Categories
Healthcare

Immetas Therapeutics announces Series A financing to advance research on inflammation pathways in aging and develop therapeutics for cancer and inflammatory disease

Immetas Therapeutics Announces Series A Financing to Advance Research on Inflammation Pathways in Aging and Develop Therapeutics for Cancer and Inflammatory Disease,

EAST HANOVER, N.J.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Immetas Therapeutics today announced it has raised a Series A financing of $11 million to advance research on inflammation pathways in aging and the development of novel, immune modulating treatments for cancer and inflammatory disease. Morningside Ventures was the sole investor in the financing round.

“Morningside’s investment is a significant endorsement of our approach to targeting inflammation pathways in aging and our clinical evidence-based discovery strategy,” said J. Gene Wang, MD, PhD, co-founder and CEO. “Emerging research that molecular pathways driving both aging and age-related diseases converge around chronic, low grade inflammation is creating a new set of opportunities to treat cancer and other serious diseases. Immetas is well positioned to capitalize on these new advances.”

Dr. Wang added, “Our approach prioritizes clinical evidence and a deep interrogation of disease mechanisms to guide drug discovery. This strategy is designed to reduce development risk resulting from the ‘translational’ gap between laboratory findings and patients and ensure the development of superior and well-differentiated drugs.”

Dr. Wang co-founded Immetas after a 20-year career at large pharmaceutical companies, including Merck, Abbott, GSK and Novartis, where he played integral roles in the successful development of major drugs, including Humira® (adalimumab), Varubi® (rolapitant), Zolinza® (vorinostat) and Gardasil® (human papilloma virus vaccine), and led multiple programs from discovery to clinical proof-of-concept. Dr. Wang received his M.D. from Peking University Medical Center and Ph.D. in Immunobiology from Yale University, followed by medical residency training at Yale New Haven Hospital.

Immetas other co-founder, Dr. David Sinclair, is an internationally recognized scientist known for his research on genes and small molecules that delay aging, including Sirtuin genes, resveratrol and NAD precursors. He was among TIME magazine’s “50 Most Influential People in Healthcare” in 2018. Dr. Sinclair is Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and co-Director of the Paul F. Glenn Center for Biology of Aging Research at Harvard and he serves as a science advisor to the Company.

“We have a shared vision that inflammation is the fundamental and ultimate process driving aging and age-related cancers and inflammatory diseases,” said Dr. Sinclair. “Our approach is distinct from others that have targeted conventional age-related pathways and to date have proved challenging.”

The Company is building a pipeline of biologic and small molecule drugs internally and through collaborations. Immetas’ lead program is aimed at designing a series of bi-specific antibodies to regulate inflammation in the tumor microenvironment and overcome resistance to conventional immune checkpoint therapies.

In connection with the financing, Dr. Lu Huang, MD, MBA, Managing Director at Morningside Ventures, joined the Immetas board of directors. Since joining Morningside in 2003, Dr. Huang has led nearly three dozen healthcare / life science investments in China and the United States.

About Immetas Therapeutics

Immetas discovers and develops novel therapeutics that modulate the innate immune system to treat age-related cancers and inflammatory diseases. The company’s approach is based on emerging evidence that chronic low-grade inflammation is a fundamental process governing aging and age-related diseases and anchored in clinical evidence to mitigate development risk. Immetas was founded by J. Gene Wang, MD, PhD, a veteran in discovery and translational drug development in immunology/ inflammation and oncology, and David Sinclair, PhD, Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and a leader in the molecular mechanisms of aging. The lead program in the company’s growing pipeline is focused on engineering bispecific antibodies to modulate inflammation in the tumor microenvironment and overcome resistance to the conventional immune checkpoint therapies. Learn more at www.immetas.com

Contacts

J. Gene Wang

gene@immetas.com

Peter Steinerman

prsteinerman@gmail.com

Go to Source
Author: WebSupport@BusinessWire.com

Categories
For Edit

We’ve hit 200,000 COVID deaths in 6 months. What will the next 6 months look like?

Experts weigh in on what the future may hold amid the pandemic.

 

— ABC News: Top Stories

Categories
For Edit

Woman, 102, beats coronavirus after surviving cancer, 1918 flu pandemic

The novel coronavirus was apparently no match for a 102-year-old woman in New Hampshire.

FOX News: Madeline Farber

Categories
For Edit

Post Malone leads 2020 Billboard Music Awards with 16 nominations

The 25-year-old’s nominations include top artist, top male artist, top rap artist and top streaming songs artist.

FOX News: Jessica Napoli

Categories
International & World

Hundreds of whales stranded off Tasmania

About 270 pilot whales became stranded on the west coast of the island state in Australia. Rescuers estimate that a third of them have already died.

— NYT: Livia Albeck-Ripka

Categories
Regulations & Security

‘Darknet’ opioid takedown nabs 179 suspects worldwide and $6.5M seized, DOJ announces

Justice Department officials on Tuesday announced the largest international opioid takedown targeting drug traffickers through the darknet, which resulted in 179 arrests and the seizure of more than $6.5 million in cash and currency.

 

— FOX News: Stephanie Pagones

Categories
For Edit

Romney supports McConnell push for Senate vote on Trump’s Supreme Court nominee

Utah GOP Sen. Mitt Romney announced Tuesday he supports a Senate vote on President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee — possibly before the November election.

ABC News: Top Stories

Categories
For Edit

‘Wonder Woman: 1984’ Japanese trailer shows off extended fight scenes following coronavirus postponement

The Japanese trailer for “Wonder Woman: 1984” is making the wait for the movie’s premiere even harder by offering an extended peek at the film’s action.

 

— FOX News: Tyler McCarthy

Categories
For Edit

NYC restaurant installs ‘space bubbles’ for sidewalk dining ahead of colder months

A French bistro in New York City has installed 18 plastic tents, or “space bubbles” as they’re being called, to help keep outdoor diners warm during the colder months.

 

— FOX News: Michael Bartiromo

Categories
For Edit

Why Ruth Bader Ginsburg refused to step down

She could have had President Obama nominate her successor. But she didn’t get to the Supreme Court by letting other people tell her what she could do.

— NYT: Top Stories