TODAY’S HEADLINES:
- Compact ultrasound maker Zonare Medical raises $30M (VentureWire)
- TherOx raises $30M for hypersaturated-oxygen devices (peHUB)
- Accumetrics, antiplatelet-drug diagnostic maker, raises $29M (release)
- Population Genetics takes in £3.8M for massively parallel genome studies (GenomeWeb)
- “Brain fitness” trainer Dakim raises $11M (release)
- BioIQ, home-diagnostics maker, takes in $2.5M (release)
- Hospital med-tracker Sabal Medical raises funds (release)
- Seattle’s PharmaIN gets $400K NIH grant for nanoparticle staph drug (PDF release)
- SensiGen, molecular-diagnostics developer, receives Michigan state loan (release)
- Arcus Ventures aims for $50M fund, targets cancer (VentureWire)
The company said the funding should set it on the road to profitability and eventually to a hope-for IPO. Zonare makes compact ultrasound systems that can be used in sonography and for a variety of other medical diagnostic purposes.
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The startup makes devices that supersaturate blood with oxygen, then infuse that blood into areas of the heart at risk of damage from oxygen starvation due to a heart attack. TherOx has now raised over $120 million in venture funding.
The startup makes a system that measures how well individuals are reacting to treatment with anti-platelet drugs, which are used to prevent or help dislodge major blood clots. Since patient response can vary widely, often as a result of genetic factors (see our coverage of this sort of “personalized medicine” here), such monitoring can help doctors avoid dangerous overdoses or to switch unresponsive patients to higher doses or different drugs as necessary.
Population Genetics Technologies takes in £3.8M for massively parallel genome studies — Population Genetics Technologies, a U.K. startup devoted to technologies for studying thousands of genomes at once, raised £3.8 million ($5.9 million) in a first funding round, GenomeWeb reported. Investors included Auriga Partners, Noble Fund Managers, and Compass Genetics Investors.
The company raised £1.1 million in seed funding from the Wellcome Trust back in 2005 to aid in the development of the technology. PGT is working on a technique devised by Nobel laureate Sydney Brenner that purports to analyze genetic variation in DNA samples from thousands of individuals at once.
In this 2005 release, PGT co-founder Sam Eletr described the method as “will allow the mixing of thousands of samples in one test tube and the simultaneous interrogation [analysis] of all of them in one experiment, instead of in as many experiments as there are genomes in a population…. We expect our technology to allow handling much larger numbers of genomes than pooling does and to have the further advantage of protecting the identities of individuals involved in any population study by allocating them a code that may be kept confidential. We expect it also be applicable to any collection of DNA molecules and genomes, whether from plants, animals, micro-organisms or humans.”
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PGT also named Mel Kronick, a former R&D manager at both Agilent Technologies and Applied Biosystems, as CEO.
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