Genetics Institute Explained

Genetics Institute, Inc.
Type:Defunct
Foundation:1980
Defunct:1996
Fate:acquisition by Wyeth
Successor:Wyeth
Location:Cambridge, MA, United States
Industry:Biotechnology

Genetics Institute, Inc. was a biotechnology research and development company founded by Thomas Maniatis and Mark Ptashne, two Harvard molecular biologists, in 1980 in Massachusetts. Originally operating out of Ptashne's house in Boston, the company found more spacious quarters first in Boston and then Cambridge before expanding further. Gabriel Schmergel joined soon afterwards as CEO.[1]

Many leading scientists joined G.I. from academia and it proved to be a fertile source of patents for some time.[2]

Historical background

One of the two largest national clusters of biotechnology in the U.S. (the other being the San Francisco Bay area), the greater Boston area has been the birthplace of many innovative corporations and non-profit research centers.Beginning in the late 1970s and 1980s, this biotech trend saw three early large for-profit corporations: Biogen (now Biogen Idec), Genzyme, and Genetics Institute. MIT's Whitehead Institute was one of the seminal non-profit research centers in this field locally, among many others. Aside from MIT, Harvard, Boston University and several teaching hospitals including Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women's were important contributors to the local field's development.[3] [4]

Products

G.I.'s Products (or potential candidates for products) included forms of M-CSF, interleukin-3, interleukin-11 (Neumega), bone morphogenetic protein 2,recombinant human Factor IX, and recombinant human Factor VIII (Recombinate); as well as tissue plasminogen activator and erythropoetin that both involved costly, complex lawsuits over patent infringement with competitors.[5] [6]

Toward the end of its independent existence, G.I. created a program to share "a library of several thousand genes and their related proteins that could be scanned for potential new drugs."[7]

This program was based on a G.I. technology that allowed it to identify proteins secreted by cells and therefore more likely to be therapeutic in the body.

Dissolution

Wyeth (American Home Products at the time) acquired a majority interest in GI in 1992 and the remaining interest at the end of 1996.[8] The company became part of Wyeth's Research division.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Genetics Institute Inc . Elizabeth Rourke . 2009-01-01.
  2. Book: Clusters, Networks, and Innovation . limited . Stefano Breschi . Franco Malerba . Oxford University Press . 2005 . 0-19-927555-6 . 263, 281.
  3. Book: Clusters, Networks, and Innovation . 263, 270.
  4. Book: The Business of Healthcare Innovation . limited . Lawton R. Burns . Lawton R. Burns . Cambridge University Press . 2005 . 0-521-83898-3 . 107.
  5. Web site: Genetics Institute Inc . 2009-01-01.
  6. Book: The Business of Healthcare Innovation . 124.
  7. News: New York Times . Genetics Institute in Deal to Share Biochemical Library . Lawrence M. Fisher . 1996-09-26 .
  8. http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/wyeth-history/ Genetics Institute, Inc. at History of Wyeth
  9. Web site: About Wyeth . 2009-01-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090107044818/http://www.wyeth.com./aboutwyeth/history . 2009-01-07.