BY RANSDELL PIERSON
Wed Sep 3, 2014 3:35pm EDT
(Reuters) - U.S. drugmaker AbbVie Inc (ABBV.N)
and Calico, a new company set up by Google
Inc (GOOGL.O)
to cure diseases of aging, will each invest $250 million to help create Calico
research facilities and collaborate on discovery and development of new
medicines.
AbbVie and Calico said on Wednesday the initial
funding would help Calico use its scientific expertise to create research
facilities in the San Francisco Bay area. Each partner could ultimately invest
an additional $500 million in the collaboration.
"Calico expects to begin filling critical
positions immediately and plans to establish a substantial team of scientists
and research staff in the San Francisco Bay area," the companies said in a
joint release.
A year ago Google
announced it was creating Calico, to be headed by Art Levinson, the former
chief executive officer and guiding force behind Genentech, a cancer company
considered by many to be the most successful biotechnology
company in history. Levinson left after Genentech was bought by Roche Holding
AG (ROG.VX).
Calico is run separately from Google, the world's
largest Internet search company, and focuses on such issues as life-threatening
diseases and problems affecting mental and physical agility due to aging.
Google increasingly is placing itself at the
intersection of medical science and technology. It also backs privately held
23andMe, which sells a $99 DNA test that provides customers ancestry-related
genetic reports and uninterpreted raw genetic data.
AbbVie said it was the first drugmaker to forge a
collaboration with Calico. Under the deal, AbbVie will provide scientific and
clinical development support and commercial expertise.
The partners will share costs equally, and
profits, if drugs are successfully developed.
Calico will be responsible for discovering drugs
and studying them in early stage trials during the first five years. It will
continue for a 10-year period to advance its experimental drugs through Phase
2a studies, small mid-stage trials that establish a likelihood the drugs may
work in larger studies.
Under the deal, AbbVie will back Calico's early
research and, following completion of Phase 2a studies, will have the option to
manage late-stage trials and marketing.
AbbVie was spun off in early 2013 from Abbott
Laboratories Inc (ABT.N),
and sells Humira, a $13 billion-a-year treatment for rheumatoid arthritis which
is the world's top-selling medicine.
Humira accounts for 60 percent of AbbVie sales,
and the suburban Chicago company needs new drugs to lessen its heavy reliance
on the product. It is developing drugs for arthritis, hepatitis C, cancer,
multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease.
AbbVie in July agreed to pay $55 billion for
Dublin-based Shire Plc (SHP.L),
moving it into the lucrative arena of rare diseases, in a deal that will allow
it to slash its tax bill by relocating to Britain.
Richard Gonzalez, AbbVie's chief executive, on
Wednesday said the Calico deal will further diversify his company. "This
collaboration demonstrates our commitment to exploring new areas of
medicine."
Calico is attracting a growing stable of research
heavy-hitters, including Hal Barron, a former chief medical officer and head of
product development at Roche who is now Calico's research chief.
Well known geneticist David Botstein is Calico's
chief scientific officer, while remaining a professor at Princeton University.
Cynthia Kenyon, a biochemist at the University of California, San Francisco,
who is a leading authority on aging genetics, left earlier this year to become
Calico's vice president for aging research.
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