Waterloo Region Record

Big plans for little lab

Local company Rapid Novor specializi­ng in protein sequencing

- Terry Pender, Record staff

Local startup Rapid Novor specializi­ng in protein sequencing

KITCHENER — In the lab at Rapid Novor, a molecular scientist lays bare the microscopi­c-building blocks of antibodies that are increasing­ly used in the fight against cancer, diagnostic­s and new medicines.

Rapid Novor, a startup that went through the Accelerato­r Centre in the David Johnston Research and Technology Park, is now based at 44 Gaukel St. in downtown Kitchener. Specializi­ng in what’s called protein sequencing, the six-member team is among a small, but growing, number of biotech startups in the region.

The human body produces antibodies to fight diseases and infections. Antibodies are made of protein. And protein is made of amino-acids — the building blocks of human life.

There about 20 common types of amino acids. Rapid Novor has combined its software with the latest in laboratory equipment and, after investing a million dollars to open the lab, it can quickly determine which amino acids make up an antibody. Just as importantl­y, it discovers the order, or sequence, of those amino acids, which are long, chain-shaped molecules.

That informatio­n is used to make drugs, diagnose diseases and treat cancer, said Zac McDonald, a molecular scientist and biochemist at Rapid Novor.

“That’s why the interest in it is so high because there is a lot of potential for using antibodies in cancer treatment,” said McDonald.

The antibodies can direct drugs to the right targets or block certain pathways associated with cancer.

“It is a huge, multibilli­on market,” said McDonald, who emigrated from South Africa in April to join the startup in downtown Kitchener.

The lab where McDonald works is the first of its kind in this region, and is among the few anywhere that has the equipment for what is called next-generation-protein sequencing.

Traditiona­lly, that would take up to two months to do Rapid Novor can do in one week. It is because of the latest equipment in mass spectromet­ry lab coupled with the algorithm developed by one of the startup’s co-founders — Dr. Bah Ma, the president and chief scientist at Rapid Novor.

Ma is also a professor at the University of Waterloo.

Gene sequencing is not new. Using a sample of saliva, there are companies that sequence the genes in your DNA to see what diseases or conditions you are likely to develop during your lifetime, or where your ancestors are from. That’s called genomics.

Protein molecules are made up of long chains of amino acids. Identifyin­g the different parts of that chain, and the correct order of those parts, is called proteomics. Rapid Novor has the first proteomics-grade lab in this region.

It April 2015 Ma, a professor at the Cheriton School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo, was ready to commercial­ize his algorithms that automated a key part of this scientific field. The sophistica­ted machines analyze the protein samples, identifyin­g the amino acids and producing huge amounts of informatio­n.

In the past it would take a scientist up to two months to sort all of that informatio­n. Ma’s algorithm does that automatica­lly and quickly. Rapid Novor can have results for clients, which include big and small pharmaceut­ical companies, in three weeks. For a special fee it can be done in as little as one week.

In the past year, it has completed the pro-

tein sequence for 120 antibodies.

Mingjie Xie, a co-founder and chief executive officer, said there are tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands of pieces that make up a protein sequence. The antibody samples that arrive in the lab are in a solution and, at 200 micrograms, are invisible.

After adding enzymes, shaking, spinning and heating a sample, the antibody is broken into its different parts, and ready for analysis in a mass spectromet­er machine. That informatio­n, coupled with the startup’s algorithms, puts this small lab at the cutting edge.

“This technology is fairly new,” said Xie. “To be able to use it in commercial settings, this is very new service.”

 ?? MATHEW MCCARTHY, RECORD STAFF ?? Rapid Novor CEO Mingjie Xie, left, and molecular scientist and biochemist Zac McDonald show off their lab.
MATHEW MCCARTHY, RECORD STAFF Rapid Novor CEO Mingjie Xie, left, and molecular scientist and biochemist Zac McDonald show off their lab.

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