Skip to main content
BHI Weekly News Archives

417th Edition – August 4, 2020

By August 20, 2020No Comments




BioHealth Innovation


If you are having trouble viewing this email, please click here


August 4, 2020












FOUNDING MEMBER OF



Jennifer Butler, Executive Vice President and General Manager, Innate Pharma US Inc. sits down with Rich Bendis for BioTalk

Jennifer Butler, Executive Vice President and General Manager, Innate Pharma US Inc. joins Rich Bendis on BioTalk to discuss her career, bringing Innate from France to the US, and goals.

Listen now on Apple https://apple.co/3i30Bxs, Google https://bit.ly/2PkUw2U, Spotify https://spoti.fi/31gDh8n, TuneIn https://bit.ly/3fqn7i3, and YouTube Audio https://bit.ly/3kgU9ou.

Jennifer Butler was appointed Executive Vice President and General Manager of Innate Pharma US Inc. in March 2019.

Read More




Innate Pharma announces publication of EXPLORE COVID-19 translational study findings in Nature | Innate Pharma

Innate Pharma SA (Euronext Paris: IPH – ISIN: FR0010331421; Nasdaq: IPHA) (“Innate” or the “Company”) today announced the publication of a Nature paper entitled, “Association of COVID-19 inflammation with activation of the C5a-C5aR1 axis,” authored by Innate researchers in partnership with scientists from Hôpitaux Universitaires de Marseille AP-HM (La Timone and North Hospitals), Laveran Hospital, Aix Marseille University, the Centre d’Immunologie de Marseille-Luminy (Inserm, CNRS, AMU) and Marseille Immunopole/AP-HM immunoprofiling laboratory at La Timone Hospital.

This Marseille-based exploratory research taskforce, named EXPLORE COVID-19, analyzed immune cells in COVID-19 patients at different stages of the disease. The goal of the study was to gain translational insights to better understand the immune response in COVID-19 patients and identify potential targets to fight the viral infection.

Read More




Save the Date! 2020 BioHealth Capital Region Forum

This invitation-only event is free for executive level biotech leaders and is presented by BioHealth Innovation, Virginia Bio, Children’s National Health System, Johns Hopkins University, JPMorgan, Maryland Department of Commerce, George Mason University, University System of Maryland, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati and AstraZeneca.

The BioHealth Capital Region—Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, DC—sets the bar high for biotech innovation. So please join us for our 6th Annual BioHealth Capital Region Forum that will highlight the accomplishments of today and chart our successes of tomorrow.

For more information about our speakers and event schedule, please visit www.biohealthcapital.com/forum-2020

#BHCRForum20

 

Read More




BioFactura Awarded $1 Million SBIR Contract for Development of a Marburg Virus Therapeutic

FREDERICK, Md., July 29, 2020 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ — BioFactura, Inc. today announced a $1 million Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase II contract awarded by the Joint Science & Technology Office—Chemical and Biological Defense (JSTO-CBD) of the Department of Defense (DoD). The goal of this project is to develop, optimize, and scale-up a highly efficient mammalian cell culture-based bioprocess suitable to meet surge requirement needs for rapid manufacture of a monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapeutic against the Marburg virus (MARV) biothreat.

Read More




Hopkins spinoff Thrive Earlier Detection Corp. raises $257 million funding round – Baltimore Business Journal

Johns Hopkins cancer diagnostics spinoff Thrive Earlier Detection Corp. has raised $257 million in new funding a little over a year after it closed another huge round.

Thrive launched in May 2019 with $110 million in funding for its cancer-detecting blood test developed by researchers at Johns Hopkins. That Series A round was remarkable for its size. It was the largest ever raised in support of a Hopkins-licensed technology, and among the largest raised by any firm co-based in the Baltimore area.

Image: https://www-bizjournals-com

Read More




Biobuzz Directory – HemoShear Therapeutics Receives FDA Fast Track and Rare Pediatric Disease Designations for HST5040 to Treat Methylmalonic Acidemia and Propionic Acidemia

Charlottesville, Va., July 28, 2020 – HemoShear Therapeutics, a clinical stage company developing treatments for rare metabolic disorders, has received Fast Track and Rare Pediatric Disease designations from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for HST5040, a once-daily oral small molecule drug being developed to treat methylmalonic acidemia (MMA) and propionic acidemia (PA).

In June, HemoShear received clearance from the FDA for its Investigational New Drug application to conduct a phase 2 clinical study of HST5040 in patients with MMA and PA. MMA and PA are rare genetic disorders caused by the deficiency of certain enzymes required to metabolize amino acids.

Read More




Johns Hopkins Receives $35M In Funding For COVID-19 Blood Plasma Trials – CBS Baltimore

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — Johns Hopkins researchers have received over $30 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Defense for two nationwide clinical trials to test the effectiveness of a convalescent blood plasma outpatient treatment.

The treatment is a transfusion of a blood product from COVID-19 survivors that contains antibodies that may help the patient’s immune system fight the virus, researchers say.

Read More




American Gene Technologies (AGT) Moves HQ to New Facility, Expands Lab Space for HIV and Cancer Cure Research – Across From National Cancer Institute Campus | American Gene Technology

ROCKVILLE, Md., July 28, 2020 — American Gene Technologies (AGT), an internationally recognized leading gene and cell therapy company in Rockville, Maryland, today announced it has leased a spacious, modern facility in the Maryland life sciences corridor, across from National Cancer Institute and Johns Hopkins Shady Grove Campus.

