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From Colossal to Chickens: The Scientists Behind Neion Bio’s Biologics Platform
Twenty years ago, Sven Bocklandt, PhD, sought to create a hypoallergenic cat. He had the genetic engineering chops to do it, but the embryology was beyond his capabilities. At a small animal genetic engineering conference, known as TARC (Transgenic Animal Research Conference), held near Lake Tahoe, he met James Kehler, VMD, PhD, whose research at that time was to make transgenic and knockout cats as models of human disease.
The two men bonded, agreed the hypoallergenic cat idea was “crazy enough,” and decided to move forward with it. They worked together, completely unfunded, for years—FedEx’ing samples back and forth as Bocklandt was on the west coast and Kehler on the east coast—trying to make their “garage cat” while each one worked different day jobs.
Bocklandt, passionate about animal genome engineering, continued to develop different ideas for genome engineering in animals. Around the same time that he started sharing his ideas with scientists like George Church, PhD, a start-up focused on animal genome engineering was taking shape—Colossal Biosciences, co-founded by Church. Introductions were made, and Bocklandt joined in 2022 as species director to work on the dire wolf project. Kehler joined a short time later as VP. And everyone knows the rest of that story (there was no shortage of media coverage).
The pair eventually succeeded with the cat project: his name is Archie, and he is, Kehler noted, only partially hypoallergenic. But the generation of Archie and the dire wolves may not be the successes of this story. The real success may be what Bocklandt and Kehler learned along the way—and what they are going to do next.
Chickens as the next biologic factory
Neion Bio, co-founded by Dimi Kellari and Sam Levin, PhD, and located on the Rockefeller University campus on the east side of Manhattan, is aiming to re-engineer eggs to produce drugs in chickens. The team uses genetic engineering to integrate therapeutic proteins into native egg proteins, creating a new manufacturing platform for drugs that runs on grain and water.
Bocklandt joined the team at Neion Bio as CSO after leaving Colossal in 2024; Kehler joined more recently, as head of avian sciences.
When thinking about producing complex proteins, using the chicken “makes a lot of sense,” Bocklandt told GEN. Breeding and genetic engineering are all established in the chicken. And the vaccine industry has established an existing infrastructure to grow eggs under disease-free conditions. Purifying proteins out of an egg, Bocklandt added, is easier than purifying them out of a Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) culture (the traditional cell choice for drug production) because there are fewer host proteins.

It makes “far more sense” than what we’re doing right now, Bocklandt noted, which is using CHO cells. “Everyone is doing that because everyone has been doing it that way,” he asserted.
“The fact that we’re now seriously questioning whether CHO cells should remain the default manufacturing platform for biologics is long overdue,” noted Ola Wlodek, PhD, CEO of Constructive Bio. “Any credible new approach that breaks this decades-old lock-in is ultimately good for patients and for the field.”
For Kehler, who did his graduate work in the lab of stem cell pioneer Hans Schöler, PhD, the chicken is a clear choice because it is the only species, besides the mouse, where the primordial germ cells have been used to transmit genetically modified gametes to the next generation.
Mike McGrew, PhD, group leader at the Roslin Institute in the U.K., and an advisor to Neion Bio, demonstrated years ago that modifying chicken primordial germ cells is a reliable way of making gene-edited chickens. This background is comforting to Kehler, who noted that, “unlike at Colossal, where everything was bleeding edge, we are able to focus on a single species and capitalize on some pretty tried and true technology.”
Drugs in eggs meet biomanufacturing reality
The lab space on the Rockefeller University campus can support research and even house chickens. But it cannot support the production of a drug. When asked about turning their egg-borne proteins into drugs, the company leans on the existing infrastructure that supports vaccines in specific pathogen free (SPF) eggs. The idea is that the egg whites will be frozen in giant batches and then processed in a CDMO.
When asked about potential challenges, Bocklandt noted that, “technically, there’s not much to worry about. I have no concerns about Neion Bio being able to do what we want to do or what we need to do.”
But there may be hurdles ahead. Rahul Dhanda, co-founder, president, and CEO of Syntis Bio, told GEN that “at the beginning, everything can look like it has infinite potential—it’s when you actually build and operate the system that the real challenges show up.”
