FRONT PAGE AMPYRA AUBAGIO AVONEX BETASERON COPAXONE EXTAVIA
Stan's Angels MS News Channel on YouTube GILENYA NOVANTRONE REBIF RITUXAN TECFIDERA TYSABRI
Rebif News Channel: 52 articles
Click Here For My Videos, Advice, Tips, Studies and Trials.
Timothy L. Vollmer, MD
Department of Neurology
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Professor

Co-Director of the RMMSC at Anschutz Medical Center

Medical Director-Rocky Mountain MS Center
Click here to read my columns
Brian R. Apatoff, MD, PhD
Multiple Sclerosis Institute
Center for Neurological Disorders

Associate Professor Neurology and Neuroscience,

Weill Medical College of Cornell University

Clinical Attending in Neurology,
New York-Presbyterian Hospital
CLICK ON THE RED BUTTON BELOW
You'll get FREE Breaking News Alerts on new MS treatments as they are approved
MS NEWS ARCHIVES: by week

HERE'S A FEW OF OUR 6000+ Facebook & MySpace FRIENDS
Timothy L. Vollmer M.D.
Department of Neurology
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center
Co-Director of the RMMSC at Anschutz Medical Center
and
Medical Director-Rocky Mountain MS Center


Click to view 1280 MS Walk photos!

"MS Can Not
Rob You of Joy"
"I'm an M.D....my Mom has MS and we have a message for everyone."
- Jennifer Hartmark-Hill MD
Beverly Dean

"I've had MS for 2 years...this is the most important advice you'll ever hear."
"This is how I give myself a painless injection."
Heather Johnson

"A helpful tip for newly diagnosed MS patients."
"Important advice on choosing MS medication "
Joyce Moore


This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Monday

 

Merck Invests in Research Partnerships to Boost Innovation

Merck Invests in Research Partnerships to Boost Innovation


Merck KGaA Invests in Research Partnerships in Israel to Boost Innovation:
• Metabomed and ChanBio joined Israel Bioincubator today, more companies to enter
• Stake in start-up company Qlight Nanotech increased
• Stefan Oschmann: “Innovative landscape of Israel fits in perfectly with our claim of Living Innovation”

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, the global pharmaceutical, chemical and life science company, is increasingly counting on partnerships with Israeli biotech companies, as demonstrated by its cooperation with Metabomed and ChanBio, both of which joined the Israel Bioincubator today. Merck KGaA is already cooperating with multiple Israeli start-up companies such as Qlight Nanotech, as well as research institutes such as the Weizmann Institute of Science as it seeks innovations that could become the basis for future products.

“The innovative landscape of Israel fits in perfectly with our ‘Living Innovation’ claim,” said Stefan Oschmann, Merck KGaA’s Executive Board member responsible for the Pharmaceuticals businesses, today at the company’s site in Yavne, Israel. “In Israel we not only have a past which has led to some of our most important products like Rebif and Erbitux, but also a promising future because we continue to find very interesting and cutting-edge science and the support here in Israel to translate that science into products.”

Newly created company Metabomed and start-up company ChanBio joined the company’s Israel Bioincubator in Yavne today. The € 10 million MS Ventures Israel Bioincubator Fun is focused on pre-seed and seed opportunities originating in Israel. The Israel Bioincubator so far housed Neviah Genomics and Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, expects several more companies to enter.
Metabomed focuses on research in the field of cancer metabolism and computational biology. Its founders besides others are from the Tel Aviv University and the Technion Israel Institute of Technology, both in Israel.

ChanBio will concentrate on the discovery of antibodies selective for ion channels considered to be significant therapeutic targets for the treatment of Multiple Sclerosis.

"Strategic investments in external innovation are a key component of our strategy,” Oschmann said. “Our MS Ventures fund demonstrates our commitment to creating long-term relationships with and tapping into the innovative entrepreneurial spirit of biotech companies.”
Last week, Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, raised its stake in Jerusalem-based company Qlight Nanotech and is currently considering whether to apply with selected Israeli partners for research grants in the Nofar program of Israel’s Ministry of Industry and Trade. This program, which for example was used as a basis to start Qlight Nanotech, has been designed by the Israeli government to support the industrial application of academic research. The projects Merck KGaA is considering applying for are in the field of high-tech materials.

A very recent example of joint R&D activity between Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, and Israel In the field of high-tech chemicals is the start-up company Qlight Nanotech. The company develops products for use in display technologies and energy-efficient lighting systems and just in September opened new laboratories to conduct further product-related research and development. Merck KGaA increased its original stake in this company last week.

Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, already announced that it would increase the 2013 and 2014 R&D budgets for its two Performance Materials and life science tools divisions, while global R&D spending for its pharmaceuticals businesses would be close to the year-earlier level. In 2012, Merck KGaA spent a total of € 1.5 billion on R&D, equivalent to 14.1% of Group sales. 80% of that amount was attributable to pharmaceuticals and 20% to chemicals divisions.

Oschmann continued: “Israel has a quality education system and above-average intellectual capital. Compared with other countries, Israel has the highest concentration of scientists and engineers in the world. In addition, cooperation partners appreciate that Israeli scientists often work in a less conventional manner and are faster at implementing their results.”

Israel took third place in the “Innovation” category in the latest Global Competitiveness Ranking published by the World Economic Forum. Globally, the country ranks fourth in scientific activity and over the past ten years, six Israelis won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

On the pharmaceuticals side, the biopharmaceutical division of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, earlier this month signed a memorandum of understanding with Israel biotech company Kadimastem, which develops human pluripotent stem cell-related products. The aim is to utilize their screening platform to characterize new compounds discovered as remyelinating agents for multiple sclerosis, but also to possibly extend the collaboration into research fields such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. This follows the signature of a previous agreement with Kadimastem in 2012.

Merck KGaA’s top selling drug Rebif® (2012 sales: € 1,893 million) for the treatment of multiple sclerosis has intellectual roots in Israel’s prestigious Weizmann Institute, as has the company’s oncology drug Erbitux® (2012 sales: € 887 million).
In 2007, Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany, was the first German and the first pharmaceutical and chemical company to sign the Global Enterprise Framework Collaboration Program of Israel’s Ministry of Industry and Trade. “This program gives us continuous support in identifying and creating new partnerships. In that framework we surely expect more in the upcoming future,” Oschmann said.