used by a number of
gene therapy companies. It could use other established delivery technologies, like lipid nanoparticles
(often used to shepherd RNA interference drugs into the body) or electroporation (in which an electric
pulse creates tiny holes in cells that allow drugs to gain entry).
Still, delivery is "a critical challenge in this field, there's no question about that," she says.
A patent battle between Editas and Doudna's group at UC Berkeley is also part of the mix. The U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office awarded the first CRISPR-related patent in April 2014 to the Broad
Institute of MIT and Harvard for work led by the Broad's Feng Zhang (an Editas co-founder). The
Berkeley group is fighting the patent, claiming it made the invention first. Doudna's work is licensed to
Caribou, which in turn has licensed use of its technology for human therapies to Intellia. The work of
Doudna's co-inventor Emmanuelle Charpentier is licensed to CRISPR. And Doudna herself was an
Editas co-founder but as MIT Technology Review first reported, later cut ties with the company. When
asked about the patent case, Bosley didn't give an update directly, but said that the company has a
"broad portfolio of IP" that it's licensed in, and that it's developing patent applications from its own
internal work as well.
All of which is why the progress of Editas and its rivals will be so closely watched, and why the
financing today marks such a noteworthy step for the technology. Crossover backers have been
increasingly active during the biotech boom, joining up with early stage companies to lay the
foundation for a number of public offerings. Editas has become the first of the CRISPR-Cas9 group to
amass that kind of support, but deciding when to take the leap to the public markets is critical,
particularly for a company with a new and unproven technology. Moderna executives, for instance,
contended that they were not thinking of an IPO in the short term when they raised $450 million.
Bosley also brushed off thoughts of an IPO, at least in the short term. While Editas will almost certainly
have to tap Wall Street at some point to build the broad type of company it hopes to be, there's much
work to be done first. That means adding a significant number to its roughly 40-person staff, refining its
strategy, and using some of that $120 million to bring several programs to clinical testing.
"We are on a marathon here at Editas," Bosley says. "As much as we think there's some nearer term
possibilities of things we might be able to address in a more straightforward way, there's a lot to do to
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really develop the platform."
Paul Morris
Managing Director
Deutsche Bank Private Bank
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EFTA00635889
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| Filename | EFTA00635886.pdf |
| File Size | 363.2 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 10,959 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T23:12:25.634848 |