Compugen (Israeli company)

Compugen Ltd.
Public
Traded as NASDAQ: CGEN
TASE: CGEN
Industry Biotechnology
Founded 1993 (1993)
Founder Eli Mintz
Simchon Faigler
Amir Natan
Headquarters Holon, Israel
Key people
Paul Sekhri (Chairman)
Anat Cohen-Dayag (Pres. & CEO)
Revenue Decrease US$ 53 thousand (2016)
Decrease US$ -8.7 million (2016)
Decrease US$ -8.5 million (2016)
Website www.cgen.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Compugen Ltd. (Hebrew: קומפיוג'ן) is a clinical-stage publicly traded predictive drug discovery and development company headquartered in Israel, with shares traded on the NASDAQ Capital Market and on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange.

Operations

Compugen was established as computational drug discovery service provider in 1993. Compugen originally acted as service provider for pharma companies, supplying its software and computational services to predict different types of biological phenomena. It had arrangements with big pharmas such as Novaris AG, Abbot Laboratories and Pfizer Inc.[2] Subsequently, Compugen made a decision to become a drug development company with its own internal pipeline, and in 2010 decided to a focus on oncology and immunology.[3] Roche and Five Prime Therapeutics are among Compugen's competitors.[4]

Pipeline

COM701/CGEN-15029

CGEN-15029 is the internal designation for PVRIG, a novel B7/CD28-like immune checkpoint target candidate. In June 2016, COM701 was selected as the lead therapeutic candidate for PVRIG. COM701 is undergoing preclinical development activities in preparation for advancement to clinical trials. Compugen filed an IND with the FDA in late March 2018 and intends start clinical trials later in the year.[5]

CGEN-15001T/ILDR2

CGEN-15001T is the internal designation for ILDR2, a novel B7/CD28-like immune checkpoint target candidate. This program is partnered to Bayer Healthcare. To date, preclinical activities are on track, and pivotal toxicity studies and GMP clinical trial material production are ongoing.

COM902/CGEN-15137

CGEN-15137 is the internal designation for TIGIT, an immune checkpoint in the B7/CD28 family. In March 2017, COM902 was selected as the lead therapeutic candidate for CGEN-15137/TIGIT. Compugen is planning IND-enabling studies in 2018 and file an IND in 2019.

CGEN-15001/ILDR2 Fc Fusion

CGEN-15001/ILDR2-Fc is our lead program for autoimmune diseases.

Partnerships/collaborations (industry and academic)

Bayer Healthcare

In August 2013, Compugen entered into a collaboration and license agreement to develop antibody drugs for cancer immunotherapy against two Compugen-discovered immune checkpoint regulators CGEN-15001T and CGEN-15022. The companies agreed to collaborate on preclinical programs, with Bayer retaining full control over clinical development and commercialization after preclinical work was completed.[6] Under the terms of the agreement, Compugen received $10 million up front payment and was set to receive $30 million, plus up to $500 million in milestone payments on both programs and was eligible for mid to high single-digit royalties on product sales. In 2017, after joint assessment of the CGEN-15022 program, the investment in the program was halted and the Bayer collaboration shifted solely CGEN-15001T.[7] To date, Compugen received approximately $25 million in up front and preclinical milestone payments and is eligible to up to $250 million in milestone payments and mid to high single-digit royalties on product sales.[8] In April 2018, Bayer disclosed the target of this program as ILDR2 and announced its intention to advance the program to the clinic.[9]

Medimmune (subsidiary of AstraZeneca)

In March 2018, Compugen entered into an exclusive license agreement with MedImmune, the global biologics research arm of AstraZeneca to develop bi-specific and multi-specific immuno-oncology antibody products derived from one of Compugen’s pipeline products. MedImmune has the right to develop multiple product under this license and is solely responsible for R&D and commercial expenses. Under the terms of the agreement, Compugen will receive a $10 million upfront payment and up to $200 million in development, regulatory and commercial milestones for the first product as well as tiered royalties on future product sales. If any other products are developed, Compugen is eligible for additional milestone payments and royalties.[10]

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

In December 2014, Compugen announced the initiation of a multi-year research collaboration with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, (JHU) on immune checkpoint candidates for the potential treatment of cancer. This collaborative research expanded Compugen’s ongoing assessment of the biology and mechanism of action of its novel B7/CD8-like immune checkpoint proteins, and provided access to the world-class I-O research tools and expertise at JHU. The project is overseen by Prof. Drew Pardoll and Dr. Charles Drake, members of Compugen’s scientific advisory board and well-known pioneers in the field of immuno-oncology.[11] In October 2017, the collaboration was expanded to include new additional targets discovered by Compugen which have the potential to serve as a basis for the development of cancer immunotherapy treatments.[12]

The Mount Sinai Hospital

In November 2017, Compugen announced a multi-year research collaboration with Mount Sinai Hospital, under the direction of Dr. Miriam Merad. The collaboration focuses on the research and target validation of selected myeloid candidates discovered by Compugen for their potential to serve as a basis for cancer immunotherapy treatments, including the validation of their role in innate immunity and involvement in tumor biology.[13]

History

Compugen was founded in 1993 by Eli Mintz, Simchon Faigler and Amir Natan. Mintz conceived of the idea for the company in 1991 while accompanying his wife, Liat Mintz, to a genomics engagement at the Pasteur Institute in France. She commented that the quantities of data being produced by scientists involved in DNA sequencing exceeded what computers could process at reasonable speeds. Eli Mintz partnered with colleagues Faigler and Natan from the IDF's elite Talpiot program to develop a more powerful specailized processor for sequence similarity searches; and the company's first product, dubbed the "Bioccelerator", had speeds up to one thousand times faster than other platforms being used at the time.[14][15][16] In 1997, the company followed this success by introducing LEADS, an EST clustering and assembly platform.[17][18] By around 2001, Compugen had effected a shift in its business model from a company whose almost exclusive focus was marketing computer programs and applications to one whose operations extended into the diagnostics and therapeutics fields.[19][20]

