HONG KONG – U.S.-based biotech firm Egenesis Inc., headquartered in Cambridge, Mass., has received $100 million through a series B funding round for the development of safe and effective human-compatible organs through gene editing.
HONG KONG U.S.-based biotech firm Egenesis Inc., headquartered in Cambridge, Mass., has received $100 million through a series B funding round for the development of safe and effective human-compatible organs through gene editing.
Avidity Biosciences Inc. CEO Sarah Boyce told BioWorld it's "a little too soon" to say when the company's lead program in myotonic dystrophy type I might reach the clinic, but the firm's $100 million series C financing will help with that effort and the portfolio in rare muscle diseases, as the antibody-oligonucleotide conjugate (AOC) platform undergoes further development.
PERTH, Australia Melbourne-headquartered regenerative medicine company Avita Medical Ltd. raised AU$120 million (US$81 million) in an institutional placement that will fund pipeline development of new indications for its Recell spray-on-skin treatment and expand its commercial footprint in the U.S. and Japan.
PERTH, Australia – Melbourne-headquartered regenerative medicine company Avita Medical Ltd. raised AU$120 million (US$81 million) in an institutional placement that will fund pipeline development of new indications for its Recell spray-on-skin treatment and expand its commercial footprint in the U.S. and Japan.