Title: Research outside the University environment
1 Research outside the University environment
just
Dr Curtis Dobson Ai2 Ltd
2Options for taking technology to market
- University issues license direct to industry
- Start up a company, which pays University for IP
(via a long term loan and equity position), and
develops, markets and licenses the technology to
third parties - Depends on
- Nature of technology how well developed it is
- Market size, hurdles and competitors
- Career goals of inventor
3CONSUMER
License
License
My focus this morning
Spin Out Company
Spin Out Company
4How to start a Start Up
5Start Up Check List
- Intellectual Property which is
- Secret
- Novel
- Inventive
- Offers a potential solution to a problem for
which there currently is no solution - Problem is sufficiently widespread / serious
that substantial income (gt 50m pa) could be made
by providing a solution - Many such problems can be tackled by same
technology (technology platform)
i.e. patentable
Out-license
Start Up
6Start Up Check List Phase 1
- In phase 1 (approx 6-9 months) you should aim
to raise sufficient funding to - Incorporate company, devise financial
procedures, open bank account, draw up Articles
of Association, appoint directors - Generate proof of principle data
- Where appropriate build a prototype
- Investigate the markets and aim to develop
links with major companies operating in that area - File provisional patent applications
7Start Up Check List Phase 2
- In phase 2 (18 months) you should aim to raise
sufficient funding to - Find premises
- Devise detailed business plan
- Maintain and expand patent portfolio
- Assemble world-class management team, and (if
appropriate) scientific advisory board - Carry out research and development work
8What to expect.
Ai2 incorp. (Apr 05)
Ai2 (Jul 05)
X
X
Dedicated Professional Management (Building Value)
Research Institution and Associated
Involvement (Reducing Risk)
Ai2 (Apr 06)
X
Timing Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
Phase 4
Founders and Early Investors Exit Goal (5/7 yrs
from start) via eg. a trade sale, IPO
(6-9 months)
( 18 months)
( 12 months)
Volume sales and profits Independent business
premises. More financing (VCs, investment banks,
Private Equity Firms)
Proof of Principle Prototyping Patenting Incorpora
tion Shareholders agreement
Business Planning Forming Partnerships Finance
from Business Angels/ VCs / University
Challenge Consultancy Incubation Premises
Early Trading Financing from Business Angels,
consortia and funds. Board reconstruction
Service contracts
9Senior Management
- Chairman
- Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
- Board of Directors
- Chief Scientific / Technical Officer (CSO /
CTO) - Panel of Scientific Advisors
- Company Secretary
10How does the company keep operating until it is
profitable?
- Government / Charity Wellcome UTA, SBRI,
FRAMEWORK 6 etc. - Investment, including Venture Capital Funds
- Will provide funding in return for shares in
the company - Investment provided in rounds different VCs
specialise in different levels of funding / risk - Investment increases as company grows / nears
market (e.g. 100-250k for seed funding,
through to many tens of millions in some series C
/ Series D - VCs initially salesmen
but ultimately buyers
11Why start a Start Up ?
12Benefits for the technology / research
- Access to venture capital investment
- Access to cutting-edge incubator laboratories
(for a fee) - All aspects of business development handled by
small specialist team, rather than large
generalist University IP department - Longer term access to investment capital via
stock market flotation - Possibility of trade sale of company
-
13Benefits to industry / society
- Research areas which are too commercially focused
for academia, though too risky / early stage for
large companies to explore are not frozen - Converts IP raw materials into a lower risk
package which is attractive to larger companies
- Financial / economic creates jobs and clusters
of small businesses in similar areas, along with
jobs in support companies - Attracts larger companies to a region
14Benefits for the researcher
- Academic research increasingly iterative.
