Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Gene analysis startup born of UNLV lab work

Schiller’s Heligenics to work with genetics firms

- By Bailey Schulz • Contact Bailey Schulz at bschulz@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0233. Follow @bailey_schulz on Twitter.

MARTIN Schiller’s research lab at UNLV is creating far more than just experiment­s. The research completed inside the Schiller Laboratory of Applied Bioinforma­tics has led to Schiller’s Heligenics, a startup that could help genetics testing companies shine a light on undiagnose­d diseases.

The business-to-business company can work with genetic testing companies by analyzing all possible variations in a gene, which gives genetics testing companies more accurate results, said Schiller, founder and CEO.

Heligenics also has the potential to work alongside pharmaceut­ical companies to help develop drugs and assist with genetic carrier screenings, which look for potentiall­y dangerous genetic disorders a parent could pass down to their children.

The Review-Journal recently spoke with Schiller about his jump from the academic space to startups and how the two worlds share many similariti­es. The interview with has been edited for length and clarity.

Is this your first venture as an entreprene­ur?

I’ve always had businesses I’ve started during my life, and they’ve all made some money, not much. I always had a career as a scientist.

This is the first time I’m pursuing a business in my direct area of expertise. I ran one as a 14-yearold, Benny and Sons Painting. I got myself through college making enough money painting residentia­l houses, and some commercial, too. As a postdoc, I started a yeast culture kit company and we ran it for a few years and sold it. We cultured yeast for microbrewe­ries at the start of the microbrewe­ry revolution. Then, Schiller Realty Group, I started later when I was an assistant professor. We rented properties, but then eventually subdivided the companies and sold off the building lots. … I’ve learned a lot of what you should and shouldn’t do.

What sort of impact did your career at UNLV have on your startup?

When I started my research lab in 1997, it wasn’t long before I realized that when you run your lab at a university, you’re running a small business. You’re in charge of funding, staffing … it’s no small feat to start up your own lab. Having run a lab for 20 years, I’ve trained in all these aspects of running a small business, just in a different way.

The support network around me and the education I’ve gotten and the quality of people I interact with are so different than the last times I attempted any (startups). There’s so much support around this business effort, it’s much different than anything else I’ve done before.

What’s the next step for your startup?

Jan. 1, no matter what, we’re going to launch the implementa­tion stage with building a lab and getting it staffed. It’s really just replicatin­g the science that’s already going on in my lab. I think it’ll take us a couple of months to find the right site and a couple of months to get staffed and equipped. I think it’ll probably take a whole year to get it up and running. … We’re planning on building in Las Vegas or Henderson.

 ?? Martin Schiller ?? Martin Schiller, founder of Heligenics and executive director of UNLV’s Nevada Institute of Personaliz­ed Medicine, inside the Schiller Laboratory of Applied Bioinforma­tics.
Martin Schiller Martin Schiller, founder of Heligenics and executive director of UNLV’s Nevada Institute of Personaliz­ed Medicine, inside the Schiller Laboratory of Applied Bioinforma­tics.

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