Company spun off from U. research will develop genetic tests to diagnose disease

Published: Wednesday, Dec. 19 2007 3:38 p.m. MST

A Utah company that plans to develop biomarker tests to diagnose genetic disease was formally launched Wednesday, with the announcement that it has closed a $5.8 million funding round.

LineaGen is a company spun off research at the University of Utah, a university that has discovered more genes related to diseases than any other. Besides developing diagnostic tools using biomarkers, the company plans to license intellectual property to companies to help develop treatments.

In an announcement made in the governor's board room at the Capitol, LineaGen leaders said they secured funding from vSpring Capital, Sanderling Biomedical Ventures and Mesa Verde Venture partners. The money will be used to help develop and bring to market tools to diagnose common but complex diseases that have a genetic component.

"This is a classic example of how leaders in Utah's life-science industry, investment and higher-education research communities are working together to provide global leadership in personalized and predictive medicine," said Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr.

LineaGen's chief executive officer, Dr. Michael S. Paul, summarized the company's efforts as the "commercialization of new and better ways to diagnose and treat" genetic disease. He predicts that the company will have its first molecular diagnostic test within three to five years, possibly in one of several areas the company is now targeting, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, autism, multiple sclerosis and osteoporosis.

The company's efforts fit with a growing trend toward "personalized" medicine. That doesn't mean compounding a drug just for an individual, but it does mean understanding molecular, genetic differences in order to predict more accurately which treatment might work best for an individual.

A test might help clinicians not only provide an early diagnosis, but decide what type of care to offer. And early diagnosis may greatly impact the course of both treatment and the disease itself, said Dr. Mark Leppert, LineaGen's chief scientific advisor and co-chairman of the human-genetics department at the U.

Simply identifying a predisposition to a disease such as scoliosis may open the door to preventing it, said Dr. Dinesh Patel, manager director of vSpring Capital, who will serve on LineaGen's board of directors.

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