Start ups offer opportunity to carry out heavy
lifting to put your idea into practice, and make
a real difference - New career possibilities - small spin out
companies / IP law / business - Maintain academic research programme, yet benefit
from SME experience - Better paid / better resourced
- Equity position, which can eventually prove
highly valuable - Networking
- Profile
15CAVEAT - dont do it if these issues worry you
- Less time for research, especially blue sky
research - Substantial time spent on administration,
business plans, financial systems, legal
documentation, fundraising etc etc. - Bar on presentation / publication until patents
filed - Need to prioritise applications which are
closest to market - Less job security (relative to tenured academic
role at least)
16How does it compare with traditional industrial
research
- More time for academic research
- Administrative procedures may be less
cumbersome - Technologies may be riskier, and more cutting
edge - Closer ties to Universities
- Culture more akin to academia
- Organisations leaner and more fleet of foot
higher productivity
17Ai2 Ltd a case study
18My Intellectual Property
- Colleagues find that a human gene (APOE)
determines the outcome of a broad range of viral
infections -
- My discovery of a region of the protein (apoE)
coded for by the gene with antiviral activity
against herpesviruses and HIV
19Lead for antiviral / anti-HIV therapeutics ?
20HIV
Lipoproteins and virusesevolutionary convergence?
Human Serum Lipoprotein
- Lipoproteins resemble virus particles, and occupy
the same cell biological niche
21Need for new anti-HIV medicines
- 1.6 million individuals infected with HIV in US,
Western Europe and Japan - 14,000 new cases per day globally
- Market for anti-HIV chemotherapy 5.1b in 2002,
and growing - HIV strains are becoming resistant to current
therapies
22attachment
HIV Replication Cycle
4
fusion
5 ?
HUMAN CELL
Existing Therapeutic Targets (1 to 4)
nucleus
1 / 2
3
replication
virus
reconstruction
virus
virus
HUMAN CELL DESTROYED
virus
virus
23GIN unique early stage funding NW England.
- Genetics Innovation Network (University of
Manchester / Liverpool) - 40k - New peptides
- Other human protein regions with similar activity
?
24Outcome of GIN programme (late 2003)
- Discovery of second apolipoprotein region with
activity - Invention of two families of compounds relating
to both original and new protein region, with
distinct activity profiles - Activity against all strains of HIV tested, via
novel mechanism
25Broad anti-HIV activity of new compounds
26Antibacterial activity?
- Many peptides from non-mammalian sources /
non-natural sequences have antibacterial activity - Features similar to our human apoE peptides
- Commercially more likely to succeed quickly
- No need for peptide to enter body
- Medical devices in particular probe to
infection often biocompatible, but without
capacity to fight infection
27Coating to Prevent Medical Device Related
Infection
Untreated Treated
Materials treated with (fluorescent) peptide, and
thoroughly washed
28Peptide-treated medical device materials
resistant to Pseudomonas infection
29(No Transcript)
30Overview
- Ai2 aims to become a significant player in the
large and growing anti-infectives market - Core Business is identification of unmet
anti-infective needs in the healthcare market,
and application of Ai2s proven platform
technology to address those needs - Current Focus on unmet biocompatibility and
infection needs at the interface between biology
and polymer surfaces (catheters, IV-equipment and
related medical devices). Clear early revenue
opportunities identified and currently being
pursued - Management Team of international calibre,
includes former senior executives from blue chip
medical device and pharmaceutical companies in UK
and US - Awards Most exciting biotechnology company in NW
England
31North West Biotechnology Project of the Year 2004
North West Biotechnology Start up of the Year 2005
32Product Pipeline Key Product Areas
Medical Device coatings Partners in place
Novel Therapeutics Long term Large Market
Novel prophylactics Building on antibacterial
coating technology
Higher Risk
Lower risk
33Challenges
- Continued need to secure investment until
company reaches profitability - Expense of patent costs
- Company increasingly must pay its way. Lab
and office space, payroll, legal expenses - Variability in investment climate
- Risk of competitor technologies emerging
- Technical hurdles, particularly for long term
therapeutic applications -
34Opportunities
- University of Manchester generous IP policy
- UMIP unique resource
- Packaged IP
- Wide networks
- Dedicated business development personnel
- MTF venture capital fund
- Tough criteria
- Solid investment experience, as we negotiate
with VCs completely outside the University - Currently signs of improved investment climate
35 Research outside the University environment
Just
Dr Curtis Dobson Ai2 Ltd