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What’s in Today’s Brief? (March 4th Preview)
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Evo 2 DNA model: AI designs genomes across the tree of life
A DNA foundation model called Evo 2 was published in Nature and can identify patterns across the genomes of more than 100,000 species and design long genomic sequences. The model accurately flags disease-causing human mutations and generated genome-length designs comparable to simple bacterial genomes. Evo 2 was trained on broad taxonomic data to capture conserved and divergent sequence features that experimental screening would take years to map. Researchers present Evo 2 as a general-purpose sequence model that compresses evolutionary information into a form usable for variant interpretation and synthetic genome design. The paper shows benchmarked performance on mutation effect prediction and design tasks; the authors discuss applications spanning functional annotation, prioritizing variants for clinical follow-up, and accelerating synthetic biology workflows.
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Prime Medicine reverses course – pursues FDA approval for prime‑editing therapy
Prime Medicine has reversed an earlier decision to shelve a gene‑editing program and will seek FDA approval for a prime‑editing therapy after treating only two patients, according to company statements and STAT reporting. The therapy uses prime editing, a CRISPR‑based tool developed by David Liu’s lab, to correct a small DNA defect in blood cells for a rare immune disease. The company says it will file with the FDA despite extremely limited clinical exposure; regulators have signaled both willingness to accelerate gene‑editing reviews and increased scrutiny of small, early datasets. The development tests how regulators apply flexible pathways for first‑in‑class genome‑editing treatments while balancing patient safety and evidentiary standards.
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Moderna pays big: upfront cash in global LNP patent settlement
Moderna agreed to settle long‑running patent litigation over lipid nanoparticle (LNP) delivery technology with Roivant’s Genevant and Arbutus, paying $950 million upfront and up to $2.25 billion total under a settlement disclosed by the parties. The deal resolves U.S. and international suits tied to Spikevax and related mRNA vaccines, and grants Moderna a global nonexclusive license for certain infectious‑disease uses. Company statements framed the settlement as removing legacy uncertainty so Moderna can focus on its pipeline. Legal filings signal the matter could still involve an appeal on government‑contract immunity (Section 1498) that would affect contingent payments, but the immediate cash payment closes most active disputes across jurisdictions.
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FDA targets compounders: fresh warning letters hit GLP‑1 telehealth sellers
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration sent a new batch of warning letters—30 in the latest round—targeting telehealth companies that marketed compounded versions of GLP‑1 obesity drugs and made claims comparable to approved products. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary signaled aggressive enforcement, saying compounders should not attempt to circumvent the agency’s approval process. The letters, stemming from website reviews, accuse firms of implying their compounded products are equivalent to branded semaglutide or tirzepatide therapies without FDA approval. Firms have 15 days to respond or face potential legal action. The enforcement activity follows high‑profile disputes, including Hims & Hers and Strive Pharmacy, and underlines regulatory risk for telehealth and compounding businesses selling copycat GLP‑1 formulations.
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Theravance winds down R&D after phase III failure – major layoffs follow
Theravance Biopharma announced the end of its R&D organization and a 50% workforce reduction after its phase III trial of ampreloxetine failed to meet the primary endpoint. The company will pivot to focus on commercial operations for its nebulized COPD product Yupelri while exploring strategic alternatives for the business. Management cited the clinical miss in multiple system atrophy as final evidence to discontinue further development of the norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor. The restructuring aims to cut cash burn but removes Theravance from new drug discovery, creating questions about long‑term pipeline value and potential asset sales.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition — or archive.
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