TwoStep Therapeutics, a biotechnology company developing new targeted therapeutics for solid tumors, announced its official launch following a successful $6.5 million seed round led by NFX, with participation from other investors including 2048 Ventures, Alexandria Venture Investments, Cooley’s affiliated fund GC&H Investments, and the family office of the founder of Arcadia Investment Partners.
The proceeds from the funding will be used to advance TwoStep’s therapeutic pipeline of solid tumor-targeting therapies, with an initial focus on targeted cytotoxic drug delivery and immunotherapy.
Solid tumors, which account for about 90% of all cancers, have been challenging to treat due to a scarcity of extracellular targets that meet the criteria for effective treatment delivery. And while tumor-targeted therapies have started to transform the treatment paradigm for hematological malignancies, their viability in solid tumors has been limited to small subsets of patients with high levels of specific tumor markers. This presents a critical unmet need and vast therapeutic opportunity – to develop a tumor-targeted approach that can viably treat the majority of solid tumors.
TwoStep Therapeutics’ delivery platform is built around a unique tumor-targeting polyspecific integrin-binding peptide (PIP) that can selectively bind several highly expressed targets on solid tumors. This multi-targeting feature enables the agent’s broad applicability to a wide range of tumor types and patient populations, overcoming the limitations of single-antigen targeting approaches.
TwoStep’s PIP agent enables targeted delivery to virtually any solid tumor by binding multiple tumor-associated integrins. And by binding with strong affinity to integrin conformations that are highly expressed on solid tumor tissue, exposure to healthy tissue is minimized. The modular design of this tumor-targeting agent makes for a modality-agnostic technology with tunable pharmacokinetics, compatible with a diversity of therapeutic payloads.
The development of TwoStep’s solid tumor-focused platform was driven by the combined expertise of its founding team in chemical biology, antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), and immuno-oncology. And the founders established in vivo proof of concept of its multi-targeted agent with various therapeutic payloads and fusion proteins in the academic labs of its co-founders, and later within the Stanford Innovative Medicines Accelerator (IMA). It is the first company to emerge from the IMA entrepreneur-in-residence program.
Caitlyn Miller, PhD founded TwoStep Therapeutics in collaboration with renowned academic entrepreneurs affiliated with Stanford University, including Carolyn Bertozzi, PhD, Professor of Chemistry, Investigator at Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Nobel Laureate, Jennifer Cochran, PhD, Senior Associate Vice Provost for Research and Professor of Bioengineering, and Ronald Levy, MD, Professor of Medicine, Oncology. And as CEO Dr. Miller is joined by Chief Business Officer Michael Ostrach and drug development and scientific advisor Robert Coffman, PhD, both veterans of Dynavax.
KEY QUOTES:
“For the majority of solid tumors lacking well-defined targets, there are few precise treatment options and limited development of new modalities, which is a painful reality for many people with cancer. Our initial focus at TwoStep is to couple our tumor-targeting technology with clinically-validated payloads, which has the potential to extend the benefits of paradigm-shifting therapies to a greater number of patients.”
– Caitlyn Miller, PhD, CEO and co-founder of TwoStep Therapeutics
“NFX Bio backs scientist-founders creating ‘defensible magic’ for massive markets. Imagine one system that can target most solid tumors and deliver the exact treatment needed. It could mean many lives saved with one core technology platform. Caitlyn is a perfect example for a ‘scientist-founder’ and is surrounded with amazing scientific founders from Stanford including Jennifer Cochran, Ronald Levy, and Carolyn Bertozzi.”
– Omri Amirav-Drory, PhD, General Partner at NFX
“In its compact form, PIP is a synthetic, ultra-stable peptide that has been engineered to localize and penetrate tumors – ideal properties for broad targeted therapy applications.”
– Jennifer Cochran, PhD, co-founder of TwoStep Therapeutics and Professor of Bioengineering at Stanford University, whose laboratory developed the PIP molecule