On April 21, 2020 Envisagenics, a company developing therapeutics for RNA splicing errors that often lead to genetic disorders including cancer, reported that it has entered into a research program agreement with the Lung Cancer Initiative (LCI) at Johnson & Johnson (Press release, Envisagenics, APR 21, 2020, View Source;johnson-301044463.html [SID1234556478]). Through this initiative, Envisagenics will build predictive models for lung cancer progression and risk. The Envisagenics team will leverage its expertise in splicing and RNA-sequencing to analyze LCI’s data using Envisagenics’ SpliceCore software platform.
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"Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths globally, and it is difficult to treat in later stages," said Maria Luisa Pineda, Ph.D., co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of Envisagenics. "That is why it is so important for Envisagenics to identify early determinants of lung cancer risk. Envisagenics hopes to identify RNA splicing events that can predict lung cancer, and in the future, develop new therapies for patients."
Martin Akerman, Ph.D., co-founder and Chief Technology Officer of Envisagenics, commented, "Tumor cells can literally cut-and-paste RNAs to produce unique cancerous proteins. Detecting these RNA splicing events early could mean better prognoses for lung cancer patients. SpliceCore can extract these biological insights because it can scan through millions of potential RNA splicing events from 1,000 patient samples in two hours."