Barron\'s - 02.09.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

r2,2019 BARRON'S 17


By Josh Nathan-Kazis


Moderna, Translate Bio, and others are developing


drugsthatusemessengerRNAtocuredisease.


Whythiscouldbethenextthinginbiotech.


ILLUSTRATION BY ISRAEL G. VARGAS


Foroveradecade, Michael Heart-


lein has been working on tricking the human


body into curing itself.


The idea struck him in 2008, when he was


working at the pharmaceutical company Shire.


What if you could slip a molecule into the body


that would tell the cells to make proteins that


would cure that person’s illness?


Lots of diseases are caused by a single miss-


ing protein. If you could get the trick to work on


one of those diseases, it could work for many of


them. Dial in the technique and you could start


cranking out new drugs one after the other, like


new generations of the iPhone.


It’s a thrilling idea, and Heartlein is one of


the scores of scientists swept up over the past


few years in the quest to make a drug out of


messenger ribonucleic acid, or mRNA, the mole-


cule that couriers blueprints from a cell’s DNA


to its protein factories.


“Despite a lot of skepticism initially, because


messenger RNA is such a difficult modality to


think about turning into a drug, we generated a


lot of very interesting data really quickly,”


Heartlein said.


Since then, the dazzling theoretical simplicity


of the concept has attracted more than $5 billion


in capital to the four biotech companies leading


the research on the idea, including Translate


Bio (ticker: TBIO), where Heartlein is chief


technical officer. And some of that investment


has come from the biggest names in Big Pharma:


Merck (MRK), Sanofi (SNY), AstraZeneca


(AZN), and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK).


The mRNA drugs wouldn’t just compete with


gene therapies as treatments for diseases caused


by missing proteins. They could also challenge


long-entrenched parts of the vaccine industry


and offer new options for cancer patients.


It is a multibillion-dollar opportunity.


“It opens up a different scope of applications


and diseases,” said Christian Koch, part of the


investment management team at BB Biotech, a


Swiss investment company that is one of the


largest institutional holders of Moderna


(MRNA), the largest mRNA company.

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