Work at Eikon Therapeutics Inc. has led to the discovery of new ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase 1 (USP1) inhibitors reported to be useful for the treatment of cancer.
Eikon Therapeutics Inc. has identified Werner syndrome ATP-dependent helicase (WRN; RECQ3; RECQL2) inhibitors reported to be useful for the treatment of cancer.
With the closing of its $350.7 million series D, Eikon Therapeutics Inc. has notched two financial high marks for the still young year. The funding is the biggest venture capital round of 2025 and it’s also the first series D.
Nonselective poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors have shown antitumoral activity, but they are tied to hematotoxicity, most probably due to PARP2 inhibition. Instead, selective PARP inhibitors retain antitumoral activity without risking PARP2-related toxicity.
Eikon Therapeutics Inc. has received IND clearance from the FDA to initiate phase I studies with IMP-1734, a highly selective poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP-1) inhibitor developed in partnership with Impact Therapeutics Inc.
Having banked almost $775 million since its inception in 2019, Eikon Therapeutics Inc. closed three transactions to beef up its pipeline and raised nearly $106 million in a series C round. And the dealmaking will continue, said Alfred Bowie, chief financial officer. “We still have well over a half-billion in cash on our balance sheet,” he told BioWorld. “We’re active.” The new funds “add more fuel to the fire,” and let the company “make sure we aren’t cannibalizing some of the funding we’ve raised to help push forward the internal pipeline,” which is “advancing very nicely.”
Computational technology and high-quality data will help scientists to improve R&D and find better treatments for human diseases, according to experts at the Wuxi Global Forum 2022.
Eikon Therapeutics Inc., a startup leveraging advanced optics and machine learning to track protein dynamics for drug discovery, has closed a $148 million series A financing. Led by a high-profile CEO, former Merck & Co. Inc. R&D chief Roger Perlmutter, and with the counsel of two Nobel prize winners, its team is working to "expand the druggable proteome by targeting protein dynamics directly."