Compugen began trading on the Nasdaq in 2000 and on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange in 2002.[21] Also in 2002, Compugen spun off its subsidiary Evogene, established as an agriscience division in 1999.[22][23]

Management

Mor Amitai, Hebrew University alumnus (Ph.D, Mathematics), who joined Compugen in 1994, was the company's CEO and president from 1998 to 2005. He was replaced by Alex Kotzer, Technion alumnus (Chemical Engineering), who was CEO and president through 2008.[24][25][26][27] Anat Cohen-Dayag, Weizmann Institute alumnus (Ph.D, Cellular Biology), became co-CEO of Compugen in 2009, serving alongside Martin Gerstel, Yale alumnus (Engineering). She has been the company's exclusive CEO since 2010.[28][29]

Weizmann Institute alumni playing key roles at Compugen

  • Anat Cohen-Dayag, CEO
  • Nadav Marbach Bar, scientist
  • Yossef Kliger, principal scientist
  • Zoya Alteber, scientist
  • Moty Klepfish, scientist

See also

References

  1. Compugen 2016 Annual Report
  2. Spotlight on Israel: Compugen Comes Forth, Script Magazine, April 24, 2018
  3. BioWorld Today, Compugen Rockets on $540M Bayer Immunotherapy Alliance, August 6, 2013
  4. "Compugen Ltd: Company profile from Hoover's". Hoover's. 2011. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  5. cgen-15029 March 2016
  6. BioWorld Today, Compugen Rockets on $540M Bayer Immunotherapy Alliance, August 6, 2013
  7. Bioworld Today, Compugen flexes dealmaking muscle in Medimmune I-O antibody pact
  8. Compugen, Annual Report, filed March 27, 2018
  9. Bayer press release, Bayer to showcase data from diverse oncology pipeline at AACR 2018, April 5, 2018
  10. Script, Compugen Concentrates on Pipeline After AZ Antibody Pact, April 3, 2018 and Globes, Compugen Signs Cancer Drug Licensing Deal Worth up to $200M, April 2, 2018
  11. Israel 21c, Compugen teams with Johns Hopkins University on immune checkpoints, January 1, 2015
  12. DDNews, Compugen and JHU chart new course, May 2015
  13. DDNews, Compugen and JHU chart new course, May 2015
  14. Khavul, Susanna (2005). "Chapter 4: Israel". In Simon Commander. The Software Industry in Emerging Markets. Gloucestershire, United Kingdom: Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 174–175. ISBN 1-84542-247-3. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  15. Blackburn, Nicky (12 November 2001). "Computing the benefits of genes and proteins". Israel21c. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  16. Ginzburg, Ami (3 August 2001). תהליך האבולוציה של קומפיוג'ן [Compugen's evolution]. Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 December 2011. מערכת המחשב שפותחה היתה מסוגלת לבצע השוואות של רצפים גנטיים במהירות של עד פי 1,000 ממערכות אחרות.
  17. Russell, John (17 October 2005). "Compugen Transforms Its Business". Bio-ITWorld.com. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  18. Xie, Hanqing; Gill-More, Raveh (2004). "Transcriptome Analysis Through Expressed Sequences". In Seckbach, Joseph; Rubin, Eitan. The New Avenues in Bioinformatics. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 153. ISBN 1-4020-2639-0. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  19. Pincas, Gitit (1 November 2004). "Compugen's metamorphosis". Globes. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  20. Coren, Ora (4 May 2001). קומפיוג'ן עוברת לפיתוח תרופות [Compugen transitions to development of drugs]. TheMarker (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 December 2011. לדבריו, החברה מעוניינת לזהות את ההזדמנויות ולהיות שותפה בתחומי הדיאגנוסטיקה והתרפויטיקה, לא רק למכור תוכנות ואפליקציות.
  21. "Compugen Company Profile". BioPortfolio. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  22. Coren, Ora (18 February 2004). "Propagating the Evogene way". Haaretz. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  23. "Evogene, a Subsidiary of Compugen, Raising U.S. $2.0 Million in Private Financing". AllBusiness.com. Tel Aviv, Israel. Business Wire. 6 January 2003. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  24. Tsipori, Tali (13 August 2000). "Compugen to Raise $55 Mln at $280 Mln Value Tonight". Globes. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  25. "COMPUGEN LTD, Form 6-K, Filing Date Jul 2, 2003" (PDF). secdatabase.com. Retrieved May 15, 2018.
  26. "COMPUGEN LTD, Form 6-K, Filing Date Aug 20, 2008". secdatabase.com. Retrieved May 15, 2018.
  27. "Alex Kotzer Profile". Forbes.com. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  28. "Anat Cohen Dayag Profile – Forbes.com". Forbes. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  29. London Sappir, Shoshana (4 March 2002). "Martin Gerstel's back in business, this time in Israel". Israel21c. Archived from the original on 4 April 2011. Retrieved 13 December 2011.

Further reading

  • "Compugen hits gold with Pfizer". Biopharmaceutiques. France: PR Editions (126). 25 February 2010.
  • Pitta, Julie (23 February 1998). "E=mc$$". Forbes.
  • Rosenberg, David (September 2000). "Israeli Army Grads Lead Business Revolution". Red Herring.
  • "President & CEO of Compugen Ltd. talks about potential long-term large revenues from licensing of in-house discoveries". The Wall Street Transcript. 30 April 2003.
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