Image: https://www.americangene.com

Read More




NIH Invests $248.7 Million to Ramp up COVID-19 Testing

Six months into the COVID-19 pandemic, the question of why tests that detect the presence of the SARS-CoV-2 virus are not faster, better, and cheaper in this country still remains. Despite an incredibly complicated answer, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has announced that they are going to help some companies work to develop their technologies, with the hope of getting over this roadblock. The program will give $248.7 million to seven biomedical diagnostic companies. The money is intended to support a range of new lab-based and point-of-care tests that, they hope, could significantly increase the number, type, and availability of tests by millions per week as early as September 2020.

Read More




TEDCO Announces New Executives | Maryland | curated.tncontentexchange.com

COLUMBIA, Md., July 28, 2020 /PRNewswire/ — TEDCO, Maryland’s economic engine for technology companies, announced today the appointments of Michael Hauser as the Managing Director of Investments and Terry Rauh as the Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer.

“Michael and Terry bring many years of leadership experience to fill these critical roles at TEDCO,” said Troy LeMaile-Stovall, TEDCO’s incoming CEO and executive director. “Leveraging their extensive knowledge of the Maryland business and innovation ecosystem, we’re looking forward to the impact they will make in fostering TEDCO’s mission.”

Image: Michael Hauser, TEDCO

Read More




Biotechnology draws $12.6B from private equity, venture capital activity in H1 | S&P Global Market Intelligence

Biotechnology led the healthcare industry in investment activity from private equity and venture capital during the first half of 2020, drawing nearly $12.60 billion in funding, up from $7.28 billion for the year-ago period.

The biotechnology sector either announced or concluded 342 deals globally as of June 30, comprising mergers and acquisitions and private placements, where the main investor was either a venture capitalist, a hedge fund manager or a private equity company, according to an analysis by S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Image: https://www.spglobal.com

Read More




Johns Hopkins Ranks 3rd In The Nation’s Best Hospitals List – CBS Baltimore

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — Johns Hopkins Hospital ranked no. 3 among the nation’s best hospitals, according to U.S. News & World Report.

The Best Hospitals List was released Tuesday with The Mayo Clinic earning the no. 1 overall ranking this year, followed by Cleveland Clinic at no. 2 out of 4,500 hospitals.

U.S. News & World Report also ranked 12 specialties at Hopkins among the top 10 in the country. Ear, Nose, and Throat, Neurology and Neurosurgery, Psychiatry, and Rheumatology ranked no. 1.

Read More




5 Questions with Jamie Lacey-Moreira, Principal and Founder, PressComm PR, LLC · BioBuzz

“5 Questions With……” is a weekly BioBuzz series where we reach out to interesting people in the BioHealth Capital Region to share a little about themselves, their work, and maybe something completely unrelated. This edition features Jamie Lacey-Moreira, Principal and Founder, PressComm PR, LLC.

Read More




EXCLUSIVE! A Personal Interview with Rita Colwell in Advance of Her Book “A Lab of One’s Own”

Rita Colwell is perhaps best known for her research on the pathogenic bacterium Vibrio cholerae. But the designation of pioneer is a label befitting Colwell for far-reaching contributions to many other areas, including her decades-long fight against sexism in a male-dominated field.

Colwell’s unique perspective on sexism in science is now able to be explored in her book, A Lab of One’s Own: One Woman’s Personal Journey Through Sexism in Science, which will be released on August 4th.

Read More




Opinion | Sputnik set off the Space Age. This virus can spark the Health Age. – The Washington Post

Regina E. Dugan is chief executive of Wellcome Leap, a nonprofit that seeks breakthroughs in human health. From 2009 to 2012, she served as director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

The global pandemic is a hinge in history. Hundreds of thousands of lives lost globally; trillions in economic damage. It is as if the 1918 flu and the 1929 crash happened in the same year. It is the kind of event that alters the course of history so much that we measure time by it: before the pandemic — and after. It is a Sputnik moment.

Image: Astronaut Buzz Aldrin walks on the surface of the moon on July 20, 1969. (Neil Armstrong/NASA via AP)

Read More




SARS-CoV-2 Lurked for Decades Where Others Like It Lurk Still

Future pandemics—and suffering of the kind inflicted by COVID-19—could be avoided if we troubled ourselves to see where dangerous pathogens lie in wait. We could, two unrelated studies suggest, save ourselves untold woe and conserve our fortunes if we were to look into matters geographic, zoologic, and genomic. More specifically, we need to keep our eyes wide open when we venture into the planet’s last wild places. There, we may run into wild animals that are infected with pathogens harboring wild genetic traits—which is to say, genetic traits that evolved naturally, beyond our gaze, and that waited patiently, perhaps decades, for a chance to strike.

Read More




Illumina Accelerator Grant Competition

Now Accepting Rolling Grant Applications

The Illumina Accelerator Sequencing Grant Competition encourages entrepreneurs to build startups using next-generation sequencing. Awarded grant winners have the opportunity to spend one week at Illumina Accelerator in the San Francisco Bay Area to run proof-of-concept sequencing experiments. It’s a great way to learn more about each other and to help advance your genomics-driven startup.

Read More



Home | About BHI | BHI News | Programs | Partners | Contact

Copyright © BioHealth Innovation 2017
All Rights Reserved.



You have successfully subscribed to the newsletter

There was an error while trying to send your request. Please try again.

BioHealth Innovation will use the information you provide on this form to be in touch with you and to provide updates and marketing.