GENE ONLINE|News &
Opinion
Blog

2022-06-02| Licensing

Astellas’ $20.5M Deal With GO Therapeutics to Develop Immuno-Oncology Therapeutics

by Fujie Tham
Share To

Japanese drugmaker Astellas announced a strategic partnership with Cambridge, MA-based GO Therapeutics to advance antibody-based cancer therapeutics in combination with glycoproteins that specifically target cancer cells. Under this agreement, the two will collaborate to identify novel antibodies with high affinity to two different glycoprotein targets and apply these antibodies in clinical settings.

GO is eyeing Xyphos Biosciences’ ConvertibleCAR technology platform, the biotech was acquired by Astellas in December 2019 for $120 million upfront.

“The combination of GO’s targets and antibodies and Astellas’ ACCEL technology promises to create a new generation of cancer treatments that have a greater therapeutic index. This will enable oncologists to increase the efficacy of antibody-based immunotherapies for solid tumors with less damage to healthy tissues,” said Constantine Theodoropulos, co-founder and CEO of GO Therapeutics.

Related article: Cell and Gene Therapy Landscape in Japan is Moving Beyond Oncology

 

convertibleCAR Technology for Flexible Cell Therapies

 

Astellas’ re-configurable CAR (chimeric antigen receptor) platform – convertibleCAR, creates flexible cell therapies that can be engineered and re-engineered inside the body to target more than one tumor antigen, offering better methods to mobilize immune cells to seek out and eliminate target tumor cells. While GO’s pipeline focuses on truncated O-glycans unique to cancer cells’ surfaces and the developments of high-affinity antibodies against cancer O-glycoproteins.

GO will lead the discovery of antibodies against cancer glycoproteins targets. Astellas will handle research activities, clinical development, and more. Xyphos will pay GO Therapeutics $20.5 million upfront, with possible total payment of $763 million. 

GO Therapeutics is currently running 7 antibody programs, encompassing receptor proteins, mucins, extracellular matrix, etc. In 2018, GO also entered into a similar immuno-oncology deal with Roche for $9 million in advance, and $186 million in potential milestone payments.

The deal follows Astellas’ research collaboration and license agreement with Twist Bioscience, announced last month, to identify potential therapeutic antibodies which would reduce tumor microenvironment-mediated immunosuppression.

©www.geneonline.com All rights reserved. Collaborate with us: service@geneonlineasia.com
Related Post
Pfizer’s Q1 2024 Revenue Declines, Offset by Strong Performance of Non-COVID-19 Products
2024-05-03
LATEST
Pfizer’s Q1 2024 Revenue Declines, Offset by Strong Performance of Non-COVID-19 Products
2024-05-03
Novo Nordisk Revises Outlook: Reports 24% Growth in Q1 2024 Sales, Reaching DKK 65.3 Billion
2024-05-03
UC Riverside Scientists Unveil RNA-based Vaccine Strategy, Potentially Avoiding Endless Booster Shots
2024-05-02
Lilly’s Q1 2024 Financial Report: Full-Year Revenue Outlook Raised by $2 Billion, with a 67% Net Income Increase
2024-05-02
Taiwan Breakthrough: Next-Generation Sequencing Now Covered in Health Insurance, Benefitting 20,000 Cancer Patients Annually
2024-05-02
CellTech Accelerator and Cyto-Facto Inc. Forge Strategic Partnership to Advance CGT Industry Growth
2024-04-29
Kaiser’s Data Breach: 13.4 Million Affected in Healthcare Conglomerates Privacy Crisis
2024-04-26
EVENT
Scroll to Top