How an Entrepreneurial Engineering Education Nurtured a Biotech Startup

Contact Information

Available for logged-in reporters only

Newswise Identify a real-world problem. Engineer a solution. And, if the solution works, figure out how it can be commercially viable. Thats what Michael Benchimol said he learned over 7 years of working in the laboratory of Sadik Esener, a professor in the departments of NanoEngineering and Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of California, San Diego. In Benchimols (Ph.D., Electrical Engineering, 12) case, it specifically means building a company to advance a targeted drug delivery platform that could make chemotherapy more effective and less toxic to the healthy tissue in the body.

I like to build things. Thats the engineering side of me, said Benchimol, who also earned a masters in electrical engineering at UC San Diego in 2008. Creating a company was just a different form of creating something from nothing. I always had that interest and I saw that there was an opportunity here.

The opportunity is a method of delivering chemotherapy drugs directly to cancerous tumors in the body, a longtime goal of next generation cancer therapy research due to the toxic effects the drugs can have on the rest of the body. The field is enjoying a research heyday in part thanks to advances specifically in the area of nanotechnology. Benchimol says nanotechnology is enabling cancer researchers to leverage the best properties of cancer drugs and biocompatible materials, in a single therapy that can circulate undetected by the body's immune system.

His company, Sonrgy, recently entered an exclusive licensing agreement with UC San Diego to further develop the companys technology, which resulted from his Ph.D. and postdoctoral research at the Jacobs School of Engineering and UCSD Moores Cancer Center, where Esener, also directs the NanoTumor Center. Benchimols solution is unique in that it doesnt rely on tumor receptors that the nanoparticle can seek out and stick to before releasing the drug. Rather, the Sonrgy platform, called SonRx, uses nanocarriers smaller than human cells that carry chemotherapy drugs through the body where they can be released at the tumor site by a doctor deploying ultrasound. The technology is in the preclinical stage.

"The SonRx technology addresses longstanding challenges related to stability and controlled release in nano-scale drug delivery," said Michael Benchimol, who is Sonrgy's Chief Technology Officer, in a company statement about the licensing agreement.

The company is fleshing out its management team and bringing on talent with pharmaceutical experience and expertise in the drug development process.

Benchimol said working in the laboratory of a successful inventor and entrepreneur provided essential support as he explored whether his idea had both scientific merit and commercial potential.Professor Esener enforced these concepts early on in my Ph.D. program, said Benchimol.

Along the way, Benchimol used the resources and programs available to entrepreneurially minded students to guide his path. At Research Expo, the annual technology showcase of the Jacobs School of Engineering, Benchimol presented earlier versions of his targeted chemotherapy program to a panel of judges drawn from faculty, alumni and industry.

The rest is here:

How an Entrepreneurial Engineering Education Nurtured a Biotech Startup

Related Posts

Comments are closed.