I asked AI the other day how many biotechs have been co-founded by Harvard’s George Church. About 50 was the response, which feels about right. And it made me wonder how many more are operating in stealth mode today, out of AI’s sight, as the prominent geneticist’s lab continues to test the bleeding edge of cell and gene therapy science.
Longevity. Reviving extinct species. Church has always steered toward biotech’s more exotic goals, which often requires more adventurous investors — never a large group. Biotech is risky enough when it keeps to the safer harbors of me-better therapies. But Church is a rare visionary who always thinks about a revolutionary — and sometimes controversial — future. And that has clearly won the hearts and minds of a large group of scientists who have come out of his lab with big plans of their own.
I’ve covered some of this work firsthand. So you can imagine how pumped I was when Church agreed to join me in a fireside chat at our upcoming Endpoints 11 awards dinner on Sept. 18 in The State Room in Boston.
Over the last few years, we’ve had the pleasure of talking about drug R&D and biotech launches with several of the most prolific scientists in the startup world. The list includes Phil Sharp, Tim Springer and Bob Langer.
Church fits right into that groundbreaking group.
The Endpoints 11 project — our roundup of the most exciting private biotechs in the drug development world — has become quite the group endeavor these days, with a team of writers and editors led by executive editor Drew Armstrong debating candidates and finalizing each year’s list. As of now, we’re pushing toward a late August deadline for profiles and prepping the final list to share that night at our gala in Boston.
If you’d like to mix and mingle with the winners and join the celebration, we encourage you to line up your tickets ASAP (we’re offering an early bird discount, for a short time). This is a unique experience. A chance for all of us to consider where the frontiers of science lie, where the next generation of biotechs is coming from. And where the new world of biopharma is taking us.
— John