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What’s in Today’s Brief? (January 15th Preview)
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Illumina launches billion‑cell atlas: AI gets a genome‑scale training set
Illumina announced the Billion Cell Atlas, a planned dataset of one billion genome‑wide genetic perturbations designed to train large AI models for drug discovery and target validation. The company said founding pharma partners include AstraZeneca, Merck and Eli Lilly; Illumina has generated roughly 150 million cells so far and expects to reach one billion. The dataset couples genetic perturbation results across ~200 cell lines with standardized readouts to enable ‘‘virtual cell’’ modeling and target prioritization, Illumina executives told investors at JP Morgan. Pharma partners will use the resource to validate targets, train foundation models, and reduce the lead‑time on early discovery experiments. For industry users, the Atlas aims to standardize perturbation outputs at scale—reducing reliance on small, lab‑specific datasets and accelerating AI‑driven hypothesis generation. Illumina positioned the Atlas as both a commercial offering and a shared resource to de‑risk early target selection for large drug developers.
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FDA asks industry to drop suicide warnings from GLP‑1 labels — regulators revise post‑market risk language
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration requested that manufacturers of GLP‑1 obesity drugs remove warnings about suicidal ideation and behavior from product labeling after a post‑market evaluation found no increased risk. The request covers Lilly’s Zepbound and Novo Nordisk’s Saxenda and Wegovy and follows agency safety reviews. FDA officials said the change is based on aggregated post‑market data and will alter the warnings and precautions sections of labeling. Company statements and FDA correspondence indicate the revision will remove a class‑level language that previously mirrored concerns associated with older weight‑loss medicines. Manufacturers and payers will need to update safety communications and prescribing information; clinicians will watch for FDA instructions on patient monitoring. The move signals a recalibration of post‑market messaging after extensive GLP‑1 uptake and scrutiny from regulators and the public.
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FDA clears Zycubo: first approved treatment for Menkes disease
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Zycubo (copper histidinate, CUTX‑101) as the first therapy for Menkes disease, granting a rare pediatric disease priority review voucher to the sponsor. Sentynl Therapeutics will commercialize the drug after earlier development work by Cyprium/Fortress Biotech. The approval addresses a fatal pediatric disorder of copper absorption that causes seizures and failure to thrive; FDA cleared the application two days before the PDUFA date after the sponsor resolved prior manufacturing questions. The decision includes transfer provisions for the PRV and potential milestone and royalty arrangements disclosed in company filings. For clinicians treating this ultra‑rare pediatric population, the approval provides the first disease‑specific therapy. For biotech investors and rare‑disease developers, the approval highlights regulatory pathways for high‑impact orphan medicines and the commercial value of PRVs.
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AbbVie inks PD‑1/VEGF deal and signs MFN pact: global strategy widens
AbbVie agreed to an exclusive outside‑China licensing deal for RemeGen’s PD‑1/VEGF bispecific RC148, structuring $650 million upfront and up to $4.95 billion in milestones plus tiered royalties. RemeGen retains Greater China rights while AbbVie secures global development and commercialization responsibilities. Separately, AbbVie reached a most‑favored‑nation (MFN) pricing agreement with the White House that included large domestic manufacturing and investment commitments. Company statements indicate the MFN deal aims to lower list prices and expand US production capacity. Taken together, the transactions show AbbVie using frontier biologics licensing and government pricing pacts to bolster oncology reach while aligning with US industrial policy. The RC148 deal accelerates AbbVie’s immuno‑oncology offering; the MFN pact reshapes the company’s commercial and manufacturing commitments in the U.S.
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NVIDIA and Lilly pledge $1B AI lab: co‑innovation to speed drug discovery
NVIDIA and Eli Lilly announced a five‑year, $1 billion collaboration to create a Co‑Innovation AI Lab focused on accelerating AI applications in drug discovery and development. The partnership will combine NVIDIA’s accelerated computing and Lilly’s drug development expertise to scale models and computational infrastructure. At a JPM fireside chat, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang and Lilly CEO David Ricks framed the lab as an effort to co‑design software and hardware stacks for large biomedical models. The initiative will target target validation, generative biology workflows, and model deployment across the pharma discovery pipeline. The tie‑up reflects how major tech vendors and big pharmas are formalizing multi‑year investments to operationalize AI in R&D. The lab aims to reduce compute bottlenecks in training foundation models and to build validated workflows for translational teams.
...and 5 more selected Biotech stories in today’s full edition.
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