Following the formation of Mayflower Bioventures, a cell and gene therapy accelerator stood up from Hibiscus BioVentures and Mayo Clinic, comes the launch of their first start-up, Primera Therapeutics, Inc. (Primera). Cellectis, a clinical-stage biotechnology company using its gene editing platform to deliver life-saving cell and gene therapies, and Primera announced today the execution of a Collaboration Agreement under which the Parties will work collaboratively to edit mutations in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in vivo to treat the root cause of associated diseases.
Inherited mitochondrial diseases caused by genetic changes in the mtDNA have very limited to no treatment options, and often result in early childhood death. An estimated 1 in 5,000 people worldwide suffer from mtDNA – associated diseases. Primera is advancing pioneering mtDNA gene editing therapies developed in the Mayo Clinic lab of Drs. Steven Ekker and Karl Clark to precisely fix a patient’s mutated mtDNA and potentially achieve a cure for the disease. Primera’s initial clinical focus is on rare mitochondrial diseases for which there are no approved treatments. Mayo Clinic excels in delivering and developing advanced care for complex diseases including the interdisciplinary research and clinical treatment through its Mitochondrial Care Research Center.
“We are thrilled to launch Primera through Mayflower Bioventures and power it with the research and treatment expertise at Mayo Clinic and through collaborations with leading industry partners such as Cellectis, alongside a wonderful group of academic centers and nonprofit partners,” noted Dr. Stephen Ekker, Dean of the Mayo Clinic Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and a key scientific inventor and thought leader for Primera. “It requires a team effort to drive this program forward into the clinic and for patients who are suffering with these dreadful diseases.”
Primera, together with Cellectis, will be co-developing a mtDNA engineering toolbox that could enable effective therapies for mitochondrial diseases. The experience Cellectis brings in groundbreaking gene editing research, technology, manufacturing and clinical development will be invaluable in moving quickly to advance these programs and mitochondrial research forward.
The Collaboration Agreement should be supplemented by other agreements to be concluded between the Parties, under which Cellectis would receive a 19% equity ownership stake in Primera and would take a seat on Primera’s Board of Directors.
Pursuant to the Collaboration Agreement, Primera has a right to exercise an exclusive worldwide option for a license from Cellectis on up to five product candidates developed under the collaboration (the “partnership products”). Upon Primera exercising the option, Cellectis will be eligible for up to $750 million of development and sales milestones for the partnership products, as well as high single-digit royalty payments on the net sales of partnership products.
“Our partnership with Primera further showcases and expands the application of our gene-editing capabilities into a previously unexplored space. This partnership is very much in line with Cellectis’ mission to leverage its gene editing technologies to develop potentially life-saving product candidates to address unmet medical needs,” said André Choulika, Ph.D., CEO of Cellectis.
Along with Cellectis and Mayo Clinic, Primera is collaborating with patient advocacy groups including the United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation (UMDF). UMDF, the largest source of funding for mitochondrial disease research outside of the government, promotes research and education for the diagnosis, treatment and cure of mitochondrial disorders and supports affected individuals and families. “UMDF is proud to partner with Primera. We are closely aligned in our vision of driving the development and application of technologies to address the needs of those currently suffering from mitochondrial genetic diseases,” noted Philip Yeske, PhD., Science and Alliance Officer for UMDF.
Marni Falk, MD, Executive Director of the Mitochondrial Medicine Frontier Program at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Professor of Pediatrics at University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, and Clinical Geneticist serves as a Clinical and Scientific Research Advisor to Primera and sees the Cellectis and Primera collaboration as providing new hope for mitochondrial disease patients. “I have dedicated my career to building a team focused on research, development, translation, clinical development and patient management of mitochondrial disease, encompassing novel diagnostics and treatments. As there currently are no highly effective treatments, we are largely limited to offering supportive therapy. We see over 1,300 patients from around the world in our mitochondrial medicine clinic each year, including both adults and children suffering from these devastating multi-system diseases. Through an interdisciplinary approach, we collaborate in performing groundbreaking research and development of technologies, such as Primera’s, that may have the potential to be disease-modifying and address the needs of those currently battling energy deficiency from genetic-based primary mitochondrial diseases.”
Primera is dedicated to advancing its programs to be first into the clinic that will apply gene editing technologies directly to mitochondrial mutations that drive mitochondrial disease and in the future, potentially broader diseases with central components of mitochondrial dysfunction.