Daily Camera (Boulder)

Investors flood in after its acquisitio­n of Veridian

- By Dan Mika

Miragen Therapeuti­cs Inc. (Nasdaq: MGEN) has acquired privately held Veridian Therapeuti­cs Inc., marking a shift to focus on thyroid-related eye diseases.

In filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Boulder biopharmac­eutical company said it will acquire the Massachuse­tts company in an all-stock deal and raise up to $90.97 million in a private-investment-in-publicequi­ty offering, giving the company a cash runway through 2023.

Veridian’s co-founder Jonathan Violin has been named Miragen’s chief operating officer under the combinatio­n.

Veridian’s main drug candidate, VRDN-001, is meant to treat eye problems such as bulging generated by Graves’ Disease or other conditions caused by an overactive thyroid gland. Under Miragen, the drug is expected to enter Phase II trials next year.

In an investor presentati­on deck, the company said it now intends to develop drugs for diseases that have few approved therapies and highly motivated patients.

Miragen’s deal was foreshadow­ed in September, when cofounder and former CEO Bill Marshall stepped down and Miragen said it would begin a review of its current drug candidates and the possibilit­y of acquiring a business or being acquired itself.

It also likely marks the end of cobomarsen, a lymphoma treatment candidate, as a Miragen project. The drug missed the mark in Phase II trials this month.

The company’s stock skyrockete­d 159% in pre-market trading Wednesday to as high as $1.18 per share. The movement of the stock’s price and trading volume triggered the Nasdaq’s five-minute cooldown rule at 8:15 a.m. Mountain Time, with as much as 3.6 million shares trading in the span of a minute.

It closed the day at $1.26 per share, an increase of 142.35% over yesterday’s closing price.

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