More specifically, Dhanda pointed out that biomanufacturing “ultimately comes down to reliable, consistent, and cost-efficient production.” Leveraging animal biology for drug manufacturing is exciting, he noted, “but scalability and cost are still open questions, especially at this early stage. Biological variability between animals and individual outputs, like eggs, introduces additional risk compared to more controlled cell-based systems,” Dhanda added.
Wlodek agreed: “because egg-based production is inherently a biological supply chain, it will face avian flu risks, batch-to-batch variability from seasonal and flock effects, animal-welfare/regulatory overhead, and practical limits on how fast you can expand output compared with stainless-steel or single-use fermenters.”
Microbial and yeast systems still “win decisively on GMP containment, land/water footprint,” she noted, and “the ability to go from a few liters to tens of thousands of liters in weeks rather than months.”
Dhanda agreed that “getting it to work in principle is far different from getting it to work at scale, and that seems far off.”
If these challenges can be addressed at scale, safely and humanely, Dhanda noted, the approach could deliver meaningful health benefits—”but there are still significant logistical and technical hurdles to work through.”
Engineering the chicken genome
Creating dire wolves at Colossal started with deriving wolf cells, editing them, and cloning them back into a live animal. But cloning doesn’t exist in birds. To genetically engineer chickens, the Neion Bio team edits the germline, starting the process with a fertilized egg.

The egg is incubated for 65 hours, at which point germ cells float in the blood because the ovaries and testes don’t exist yet. A microliter of the blood is removed, put into cell culture media, and the germ cells grow out. The transgene that codes for the therapeutic protein is inserted using CRISPR-Cas enzymes, in the coding region of a gene that codes for Ovalbumin—which makes up a bit over 50% of the egg white protein. This protein is made “on a massive scale” by the oviduct, the company noted.
The genome is screened for correct integration and potential off-target edits. Once the clone is approved, several thousand cells are injected back into another embryo (also at 65 days old). After incubation, the egg hatches and becomes a chicken.
Kanuma set the precedent—but not the scale
In 2015, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Kanuma (sebelipase alfa) to treat Lysosomal Acid Lipase (LAL) deficiency, also known as Wolman disease. The drug, an enzyme replacement therapy, was the first treatment for patients with the rare disease and the first drug to be made in chickens. Kanuma is produced by Alexion Pharmaceuticals, which was acquired by AstraZeneca in 2021.
This historical precedent may provide a proof of concept for Neion Bio. That said, “the scale required for Kanuma is very different from what would be needed for large biosimilars,” explained Wlodek.
An Odyssean journey
For both Bocklandt and Kehler, the move to Neion Bio feels like their careers are coming full circle. When Bocklandt first left Colossal, he was not sure how he would surpass that level of excitement. But the move came at an interesting time for him; the call to join Neion Bio came just weeks after he learned that his sister had been diagnosed with leukemia.
He thought, “Well, maybe this is not such a bad use of my skills.”
Earlier in his career, he didn’t think that he had anything special to add to a field like cancer research. But now Bocklandt sees it differently: throughout his career, he has pushed the state-of-the-art of genetic engineering. Now, he said, “I bring something to the field. And the fact that I can do my passion, animal genetic engineering, and apply that to make drugs better, cheaper, and more accessible, is really exciting.”
As for Kehler, Neion’s goal was his goal all along. He went to the University of Pennsylvania to make better animal models to test drugs for humans. “It never really dawned on me that we could use animals to make the drugs for humans. But taking everything I know about stem cell biology, germ cell biology, and gene editing, and bringing that to bear to make what should be a disruptive, transformational approach to making drugs—it feels like the culmination of my career.”
Neion (pronounced Neon) Bio is named after the birthplace of Odysseus; Mount Neion is a mountain mentioned in Homer’s The Odyssey as a landmark on Ithaca—Odysseus’ island home. As described by the company, the name is a testament to the shared qualities between the Greek hero and the company’s goals: relying on intelligence and resourcefulness over strength. And yes, Odysseus was successful in his return home to reclaim his throne. But it was a bittersweet success given the enormous cost and hardship.
