For more than a decade, Carleton University biochemist Kyle Biggar has been toiling away at treatments that could one day improve the lives of millions of people with cancer and other diseases. The award-winning researcher is the co-founder of NuvoBio, a company based at Carleton that uses an artificial intelligence-powered platform to develop peptides for […]
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Access to cutting-edge lab space
Thankfully for Biggar, a new organization is here to give him a leg up. Launched last fall by former executives of Ottawa-born biotech trailblazer Turnstone Biologics and researchers from local universities, Capital BioVentures is a not-for-profit group that provides funding, lab space and mentorship to promising local biotech ventures. NuvoBio is one of seven startups in Capital BioVentures’ first cohort of companies announced earlier this week. The firm will receive $100,000 in non-dilutive funding as well as access to laboratory space at Carleton University that features more than $2 million worth of cutting-edge research equipment. In addition, Capital BioVentures has a roster of experts who meet regularly with founders, offering valuable guidance in key areas such as dealing with the FDA – the subject of Biggar’s recent discussion with a regulatory affairs specialist provided by CBV. “That’s been monumental for us,” Biggar says. “Just that one-hour meeting with that person was huge for us and really kind of streamlined how we’re approaching these (clinical trial) applications.” NuvoBio previously graduated from the Creative Destruction Lab, a global accelerator program for early-stage, science-based companies. But Biggar says the new organization’s mentors are “head and shoulders” above any advisers he’s worked with in the past. “We’ve been engaged with CBV for two months, and it feels like the turbo button has been hit,” he explains. “Where CBV really comes in is to create that link (to) biotech. It’s great that you have excellent leadership on the company side, but how does that translate to biotech, talking to the FDA, drug development? That’s where CBV kind of helps to fill those voids.” Capital BioVentures executive director Jeff Smirle says the fact that a battle-hardened business leader like Cowpland is willing to cast his lot with a venture such as NuvoBio says a lot about the evolution of Ottawa’s biotech ecosystem. “The state of biotech in Ottawa is really strong and getting stronger,” says Smirle. “People see the challenges in our health-care system, and they want to make an impact. Looping in very seasoned executives on the business side with some really innovative researchers in health care and biotech, it’s a recipe for success.” Over the past six months, the seven companies in CBV’s first cohort have created 11 new jobs and raised nearly $4 million in seed funding, along with an additional $1 million in non-dilutive grant funding, Smirle says. In addition, they’ve filed 10 patents and developed four product prototypes. “They’re all developing very elegant solutions for complex health-care challenges,” he says. “They’re all just really, really innovative (companies).”Turnstone's lasting legacy
Biggar, whose firm is poised to launch a campaign to raise $1.5 million in seed funding early next year, credits the founders of Turnstone Biologics for being catalysts for Ottawa’s biotech bonanza. Co-founded by renowned Ottawa Hospital researcher John Bell, Turnstone develops groundbreaking treatments using the body’s own immune system to battle cancer. The company, which received more than $170 million in venture capital, is now headquartered in southern California and trades on the Nasdaq exchange. However, the firm left a lasting legacy in the nation’s capital. Its former lab space at Carleton University is now occupied by fast-growing startup Virica Biotech. Other researchers have also been inspired by Turnstone’s success, Biggar adds. “What it did was to create a talent pool that is extremely diverse and rich,” he says. “Now Ottawa is ripe to take advantage of these opportunities and these resources that were left behind from Turnstone. “CBV is doing just that – accessing the talent pool that now exists in Ottawa and putting (resources) where they’re needed the most. It’s really sparking the growth of life science in Ottawa.” In a recent interview with Techopia, Smirle pointed to the new biotherapeutics manufacturing hub that’s expected to be part of The Ottawa Hospital’s new Civic campus when it opens in 2028, as well as the state-of-the-art $280-million medical research facility now under construction on the University of Ottawa, as examples of infrastructure that will strengthen the local biotech ecosystem.