Actelionhas got into startup creation. The Swiss biotech has committed €30 million ($33 million) to set up Vaxxilon, a synthetic carbohydrate vaccine-focused startup with a mission to push a program licensed from the Max Planck Society into the clinic within the next three years.
Reinach, Switzerland-based Vaxxilon is starting life with Actelion-veteran Tom Monroe at the helm and four chemists from Professor Peter Seeberger’s team at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces handling the science. The team will use the €30 million Actelion is willing to drip feed into Vaxxilon over the next few years to advance the vaccines discovered and synthesized by Seeberger’s team into the clinic. The goal is to have a vaccine in human trials within three years, something Seeberger thinks will be easier to achieve within a small R&D operation such as Vaxxilon.
For Actelion, which is the majority shareholder in Vaxxilon, the arrangement provides it with a way to expand its R&D activities beyond its core areas of focus. “A collaboration gives us the opportunity to engage our areas of research that are promising in parallel to our own research,” Actelion SVP Andrew Weiss told FierceBiotech. Such parallel research is part of how Actelion plans to expand its business into other specialty areas and in doing so lessen its reliance on pulmonary arterial hypertension.