Business Roundup - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

The start-up also says it has completed a successful test in Silsbee, Texas, of its biomass-based aromatics production process. Waters Corp. and Wyatt...
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NUCLEIC ACIDS

BIOSIMILARS

▸ Japanese companies advance microwaves

▸ Cipla seeks partner for business

Two Japanese firms, PeptiDream and Microwave Chemical, are joining to develop a process for low-cost mass production of peptides with the aid of microwaves. The two companies say they have produced peptides in small quantities but don’t yet fully understand how the microwave process functions. PeptiDream develops libraries of peptides that it tests against disease targets to find hits. Microwave Chemical specializes in scaling up the use of microwaves for chemical production.—JEAN-

The Indian drug producer Cipla is hoping to find a partner or buyer for its biosimilars business. Cipla’s strength is in small-molecule chemistry, not biologic drugs, a company executive tells C&EN. The biosimilars business operates a plant and R&D center in Goa on India’s west coast. Cipla has developed biosimilars of Genentech’s cancer drugs Avastin and Herceptin but has not launched them in regulated markets. The company’s decision comes a few weeks after Merck KGaA agreed to sell its biosimilars business to Fresenius.—JEAN-FRANÇOIS TREMBLAY

FRANÇOIS TREMBLAY

BIOLOGICS

▸ Merck will boost production in Ireland Merck & Co. will spend $315 million over the next three years to boost drug and vaccine production at facilities in Counties Carlow and Cork, Ireland. The investment is expected to create 200 jobs at the Cork plant. There, Merck specializes in fermentation, purification, and sterilization of biologic medicines for lung cancer, melanoma, hepatitis C, and arthritis. The Carlow facility, which makes vaccines and biologics, will take on 120 new employees.—RICK MULLIN

ONCOLOGY

▸ Array licenses cancer compounds to Ono Array BioPharma has licensed Japan’s Ono Pharmaceutical the right to develop two late-stage oncology compounds, binimetinib and encorafenib, in Japan and South Korea. Array will get $32 million up

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BIOTECHNOLOGY

Attempting to right its financial course, ImmunoGen has handed over rights to several compounds to Sanofi in exchange for $30 million. The deal amends a long-running collaboration with Sanofi, which gains a license to assets including isatuximab, an antibody in Phase III studies for multiple myeloma, and SAR566658, an antibody-drug conjugate in Phase II trials for breast cancer. Last month, Im-

▸ Eastman Chemical will spend $12 million to expand window and paint protection film capacity at a plant in Martinsville, Va. The enlargement will create 15 new jobs.

since October 2016. The start-up also says it has completed a successful test in Silsbee, Texas, of its biomass-based aromatics production process.

▸ Croda is building a $35 million plant in Hull, England, that will almost double its capacity for fatty acid amide-based polymer additives. The additives address issues such as friction, scratch resistance, and stability in plastics.

▸ Waters Corp. and Wyatt Technology have entered a comarketing agreement that couples a Wyatt multiangle light-scattering detector with Waters’s ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography system. Customers will be able to determine the properties of polymers, peptides, and proteins without relying only on column calibration or reference standards, they say.

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▸ ImmunoGen hands drug rights to Sanofi

Business Roundup

▸ Anellotech says it has raised $800,000 from an undisclosed investor, bringing its funding to $3.2 million

munoGen took in another $30 million after Debiopharm bought the rights to IMGN529, an ADC in early-stage studies for B-cell cancers. Last September, ImmunoGen laid off 17% of its staff in an effort to save cash.—LISA JARVIS

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Binimetinib front and up to $156 million in milestone payments. The compounds are in Phase III studies of patients with BRAF-mutant cancers. Array recently struck a deal to assess binimetinib with two Bristol-Myers Squibb immuno-oncology agents.—

MICHAEL MCCOY

▸ Eisai and Charles River Laboratories have extended a drug discovery pact focused on tropical and neurological diseases. The partners, which work out of Eisai’s research center in Hatfield, England, will now also collaborate with Medicines for Malaria Venture scientists. ▸ Aslan Pharmaceuticals has raised $33 million from its initial public stock offering. The Singapore-based company, which focuses on treatments for tumors that are prevalent in Asia, has one drug candidate in clinical trials in the U.S. ▸ Inthera Bioscience has raised close to $11 million

in its first round of venture capital funding, led by Merck Ventures. The Swiss firm is developing cancer treatments based on small-molecule inhibitors of intracellular protein-protein interactions. ▸ The Global Health Innovative Technology Fund has raised about $200 million from the Japanese government, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and other organizations to develop drugs for diseases prevalent in developing countries. Launched in 2013 with $100 million, the Japanese fund supports 61 projects, including six undergoing clinical trials.

JUNE 5, 2017 | CEN.ACS.ORG | C&EN

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