Neion Bio’s name may mirror the resilience and ingenuity required to undertake the journey, but time will tell how long the similarities in the namesake are shared between the two.
The post From Colossal to Chickens: The Scientists Behind Neion Bio’s Biologics Platform appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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Engineered Miniature CRISPR Boosts Gene‑Editing Efficiency in Human Cells
One of the biggest obstacles in targeting CRISPR therapy deliveries directly into the body isn’t the editing chemistry, it’s the size of the editors themselves. The field’s workhorse nucleases, including Cas9 and Cas12a, are considerably large (exceeding 1,300 amino acids) to fit inside adeno‑associated virus (AAV) vectors, the most widely used delivery vehicle for in vivo gene therapy. That size mismatch has forced most clinical applications to rely on ex vivo editing of blood or bone‑marrow‑derived cells, leaving many tissues out of reach. A smaller CRISPR system that can be packaged into AAV without sacrificing efficiency has long been a key missing piece.
A new study published in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology takes a major step toward that goal. Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin and collaborators report the discovery and engineering of a compact Cas12f nuclease that performs robustly in human cells, a notable advance for a class of miniature enzymes that have historically shown lower efficiencies in mammalian cells compared to larger systems. The paper is titled, “Comparative characterization of Cas12f orthologs reveals mechanistic features underlying enhanced genome editing efficiency.”
The team began by mining metagenomic datasets for naturally small CRISPR enzymes and identified a previously uncharacterized ortholog, Alistipes sp. Cas12f (Al3Cas12f). Despite its compact size—roughly one‑third that of Cas9—the nuclease showed unexpectedly strong activity in human cells. In initial screens, Al3Cas12f produced more than 50% editing at many genomic sites and exceeded 90% at several targets. The authors wrote, “Results from a gRNA screen targeting intron 1 of the ALB gene, exon 3 of the APOA1 gene and the AAVS1 site within PPP1R12C intron 1 showed that 27 target sites displayed >10% editing, 19 sites displayed >50% editing and 10 sites displayed >90% editing across AAVS1 and APOA1.”
Cryo‑EM structures revealed why this miniature enzyme punches above its weight. Compared with other Cas12f orthologs, Al3Cas12f forms a more extensive and interlocking dimer interface, creating a stable, preassembled complex that supports efficient R‑loop formation. The guide RNA scaffold also appears naturally streamlined: unlike other Cas12f gRNAs, it lacks an extraneous stem‑loop and adopts a compact conformation that docks cleanly into the protein. As the authors noted, Al3Cas12f achieves “efficient R‑loop formation through a stable dimer interface and a naturally optimized gRNA.”
Using these structural insights, the team engineered an enhanced variant, Al3Cas12f RKK, that dramatically boosts editing efficiency across genomic loci. In human cells, the variant increased editing from below 10% to more than 80% at many targets, with some sites reaching 90%. The researchers tested the system in a leukemia‑derived human cell line, focusing on genes implicated in cancer, atherosclerosis, and ALS.
The mechanistic comparisons were equally revealing. By solving the structures of two additional Cas12f orthologs—Oscillibacter sp. Cas12f and Ruminiclostridium herbifermentans Cas12f—the team noted “divergent architectures and regulatory features governing protospacer-adjacent motif recognition, gRNA binding, dimerization, and DNA cleavage.” Al3Cas12f’s extended helices and mortise‑and‑tenon‑like interactions appear to be lineage‑specific adaptations that stabilize the nuclease and support high activity.
The next step is to test whether the enzyme maintains its performance when packaged into AAV vectors. If successful, the system could offer a blueprint for engineering future generations of compact CRISPR tools.
The post Engineered Miniature CRISPR Boosts Gene‑Editing Efficiency in Human Cells appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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CAR T Cell Therapy Biomanufactured by Cellares Infused Into First Two Patients
Cellares reported that the first two patients have been dosed with Cabaletta Bio’s investigational CAR T cell therapy rese-cel (resecabtagene autoleucel) manufactured on Cellares’ Cell Shuttle
instrument. The administration of an autologous cell therapy, which met all release criteria and was manufactured on an automated manufacturing platform, represents an important step on the journey to realizing a future where scalable manufacturing of autologous products to supply thousands of patients per year can be achieved with minimal capital investment and a low cost of goods, according to a Cellares spokesperson.
