BioMotiv
IndustryBiotechnology
FoundedCleveland, Ohio, 2012
Headquarters,
United States Edit this on Wikidata
Key people
Baiju Shah, CEO
SubsidiariesAllinaire Therapeutics
Dual Therapeutics
Kodosil Bio
Koutif Therapeutics
Nynex Therapeutics
Optikira
Orca Therapeutics
SapVax
Sujana
Inclera
Websitewww.biomotiv.com

BioMotiv is an accelerator company associated with The Harrington Project, an initiative centered at University Hospitals of Cleveland. Therapeutic opportunities were identified through relationships with The Harrington Discovery Institute, university and research institutions, disease foundations, and industry sources. Once opportunities are identified, BioMotiv oversees the development, funding, active management, and partnering of the therapeutic products.

History

The Harrington Project was launched as an effort to bridge varying aspects of the drug development sphere. In response to recent decline in the number of traditional, early-stage biotechnology venture capital firms,[1] BioMotiv utilizes an asset-centric model to in-license, fund, and manage technologies in-house.[2] Its goal is to address the "valley of death" [3] between research, discovery, and early clinical-stage drug development. Projects were advanced by the management team through clinical proof-of-concept, and then out-licensed via strategic alliances with pharmaceutical companies.[4]

The company has raised over $146 million to date. Major investors include The Harrington Family, University Hospitals of Cleveland,[5] Takeda Pharmaceutical Company,[6] Biogen,[7] Arix Bioscience,[8] and Charles River Laboratories.[9]

Leadership

Ron Harrington, BioMotiv's Board of Managers Chairman and The Harrington Project's lead, led Edgepark Medical Supplies and after growing the business successfully, sold the company in 2011 to Goldman Sachs and Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (which renamed the company AssuraMed and sold it again in 2014 to Cardinal Health, Inc.).

BioMotiv recruited Baiju Shah, former CEO of BioEnterprise, a non-profit aimed at boosting Cleveland's healthcare economy,[10] to lead its efforts.[11] Prior to founding BioEnterprise, Baiju worked at McKinsey & Company.[12]

Ted Torphy is BioMotiv's Chief Scientific Officer. Prior to BioMotiv, he served as Global Head of External Innovation & Business Models for Discovery Sciences, Vice President and Head of External Research and Early Development, and Corporate Vice President and Head of Johnson & Johnson's Corporate Office of Science & Technology.

David C. U'Prichard is the Chairman of the Advisory Board; he has served on a number of biotechnology boards, as a venture partner at several funds, and was Chairman of Research and Development at SmithKline Beecham.

Subsidiaries

BioMotiv launched its first subsidiary company, Orca Pharmaceuticals, in 2013.[13] Based in Oxford, England, it worked in collaboration with New York University Innovation Venture Fund to develop RAR-related orphan receptor gamma (RORy) inhibitors for treatments of psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, and inflammatory bowel disease.

Today, BioMotiv's subsidiary portfolio includes ten companies across five indication areas:

Company Indication Source Institution
Allinaire Therapeutics Cardiology Indiana University
Dual Therapeutics Cancer Mt. Sinai School of Medicine

Case Western Reserve University

Kodosil Immunology BioAtla
Koutif Therapeutics Immunology University of Pittsburgh
Nynex Therapeutics Cancer University of Michigan
Optikira Neurology University of California, San Francisco

University of Washington

Orca Therapeutics Immunology New York University
SapVax Cancer University of Auckland
Sujana Cardiovascular Case Western Reserve University

Cleveland Clinic

Inclera Various Indiana University

University of Pennsylvania

Partnerships

BioMotiv's strategic partners include leaders in the drug development and pharmaceutical industries, as well as disease foundations.

In September 2014, BioMotiv entered into its first strategic partnership with Takeda Pharmaceutical Company in the areas of Immunology & Inflammation and Cardio-metabolic Diseases.[14]

Today, BioMotiv has four strategic partners:

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Booth, Bruce. "Where Is Everyone? Biotech's Dwindling Number of Venture Firms". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  2. Parmar, Arundhati (2012-12-05). "There's a new twist to early stage drug discovery financing: technology without the team (video)". MedCity News. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  3. Schwartz, David (2012-12-12). "Profit/non-profit partners to carry biotech innovations across valley of death - Tech Transfer e-News". Tech Transfer Central. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  4. Pogorelc, Deanna (2012-09-21). "The biotech valley of death has become the uncrossable canyon". MedCity News. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  5. Fierce Biotech, BioMotiv garners $46M for early-stage licensing deals, R&D work, 2013-08-05 http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/biomotiv-garners-46m-early-stage-licensing-deals-rd-work/2013-08-05
  6. Fierce Biotech, Takeda pours $25M into biotech dealmaker BioMotiv, 2014-09-26 http://www.fiercebiotech.com/story/takeda-pours-25m-biotech-dealmaker-biomotiv/2014-09-26
  7. Writer, GEN Staff (2015-09-21). "Biogen, BioMotiv Launch Neuroscience Collaboration". GEN - Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  8. "BioMotiv partners with London-based Arix Bioscience". Crain's Cleveland Business. Retrieved 2016-04-19.
  9. "BioMotiv secures up to $10 million investment from Charles River Laboratories". Crain's Cleveland Business. Retrieved 2016-04-19.
  10. "Baiju Shah leads a BioEnterprise team helping build Northeast Ohio's biomedical industry". cleveland. 2009-06-28. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  11. Crain's Cleveland Business, Longtime BioEnterprise CEO Baiju Shah to leave organization, 2012-07-19 http://www.crainscleveland.com/article/20120719/FREE/120719805
  12. Forbes, Profile: Baiju Shah
  13. "Company". Orca Pharmaceuticals. Retrieved 2019-12-03.
  14. "BioMotiv and Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Enter into Strategic Partnership". www.takeda.com. Retrieved 2019-12-03.

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