|
St. Louis, Missouri (May 04, 2001) - Divergence, which is developing technology
to neutralize harmful parasites, has raised $1.4 million in its initial round of fund raising.
The local biotech startup company attracted investments from St. Louisans familiar with its research
and from several former top executives at life science firms elsewhere, said Chief Executive Derek Rapp.
"Very little of our money came from St. Louis," said Rapp, a former
Monsanto Co. executive who led that company's $2.5 billion acquisition of
Dekalb Genetics in 1998.
Among the investors are Roy Vagelos and Wilbur "Bill" Gantz, he said. Vagelos was chairman
and chief executive of Merck & Co. until he retired in 1994. He has funded molecular science research
at his alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania. Gantz is a former chief operating officer of Baxter
Laboratories Inc. in Chicago.
Dr. James McCarter, a group leader of Parasitic Nematode Sequencing at the Genome Sequencing Center
at Washington University, founded Divergence in 1998. His father, John McCarter, chairman of the Field
Museum in Chicago and a former consultant to life science firms, is chairman of the company.
The McCarters, Rapp and Ernest Jaworski, a retired director of plant biotechnology at Monsanto,
are the board of directors.
Rapp, 38, joined the business when it completed the initial fund raising in February. He declined
to disclose other investors or how much more capital the small business -- eight full-time and three
part-time employees -- still expects to raise.
However, he said Divergence is among the 20 companies selected to make presentations to venture
capitalists May 15-16 at the InvestMidwest forum in Kansas City.
Divergence likely won't deliver its first product before 2008, Rapp said. "We've
already filed for patents. It's highly unlikely Divergence is going to commercialize an end
product," he said. "We would develop a licensing or royalty agreement, or sell the technology
outright" to a life-science giant, such as Monsanto, Dow or DuPont.
The business plan calls for using recent genome research to develop ecologically sound methods to
control some parasitic nematodes. The microscopic worms cause an estimated $80 billion damage to crops
such as soybeans, cotton and bananas. Other nematodes, such as hookworms and heartworms, live in animals,
and some forms are prevalent among humans in developing nations.
"Nematodes are a huge problem for the herbicide industry because all of the present pesticides
(used against them) are carcinogenic and have to be phased out by 2005," said Bob Calcaterra,
president and chief executive of the Nidus Center for Scientific Enterprise.
Divergence, now at 660 S. Euclid Ave., is negotiating a lease that would make it the fifth early-stage
biotech firm at Nidus, Calcaterra said.
Tom Melzer, managing director of RiverVest Venture Partners, a local venture fund specializing in
biotechnology, said $1.4 million in new capital during an initial round of financing "represents a
significant step for an early-stage company...Life science venture companies didn't get overextended
the way others in the Internet (field) did."
Kirk Walden, national director of the PWC/VentureOne MoneyTree survey, said the bio-pharmaceutical
field is the only venture area that saw an increase every quarter of 2000. Bio-pharmaceutical investments
reached $2.65 billion last year nationwide, up from $1.3 billion in 1999.
Rapp predicted that Divergence will face other competitors in the field of nematode research, but it
is broad enough for several to succeed.
RELEASE: ©2001 St. Louis Business Journal. By: Rick Desloge. All rights reserved.
|