While the transformative clinical benefits of autologous CAR T cell therapy are well established in oncology, the high manufacturing costs, lack of scalability, process inconsistency, and operational inflexibility associated with the current highly manual way of manufacturing have created meaningful barriers to patient access, reducing patient accessibility to these therapies.
“This is an important milestone that reflects three years of focused collaboration between the teams at Cabaletta and Cellares,” said Steven Nichtberger, MD, co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Cabaletta Bio. “The dosing of these first two patients is an important demonstration of Cellares’ GMP manufacturing and supply chain capabilities with their automated manufacturing platform and thus represents a significant achievement toward our goal of securing high-capacity flexible supply with minimal capital investment and a low cost of goods.”
“This milestone is a transformative moment for the field of autologous cell therapy,” added Fabian Gerlinghaus, co-founder and CEO of Cellares. “For years, the promise of autologous CAR T has been constrained by manufacturing models that were never designed to scale.”
Rese-cel (formerly referred to as CABA-201) is an investigational, autologous CAR T cell therapy engineered with a fully human CD19 binder and a 4-1BB co-stimulatory domain, designed specifically for the treatment of autoimmune diseases. Administered as a single, weight-based infusion, rese-cel is intended to transiently and deeply deplete CD19-positive cells, with the goal of resetting the immune system and achieving durable clinical responses without the need for chronic therapy.
Cabaletta is evaluating rese-cel in the RESET
(REstoring SElf-Tolerance) clinical development program, which includes multiple ongoing company-sponsored trials across a diverse and growing range of autoimmune diseases in rheumatology, neurology, and dermatology.
The post CAR T Cell Therapy Biomanufactured by Cellares Infused Into First Two Patients appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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Regeneron, Telix Launch Up-to-$4.3B Cancer-Focused Radiopharma Drug, Diagnostic Collaboration
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals plans to expand its pipeline into radiopharmaceutical therapies through an up to $4.3 billion collaboration with Telix Pharmaceuticals to co-develop and co-commercialize precision oncology treatments and companion diagnostics.
The companies have agreed to partner on next-generation radiopharmaceutical therapies aimed at up to eight solid tumor targets from Regeneron’s portfolio of antibodies, generated from VelocImmune® technology, which uses the company’s own mouse platform engineered with a genetically humanized immune system.
Regeneron and Telix also said they plan to develop radio-diagnostics designed to support patient selection and treatment response assessment.
The collaboration is intended to combine the biologics expertise of Tarrytown, NY-based Regeneron, including bispecific antibody discovery, with the radiopharmaceutical development platform, global manufacturing capabilities, and supply chain infrastructure of Telix, which is headquartered in Melbourne, Australia.
“Regeneron is excited to enter the targeted radiopharmaceuticals space and explore the utility of these agents either as monotherapy or rationally combined with our immunotherapy platform, particularly in areas of high unmet patient need such as lung cancer, where our PD-1 inhibitor is a global standard of care,” Israel Lowy, MD, PhD, Regeneron’s senior vice president and clinical development unit head, oncology, said in a statement.
Lowy referred to Libtayo® (cemiplimab-rwlc), a programmed death receptor-1 blocking antibody approved for multiple oncology indications including forms of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), as well as cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, and basal cell carcinoma. Libtayo finished 2025 with $1.453 billion in worldwide net product sales, up 19% from $1.217 billion in 2024. Figures include $425 million in Q4 2025 global net product sales, up 16% from $367 million in the year-ago quarter.
‘An ideal partner’
“In our view, the deal with Regeneron validates Telix’s differentiated capabilities in radiopharmaceutical development and handling of complex supply chain logistics,” Andy T. Hsieh, PhD, a partner and biotechnology analyst with William Blair, wrote Monday in a research note. “Furthermore, given Regeneron’s track record of developing successful commercial therapeutics, we believe it is an ideal partner in bringing forth antibody-based theranostic assets.”
