Featured companies: CG Therapeutics, Complete Genomics, ConforMIS, Flexible Medical Systems, LeMaitre Vascular, MAP Pharmaceuticals, ParaPro, Vascular Architects, Zars Pharma
(UPDATED on 10/1/07: See below.)
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Complete Genomics is one of several companies aiming to bring down the cost of genome sequencing in order to, among other things, eventually make it possible for individuals to base medical and lifestyle decisions on their individual genetic profiles. The company, founded in 2005, hasn’t disclosed many details about its technological approach, although its Web site vaguely describes it as “a novel combination of high-density DNA nanoarrays, sequencing-by-hybridization and combinatorial probe-ligation chemistry, and high-performance computing techniques.”
The high-speed sequencing market has been in a state of flux recently. Cambridge, Mass.-based Helicos Biosciences, went public in May. Solexa, a U.K.-based sequencer that later moved to the U.S., also went public in 2005 via a reverse merger and then was acquired earlier this year by Illumina. 454 Life Sciences was acquired by Roche earlier this year. VentureWire also lists Pacific Biosciences as a recent venture-backed sequencing company.
UPDATE: Complete Genomics announced an interesting new joint venture with BioNanomatrix of Philadelphia ten days after this funding; see our coverage here.
MAP makes reformulated versions of existing drugs for delivery via inhalers. Its lead candidate is a new inhaled version of budesonide, a corticosteroid used to treat pediatric asthma.
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At that, Zars is in far better shape than Cumberland Pharmaceuticals, which has been expected to go public on a day-to-day basis since mid-August. We last wrote about Cumberland here.
FMS is developing diagnostic monitors that continuously draw “interstitial fluid” through the skin without a needle or other punctures. This fluid can theoretically be used to monitor protein levels in blood, although it’s also worth noting that other attempts to do this sort of thing — especially continuous blood-sugar monitoring for diabetics — have had a mixed history.
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