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13 November, 2025 |
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We’ve got a couple of excellent Q&As for you today. First, Andrew Dunn talked to Bausch + Lomb CEO Brent Saunders on reshaping its workforce in the face of AI. Then, Max Gelman spoke with BioNTech co-founders Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci on how they’re positioning the company in the high-stakes PD-(L)1xVEGF bispecific race. Read more below. |
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Reynald Castaneda |
Deputy Editor, Endpoints News
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BioNTech co-founders Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci at the company's R&D Day on Nov. 11, 2025 (courtesy BioNTech) |
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by Max Gelman
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This week, BioNTech presented the industry’s most in-depth look so far at how PD-(L)1xVEGF bispecifics are being developed in cancer at its R&D Day in New York City. Following the event, Endpoints News
sat down with two of the company’s co-founders, CEO Uğur Şahin and CMO Özlem Türeci. The discussion covered BioNTech’s partnership with Chinese biotech Biotheus on the experimental cancer drug pumitamig, how Şahin and Türeci measure success, and why BioNTech ultimately decided to buy out its partner. Şahin and Türeci also talked about turning that buyout around into a $11 billion-plus licensing deal with Bristol Myers Squibb, an agreement that has the companies set to significantly compete in this new immuno-oncology
space. The following interview has been edited substantially for length and clarity. | |
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by Lei Lei Wu
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Gate Bioscience has raised $65 million to propel its so-called "molecular gate" drugs into human studies. The company is working on developing an unconventional type of small-molecule protein degrader for immune and brain diseases. The startup’s Series B round included a number of well-known investors, such as Forbion and Eli
Lilly, which were new investors in Gate, though Lilly penned a partnership with the company earlier this year. The round also included Gate’s previous investors Versant, a16z, GV and ARCH. While some proteins stay in the cell once they are made, others are secreted out of the cell. Gate’s goal is to stop those discharged, disease-causing proteins. | |
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by Lei Lei Wu
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Day One Biopharmaceuticals is bailing out Mersana Therapeutics two years after the antibody-drug conjugate maker’s lead ovarian cancer drug failed a pivotal trial. Day One plans to pay $129 million upfront to buy Mersana, the companies announced Thursday morning. The total deal value could more than double to $285 million depending on the success of Mersana’s B7-H4-targeted ADC, upon which the deal is centered. That ADC, known as Emi-Le, has been studied primarily in triple-negative breast cancer. Moving forward, an additional focus for the ADC appears to be a rare cancer called adenoid cystic carcinoma, based on Mersana CEO Marty Huber's statement announcing the deal. | |
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Merck KGaA CEO Belén Garijo (L) and CFO Helene von Roeder (Arne Dedert/picture alliance via Getty Images) |
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