Servier backs an American startup at LabCentral in the field of mitochondrial health for neurodegenerative and rare diseases


PARIS, France and CAMBRIDGE, Mass. USA, Nov. 14, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Servier, an independent international pharmaceutical laboratory, and LabCentral, a well-known launchpad for innovative life sciences startups in the United States, have announced the Golden Ticket 2018, sponsored by Servier, has been awarded to Amathus Therapeutics, a startup engaged in the development of novel therapeutics for neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s, and rare lysosomal storage disorders. The prize was presented by Olivier Laureau, president of Servier, during the ceremony held last week on the premises of LabCentral, Cambridge.

Awarded by Servier since 2017, as part of its sponsorship program with the prestigious American co-working establishment, LabCentral, this prize aims to support for a period of one year, a startup research program corresponding to one of the Group’s therapeutic areas.“Research today is a collective domain, which cannot be done any more in an isolated way. For this reason, Servier is committed to support startups, but also promising biotechs whose projects represent hope to patients,” commented Olivier Laureau, President of Servier. “Servier is pleased to have given the Golden Ticket 2018 award to Amathus Therapeutics, whose innovative approach may lead to the discovery of new treatments for Parkinson`s disease.”

The Golden Ticket award, worth $50,000, underwrites the cost of a lab bench for a scientist to reside in LabCentral’s open lab for one year. During this period, the scientist benefits from all the latest research equipment, shared infrastructure, as well as numerous programs and services offered by the startup launchpad. The company will also benefit from LabCentral’s corporate development support (e.g., co-working area, business coaching, investor relations).

“When Amathus first presented to the LabCentral selection committee in January of 2017, immediately we saw the groundbreaking therapeutic potential of its technology platform that had originated in founder Professor Yiannis Ioannou’s lab at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai,” explained LabCentral Cofounder and President Johannes Fruehauf, M.D., Ph.D. “Amathus has been an exciting company to watch as they’ve built out a world-class scientific team at LabCentral — we’re thrilled the Servier Golden Ticket will give them additional runway to move their science toward the clinic.”

Amathus Therapeutics is developing first-in-class, small-molecule therapeutics designed to enhance mitochondrial function, which have the potential to treat neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s disease, and lysosomal-storage disorders — rare, but devastating inherited metabolic diseases that are characterized by an abnormal build-up of various toxic materials in the body's cells as a result of enzyme deficiencies.

“We are honored to receive this award from Servier — a company with a long and distinguished history of innovation and commitment to patients — and are excited about this wonderful opportunity to build a relationship with the Servier team,” said Edward Holson, Ph.D., chief scientific officer of Amathus Therapeutics. He continued, “Having regular interactions with potential partners and funders, like Servier, and three-floors-full of early-stage science companies filled with truly brilliant people, is a primary benefit of being a startup at LabCentral.”

In 2017, the Golden Ticket was awarded to Revitope, a start-up specializing in biotechnologies, whose innovative technology aims to allow antibodies to precisely target cells to be treated in patients with cancer and inflammatory diseases. 

Thanks to the support from Servier and the accompaniment by LabCentral, the startup was able to carry out determinant studies in validation of their technology. The Servier teams remain in contact with the startup and closely monitor the evolution of their work in order to potentially benefit certain Group research programs.



The cooperation agreement with LabCentral is part of Servier’s dynamic collaborative partnership strategy, which aims to better respond to the challenges of therapeutic innovation by placing its research activities in the most dynamic research ecosystems where creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship are promoted and valued.

This new collaboration also confirms Servier's commitment to developing its partnership strategy in the United States, where the Group has been implanted since 2018 via the two entities: Servier BioInnovation and Servier Pharmaceuticals, its new commercial subsidiary.



About Servier (www.servier.com; twitter @servier)
Servier is an international pharmaceutical company governed by a non-profit foundation, with its headquarters in France (Suresnes). With a strong international presence in 149 countries and a turnover of 4.152 billion euros in 2017, Servier employs 21,700 people worldwide. Entirely independent, the Group reinvests 25% of its turnover (excluding generic drugs) in research and development and uses all its profits for development. Corporate growth is driven by Servier’s constant search for innovation in five areas of excellence: cardiovascular, immune-inflammatory and neuropsychiatric diseases, cancer and diabetes, as well as by its activities in high-quality generic drugs. Servier also offers eHealth solutions beyond drug development.

About LabCentral (www.labcentral.org;  twitter @labcentral)
LabCentral is a first-of-its-kind shared laboratory workspace in the heart of the Kendall Square, Cambridge, biotech innovation hub, designed as a launchpad for high-potential life-sciences and biotech startups. It offers everything young companies need to begin lab operations immediately upon move-in and propel their science forward faster and more cost-efficiently. This includes: beautifully designed, fully permitted lab and office space, first-class facility and administrative support, skilled laboratory personnel, peer learning and networking opportunities, an expert speaker series — as well as critical access to potential funders and industry partners. A private, nonprofit institution, its first site opened in 2013, with support from real-estate partner, MIT. Founding sponsors include Johnson & Johnson Innovation, the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, Roche, and Triumvirate Environmental. To accommodate demand for growing startups, LabCentral 610 opened in late 2017, with support from Pfizer. LabCentral now has capacity to serve a total of ~450 scientists and entrepreneurs in about 70 companies across its two-building campus. In 2017, it also added the LabCentral Learning Lab for STEM programming to help inspire the next generation of science entrepreneurs.

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From left to right: R&D General Manager Claude Bertrand, Ph.D.,  Senior Executive Vice-President R&D Emmanuel Canet,M.S., Ph.D., and President of Servier Olivier Laureau, presenting the 2018 LabCentral Golden Ticket, sponsored by Servier to Edward Holson, Ph.D., chief scientific officer of Amathus Therapeutics at LabCentral in Kendall Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts, on October 5, 2018. LabCentral is the premier shared laboratory workspace for high-potential life science startups in Greater Boston. Since LabCentral opened in late 2013, it has demonstrated that launching a company in its supportive ecosystem increases the probability of success: LabCentral startups can focus resources on meeting science & business milestones, with potential of 10-20x less capital investment than building out/operating their own dedicated wet lab/office facilities and its startups and graduates have raised more than $2.5 billion in VC and other funding. Servier logo

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