|
01/20/05
-- Galapagos announced today that Boehringer Ingelheim has successfully used
Galapagos' SilenceSelect(tm) gene knock-down platform to identify a number
of genes that were shown to influence viral replication in human cells.
Under the terms of an agreement made in October 2003, licensing of these
potential targets will trigger a milestone payment to Galapagos. Further
financial terms were not disclosed.
The
SilenceSelect(tm) collection is offered by Galadeno, Galapagos' genomics
services unit. The adenoviral collection contains siRNA knock-down sequences
targeting over 4,000 human drugable transcripts, where drugable represents
those gene classes of most value for pharmaceutical development. "We are
very pleased with the results from the collaboration with Galapagos, and
look forward to pursuing our studies on these potential antiviral targets,"
said Michael Cordingley, VP of Research at Boehringer Ingelheim's virology
research center in Laval, Quebec, Canada. "This collaboration proves that
the SilenceSelect platform works not only in the hands of Galapagos, but
performs equally as well in the hands of our customers. In addition, we are
pleased this confirms that our approach is also applicable in infectious
diseases," said Dirk Pollet, Galapagos' VP Business Development. "Time after
time, our target discovery platform delivers for our partners, opening
significant opportunities for continued collaboration."
About
Boehringer Ingelheim
The
Boehringer Ingelheim group is one of the world's 20 leading pharmaceutical
companies. Headquartered in Ingelheim, Germany, it operates with 152
affiliates in 45 countries and more than 34,000 employees. Since its
founding in 1885, the family-owned company has been committed to
researching, developing, manufacturing, and marketing novel products of high
therapeutic value for human and veterinary medicine.
In 2003,
Boehringer Ingelheim posted net sales of 7.4 billion euro while spending
more than one fifth of net sales in its largest business segment,
Prescription Medicines, on research and development. Boehringer Ingelheim
(Canada) Ltd. is the virology research center for the Boehringer Ingelheim
group of companies, focusing on HIV and HCV research at its Laval, Quebec
facility.
For further
information about Boehringer Ingelheim, please visit http://www.boehringer-ingelheim.com.
About
Galapagos Genomics NV
Galapagos is
a genomics based drug discovery company with programs in osteoporosis,
rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, Alzheimer's disease and asthma.
Proprietary targets and compounds resulting from Galapagos' programs are
both developed internally and selectively out-licensed. Galadeno, Galapagos'
services unit, provides reagents and functional screens to leading
pharmaceutical, biotech and nutraceutical companies for rapid identification
and validation of novel drug targets. Galapagos currently employs 70 people,
including 22 PhD's, and occupies a discovery research facility in Mechelen,
Belgium, and a reagent and services business unit in Leiden, The
Netherlands. Partners include Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene,
GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer, Procter & Gamble, Vertex and
Wyeth. Galapagos was founded in 1999 by Crucell (NasdaqNM:CRXL) (Euronext:CRXL)
and Tibotec to exploit Crucell's unique PER.C6(r) technology for target
discovery. The shareholders include Abingworth, Apax, Burrill, AlpInvest,
Crucell and Tibotec-Virco.
More
information about Galapagos can be found at http://www.galapagosgenomics.com.
Source: Crucell N.V |