64x Bio Raises $55 Million Series A Financing to Advance Cell Line Engineering Platform for Gene Therapy Manufacturing
January 19 2022 - 7:00AM
Business Wire
- Multibillion-dollar gene therapy market facing critical
manufacturing bottleneck that limits reach of lifesaving therapies
to patients
- VectorSelect™ platform has the potential to revolutionize the
economics and accessibility of gene therapy.
64x Bio, a synthetic biology company, today announced the close
of a $55 million Series A financing round to fund the expansion of
its VectorSelect™ platform, a novel cell line engineering
technology which has the potential to revolutionize the economics
and accessibility of gene therapy.
The Series A financing was led by Lifeforce Capital, with
significant participation from Northpond Ventures, individual
investor Michael Chambers (co-founder and former CEO of Aldevron),
Future Ventures, and insider First Round Capital. Chris Gibson
(co-founder and CEO of Recursion), Alix Ventures, as well as
previous investors, Fifty Years, SV Angel, BoxGroup, and Refactor
Capital, also participated in the oversubscribed round.
The funding will advance 64x’s cell line engineering platform
VectorSelect™ to design improved cell lines for a wide range of
gene therapies. 64x will also use the proceeds to dramatically grow
its employee base and partnership efforts with leading gene therapy
companies, through the expansion of additional intellectual
property, operations, and business development infrastructure.
“This Series A financing will allow us to take VectorSelect™ to
the next level and grow our business infrastructure to establish
more partnerships,” said Alexis “Lex” Rovner, PhD, CEO &
co-founder, 64x Bio. “With the support of our incredible investors
and scientific team, we aim to become the leading developer of
vector manufacturing cell lines, to revolutionize the economics of
gene therapy and the reach of these lifesaving medicines to
patients.”
“Viral vectors, engineered viruses that deliver a genetic
payload to cells, are a critical component of many biologic drugs.
Current vector manufacturing cell lines suffer from poor yield and
quality, limiting the scale and impact of biologics drug
development. This limitation is a major bottleneck for the gene
therapy field, which relies heavily on vectors,” said Sander
Duncan, General Partner at Lifeforce Capital, who joins 64x’s Board
of Directors. “64x’s technology platform VectorSelect™ has the
potential to reduce cost and increase manufacturing capacity by
orders of magnitude,” he added.
With current cell lines, vector manufacturing carries tremendous
cost and in-house manufacturing capacity is exceeded for even the
smallest disease populations. For gene therapy to deliver on its
potential to address widespread diseases, capacity would need to
increase by six orders of magnitude in many cases. “Contract
manufacturers are facing multi-year waitlists due to increasing
demand from the growing market, so simply outsourcing the process
is not a solution. Combined with prohibitively high manufacturing
costs, this means that many gene therapies cannot be manufactured
today, and 64x directly addresses this challenge,” said Michael
Chambers.
“The industry has poured billions of dollars into the expansion
of vector manufacturing facilities in recent years. However, the
problem is more fundamental than physical infrastructure. This is a
genetics problem and the solutions are going to be in tailoring how
a cell interacts with the viral components,” said George Church,
PhD, co-founder of 64x Bio, Professor of Genetics at Harvard
Medical School, and founding Core Faculty member at the Wyss
Institute at Harvard University. “Until now, genetic tailoring of
manufacturing cells has failed to deliver. Overcoming the cellular
barriers to viral production will require many cellular mutations
in combination, which means testing potentially trillions of mutant
cells. Existing cell line engineering and screening technologies
have not been up to the challenge,” he added.
VectorSelect™ uniquely allows 64x to map millions of unique
cellular genotypes to their individual vector production
phenotypes. In this way, the technology enables high-throughput
data generation from massively multiplexed experiments on millions
of candidate cell lines simultaneously. 64x then applies
computational tools to its growing CellMap™ database of proprietary
mutant data to filter trillions of possible solutions into millions
of screenable genetic combinations, further increasing the speed
and efficacy of cell line development. Together, this enables
discovery of cell lines with otherwise unattainable and radically
improved productivities. The company is currently focused on cell
and gene therapy and plans to expand to other markets in the
future.
About 64x Bio
Using novel high throughput genome engineering and screening
technologies in a design loop with computational tools, 64x Bio is
developing new ways of generating highly optimized and otherwise
unattainable cell lines for the manufacturing of viral vectors,
with a specific focus on those used for cell and gene therapies.
The novel approach developed by founders at Harvard Medical School
and the Wyss Institute at Harvard University promises to bring more
cell and gene therapies to patients. The company is headquartered
in San Francisco, CA. For more information, visit www.64xbio.com.
Follow us on Twitter @64xbio.
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Media: Kimberly Ha KKH Advisors 917-291-5744
kimberly.ha@kkhadvisors.com