| 15
June 2007
CellCentric signs IP agreement with
Massachusetts General Hospital
New agreement expands CellCentric’s epigenetic discovery
base
to include ties with the leading laboratory of Dr. Bob
Kingston
CAMBRIDGE, UK
CellCentric, the biotechnology company unlocking epigenetic
control mechanisms, has increased further its network of
intellectual property (IP) arrangements with world-leading
scientists. The new agreement with Massachusetts General
Hospital (MGH) concerns discoveries coming from the laboratory
of Bob Kingston, PhD. His laboratory is interested in understanding
the fundamental mechanisms of how enzymes can modify chromatin.
CellCentric translates such discoveries into therapeutic
product opportunities for degenerative diseases and cancer.
Dr. Kingston is the chief of the Department of Molecular
Biology at the MGH. Before coming to the hospital, he earned
his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, and
completed his postdoctoral work at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. Dr. Kingston became a full professor at Harvard
Medical School in 1995.
Founded in 1811, MGH is the third oldest general hospital
in the United States. It is the oldest and largest teaching
hospital of Harvard Medical School and it conducts the largest
hospital-based research programmes in the US.
Epigenetics is transforming how researchers, clinicians
and pharmaceutical companies think about tackling intractable
diseases. Since the sequencing of the human genome, it has
become increasingly apparent that the way in which genes
are controlled is as important as gene sequences themselves.
CellCentric, by building a unique hub and spoke discovery
network of leaders in epigenetics, is uniquely placed to
assimilate new epigenetic information, synergise it and prioritise
it. The company goes on to carry out product opportunity
validation and early drug candidate identification.
Frances Toneguzzo, Director, Corporate Sponsored Research & Licensing
at the MGH, commented: “Our focus is on creating relationships
that help move exciting technology from the laboratories
of the Massachusetts General Hospital to the point where
it can eventually be used to help patients. We are pleased
to be working with a company that brings a new approach to
identifying and commercializing discoveries in the promising
field of epigenetics.”
Dr. Kingston said, “We have learned that epigenetic processes
and chromatin modifications influence the fundamental biology
of many disease states. My research team and I are encouraged
by the possibilities offered by this nascent field, and we
are excited about the opportunity to take this knowledge
further down the pathway toward its full therapeutic potential.”
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