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Abgenix takeover gives Amgen grasp of the humanized mouse.


Besides the promising colon cancer colon cancer, cancer of any part of the colon (often called the large intestine). Colon cancer is the second most common cancer diagnosed in the United States.  drug panitumumab, Amgen Inc. will get something much easier to pronounce in its $2.2 billion purchase of Abgenix Inc.

Mice--actually, a special line of genetically altered mice that have been in high demand because they now have human immune systems immune system

Cells, cell products, organs, and structures of the body involved in the detection and destruction of foreign invaders, such as bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells. Immunity is based on the system's ability to launch a defense against such invaders.
. As a result, antibodies can be grown in the mice and then used in humans, with less risk of rejection.

Amgen Chief Executive Kevin Sharer told analysts during a Dec. 14 conference call that the Thousand Oaks-based biotech giant was still evaluating what's being called Abgenix's XenoMouse technology. "We know there are customers who depend on that platform and we are mindful of that and respectful of it and we want to make sure that we deliver properly," Sharer said.

Might Amgen hoard the developing technology, making business tougher for its competitors?

"There are several places people can go now, but clearly taking one of the big players out of the market is going to have an impact," said RBC Capital Markets RBC Capital Markets is the corporate and investment banking division of Royal Bank of Canada ("RBC"). Broker dealers
Depending on the jurisdiction, the division uses different broker dealer subsidiaries of RBC:
  • Canada: RBC Dominion Securities Inc
 analyst Jason Kantor, adding that reduced access to XenoMouse could present an upside for smaller Abgenix competitors.

Amgen may decide to honor Abgenix's existing partnerships with about a dozen companies. Currently, those partners range from established drug giants such as Pfizer Inc. and AstraZeneca PLC, to small development firms such as Santa Monica-based Agensys Inc., whose chief scientific officer, Aya Jakobovits, led the Abgenix team that produced XenoMouse in mid- 1990's.

Unlike many young development companies with no products on the market, Abgenix has been able to supplement its funding with a small but steady royalty stream from XenoMouse--the product of years of intricate gene splicing splicing /splicĀ·ing/ (spliĀ“sing)
1. the attachment of individual DNA molecules to each other, as in the production of chimeric genes.

2. RNA s.
 and animal cross-breeding.

"It's like a gold mine," said Jakobovits, whose new company has a XenoMouse-developed prostate cancer prostate cancer, cancer originating in the prostate gland. Prostate cancer is the leading malignancy in men in the United States and is second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer death in men.  drug in Phase One clinical trials with Merck and Co. Inc. as a co-development partner. "It's a well-proven technology. If you have good targets, you can produce very good antibodies with it."

Agensys' XenoMouse license is up for renewal in August, but Jakobovits hopes that small companies like hers, which often serve as farm teams for big pharmaceutical companies, will still have access to the technology.

Detecting cells

Some Abgenix shareholders filed a class action suit last month, contending that Amgen's offer of $22.50 a share is too little, given the value of the company's experimental drug portfolio and intellectual property. Fremont-based Abgenix said in a regulatory filing that the suit was without merit.

The proposed acquisition awaits approval from federal regulators and Abgenix's shareholders.

The genetically altered mice are considered important because they can offer further clues on how antibodies are used to detect and prevent microbes or viruses.

More than 25 years ago, scientists began determining how to develop antibodies that would attach to diseased cells that normally go undetected, such as many kinds of cancer. They also can attach to cells linked to arthritis and other diseases. The benefit: a treatment without the severe side-effects of radiation or pills that can weaken the liver.

Using mice to create antibodies requires genetically humanizing the mouse's immune system so that the antibodies it creates can be introduced in humans without being attacked themselves. Older drugs, such as Imclone Inc.'s cancer treatment Erbitux, were developed from mouse cells that are not as "humanized." They must be administered with other drugs that counter the side effects Side effects

Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm.
 of the minute amount of mouse genetic matter they contain.

XenoMouse antibodies are considered among the most fully human developed to date, with panitumumab so far triggering no reported immune response immune response
n.
An integrated bodily response to an antigen, especially one mediated by lymphocytes and involving recognition of antigens by specific antibodies or previously sensitized lymphocytes.
 in clinical trials. That kind of record has made XenoMouse, along with Princeton, N.J.-based Medarex Inc.'s UltiMab system, also used by Amgen, among the most sought after among a half dozen humanization Humanization
Fusing the constant and variable framework region of one or more human immunoglobulins with the binding region of an animal immunoglobulin, done to reduce human reaction against the fusion antibody.

Mentioned in: Alemtuzumab
 platforms.

"An antibody produced from a XenoMouse is for all practical purposes human," said Larry Green, an Abgenix senior research fellow who was part of Jakobovits' XenoMouse development team. He noted that even an antibody originally produced from a human has the potential of being rejected by another person's immune system.

Next-generation competitors to XenoMouse are still several years off. Pasadena-based California Technology Ventures has provided seed funding Seed funding is investing capital to begin a new project, so that it has enough funds to sustain itself for a period of development until it reaches either a state where it is able to continue funding itself, or has created something in value so that it is worthy of future rounds  for a new California Institute of Technology California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena, Calif.; originally for men, became coeducational in 1970; founded 1891 as Throop Polytechnic Institute; called Throop College of Technology, 1913–20.  spin-off called Aliva Inc., which is looking to develop a humanized mouse with an even broader antibody-producing repertoire. Aliva's scientific founder, Hiroaki Shizuya, was the inventor of key technology that enabled the cloning of the human genome The human genome is the genome of Homo sapiens, which is composed of 24 distinct pairs of chromosomes (22 autosomal + X + Y) with a total of approximately 3 billion DNA base pairs containing an estimated 20,000–25,000 genes. .

"While the Abgenix technology is excellent, we believe, theoretically, that we can build a better mouse trap This article is about the video game. For the board game, see Mouse Trap (board game). For other uses, see Mousetrap (disambiguation).

Mouse Trap is a 1981 arcade game released by Exidy similar to Pac-Man It was ported to three home systems by Coleco;
," said Gary Lazar, California Technology Venture's managing partner.

Meanwhile, both Amgen and Abgenix last month applied for U.S. regulatory approval of panitumumab. A recent study found that the drug helped slow tumor tumor: see neoplasm.  growth in patients not helped by chemotherapy. Patients who got the drag were 46 percent less likely to have their cancer worsen than those who received just supportive care supportive care,
n medical and other interventions that attempt to support and make comfortable rather than to cure.
, exceeding the study's goal of 33 percent.
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Author:Crowe, Deborah
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 2, 2006
Words:823
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