Telix investors appeared to somewhat agree with that analysis. The company’s ordinary shares traded on the Australian Stock Exchange climbed nearly 8% from A$14.64 ($10.34) to A$15.77 ($11.13). Telix’s American depositary shares traded on NASDAQ rose about 7%, from $10.56 to $11.24.
Hsieh reiterated William Blair’s “Outperform” rating for Telix shares based on several potential value-creating inflection points, including:
- Continuing gains in market share gains within the prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) positron emission tomography (PET) diagnostic imaging market, based on rising sales and price stability as payers have offered clarity on reimbursement—factors he said enable Telix to expand its precision medicine franchise “from a position of strength.”
- Therapeutic franchise potential, as supported by recent positive preliminary data from part 1 of the ongoing Phase III ProstACT GLOBAL trial (NCT06520345) assessing TLX591 in metastatic androgen pathway modulation resistant prostate cancer.
- Potential approvals of two PET imaging agents—TLX250-CDx (Zircaix®, 89Zr-DFO-girentuximab), designed to non-invasively detect and characterize clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC); and TLX101-Px (Pixclara®, Floretyrosine F 18 or 18F-FET), designed to image glioma. Both could “meaningfully” contribute to Telix’s profit-and-loss statement next year, the analyst predicted.
The FDA rejected both Zircaix and Pixclara last year via separate complete response letters. The agency held in April 2025 that Zircaix required additional confirmatory clinical evidence, which the company agreed to provide. On Friday, Telix said the FDA accepted its resubmitted New Drug Application (NDA) for Pixcara, assigning a target decision date of September 12 under the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA).
In August 2025, the FDA rejected Zircaix via complete response letter, alleging deficiencies relating to its chemistry, manufacturing, and controls (CMC) package—deficiencies the company said were “readily addressable.”
“We look forward to additional updates pertaining to efficacy parameters, such as progression-free survival, an approvable endpoint, likely later this year,” Hsieh added.
Growth through acquisitions
Telix has built up its radiopharma infrastructure in recent years through acquisitions, spending $13.6 million to purchase IsoTherapeutics, a contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) focused on providing services to Telix and other radiopharmaceutical companies—followed by an up to $82 million buyout of radioisotope production technology firm ARTMS, which stands for alternative radioisotope technologies for medical science.
In September 2024, Telix expanded its manufacturing footprint by acquiring RLS Radiopharmacies for up to $250 million, part of an investment strategy focused around creating vertically integrated supply chain, manufacturing, and distribution.
The global radiopharmaceuticals market is predicted to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 10.1%, more than doubling from $14.2 billion this year to $31 billion in 2032, then soaring again to $54.6 billion by 2040, according to a Roots Analysis report issued in January.
Telix briefly pursued a U.S. initial public offering, which it withdrew in June 2024. The company cited market conditions as biotech IPOs met with chilly receptions on Wall Street and asserted that the offering was not predicated on the need to raise capital.
Regeneron has agreed to pay Telix $40 million in upfront cash for access to its radiopharmaceutical manufacturing platform for four initial therapeutic programs, with Regeneron holding an option to expand the collaboration to include four additional programs with additional upfront payments.
Telix and Regeneron have agreed to share equally their global commercialization costs and potential profits, with Telix retaining the option to co-promote certain potential products. However, if Telix were instead to opt out of the co-funding model for any of the original four programs, it would then be eligible to receive up to $535 million in development and commercial milestone payments, plus low double-digit royalties on future net sales, for that program.
If Telix opts out of co-funding for all four, company could achieve $2.14 billion in payments tied to achieving milestones.
For the diagnostics to be covered by the collaboration, Telix and Regeneron have agreed to jointly develop diagnostic assets, with Telix leading commercialization and Regeneron receiving a set percentage of profits.
“The collaboration with Regeneron reflects a highly complementary set of capabilities and a unique opportunity to explore what true ‘next gen’ biologics-based radiopharmaceuticals can potentially do for patients,” added Christian Behrenbruch, DPhil, managing director and group CEO at Telix. “We are well positioned to work toward the shared goal of advancing next-generation precision radiopharmaceuticals for patients with hard-to-treat cancers.”
The post Regeneron, Telix Launch Up-to-$4.3B Cancer-Focused Radiopharma Drug, Diagnostic Collaboration appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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