Gene ther­a­py goes acoustic as ARCH-backed biotech launch­es with ul­tra­sound gene de­liv­ery plat­form

Af­ter co-found­ing two biotechs off virus-based ther­a­pies, one for pain and one for can­cer, Ken Green­berg de­cid­ed to go in a dif­fer­ent di­rec­tion for his newest biotech, SonoThera.

Based out of San Fran­cis­co, SonoThera an­nounced Mon­day morn­ing that it raised $60.75 mil­lion to de­vel­op new gene ther­a­pies — but de­liv­ered by ul­tra­sound, which Green­berg says can ad­dress the ma­jor chal­lenges fac­ing more con­ven­tion­al vi­ral gene ther­a­pies.

Green­berg pre­vi­ous­ly co-found­ed Co­da Bio­ther­a­peu­tics, which is de­vel­op­ing an ade­no-as­so­ci­at­ed virus-based ther­a­py for pain and On­corus, which wants to use an on­colyt­ic virus against can­cer but laid off just un­der 20 em­ploy­ees last week.

“I’ve been work­ing in the gene ther­a­py space for about 20 years now. And dur­ing that time, the ma­jor­i­ty of the work was with vi­ral vec­tors, whether it’s AAV or [lentivirus], or her­pes, or ade­n­ovirus, and as well as some non-vi­ral sys­tems … I got a good feel­ing for where things are work­ing and where they don’t, and where the short­com­ings are of the cur­rent modal­i­ties that are used,” he told End­points News.

SonoThera’s Se­ries A was led by ARCH Ven­ture Part­ners, fol­

lowed by the ven­ture arms of a num­ber of big com­pa­nies — Il­lu­mi­na, John­son & John­son and Eli Lil­ly — and Med­ical Ex­cel­lence Cap­i­tal, Ver­tex Ven­tures HC (sep­a­rate from Ver­tex Phar­ma­ceu­ti­cals), Alexan­dria Ven­ture In­vest­ments, Lifes­pan In­vest­ments, Formic Ven­tures, Foothill Ven­tures and Wil­son Son­si­ni.

The biotech was found­ed by Green­berg; Michael David­son, the CEO of NewAms­ter­dam Phar­ma and co-founder of Cor­vidia Ther­a­peu­tics, which No­vo Nordisk bought in 2020 for $725 mil­lion; and Steve Fe­in­stein of Rush Uni­ver­si­ty, who pre­vi­ous­ly in­vent­ed di­ag­nos­tic imag­ing agents and will serve as SonoThera’s CSO. David­son is the chair­man of SonoThera’s board, where ARCH’s Steven Gillis is now al­so a mem­ber.

Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia-Berke­ley’s David Schaf­fer, who al­so co-found­ed 4D Mol­e­c­u­lar Ther­a­peu­tics, serves as a sci­en­tif­ic ad­vi­sor to the fledg­ling biotech.

Tra­di­tion­al gene ther­a­pies that are de­liv­ered in virus vec­tors have run in­to safe­ty is­sues, in­clud­ing pa­tient deaths, and ap­proved ther­a­pies are pricey. Two weeks ago, the FDA ap­proved Hem­genix, CSL’s gene ther­a­py for he­mo­phil­ia B, which the com­pa­ny then priced at $3.5 mil­lion per treat­ment, mak­ing it the most ex­pen­sive sin­gle-dose ther­a­py in the US.

The size of the gene de­liv­ered is al­so lim­it­ed by the size of the vi­ral vec­tor. AAV vec­tors, for in­stance, can car­ry max pay­loads of 4.7 kilo­bas­es, which lim­its what dis­eases they may be able to ad­dress. And be­cause they use vi­ral vec­tors, gene ther­a­pies can on­ly be dosed once. Af­ter that, the body de­vel­ ops an im­mune re­sponse to the virus.

A plethora of new biotechs have been scurrying to develop alternative options that they say can address the limitations of the earlier gene therapies. Spanish biotech SpliceBio uses two AAVs to deliver bigger genes, and is developing treatments for a rare eye disease. Hub-and-spoke startup Replay, led by Sangamo’s former R&D chief Adrian Woolfson, uses an HSV vector which it says can hold bigger payloads.

 

Vector BioPharma touts a “gutless adenovirus” that it says can overcome the size limitation, immune response, and safety concerns. Deerfield-backed Apertura Gene Therapy is developing custom AAVs that can get into more difficult-to-reach organs, like the brain and kidney. And like SonoThera, Code Biotherapeutics is working on a non-viral option.

 

Greenberg said that SonoThera’s platform can take on all four of what he sees are the main challenges of current gene therapies — the immune response, payload cap, cost, and choice of organ system. SonoThera co-infuses ultrasound contrast agents with DNA through an IV, and then uses an ultrasound probe at target organs where the acoustic energy disrupts the cell membrane to allow the genetic payload to enter into the cell and nucleus. Greenberg noted that since naked DNA degrades very quickly, the treatment and ultrasound happen “within the order of minutes.”

 

SonoThera’s new cash infusion will be used to spur preclinical development and help the biotech do the work needed to identify a lead candidate. He noted that SonoThera wanted to

pick a lead program “where we can be unique in doing delivery to areas that others are simply challenged by, or our therapeutic will have features that we think will make it superior to others,” though he declined to say anything further.

The biotech will also use the new money to build out its team. It currently stands at 13 full-time employees with nearly just as many consultants, but Greenberg hopes to bring that up to 20 employees by the middle of next year.

As for getting into the clinic, the biotech still has a ways to go. Greenberg hopes that SonoThera’s first Phase I trial will be in 2025.

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