Daily Camera (Boulder)

Arpeggio Bioscience raises $17M

- By Lucas High Bizwest / Daily Camera This article was first published by Bizwest, an independen­t news organizati­on, and is published under a license agreement. © 2022 Bizwest Media LLC.

Arpeggio Bioscience Inc., a preclinica­l-stage pharmaceut­ical company founded by University of Colorado Boulder doctoral program graduates, has raised a $17 million Series A fundraisin­g round that will allow the company to scale its early drug trials.

San Francisco venture-capital investor Builders VC led the Series A, which followed a $3.2-million seed round in 2020.

Arpeggio has developed an artificial-intelligen­ce-enabled platform for drug discovery that examines “what’s wrong with the entire cellular network that defines a disease” and applies potential treatments, Arpeggio co-founder and CEO Joey Azofeifa told Bizwest.

The company, named by its musician founders after a type of chord, is putting its drug-developmen­t technology — which it farms out for use by other pharmaceut­ical companies as a secondary revenue stream — to work toward therapies for cancer and auto-immune diseases.

A large portion of the Series A funding will go toward putting the processes Arpeggio has used to help other companies discover drugs to use in bolstering its own treatment pipeline. Specifical­ly, the company expects to invest in laboratory robotics and automation technology for cellular testing, results of which will be run through Arpeggio’s AI technology in an effort to scale up drug discovery.

The most mature potential oncology treatment in Arpeggio’s pipeline is being tested on mice, Azofeifa said.

“This drug we identified with our technology is killing and melting down really hard to treat cancers” in rodents, he said, and “ideally,

the Series A proceeds will allow us to spend more money on more expensive studies” with the goal of eventual clinical trials — either funded by future capital raises or through a partnershi­p with a larger pharmaceut­ical company — a few years down the line.

“Health care is primed to benefit from a disrupting system like Arpeggio’s, which has so much potential to help further our understand­ing of how drugs interact with each individual taking them,” Builders VC general partner Amit Mehta said in a statement. “We believe Arpeggio has the vision to transform the way we approach drug and therapy developmen­t.”

Arpeggio — founded and led by Azofeifa, chief technology officer Tim Read and chief operating officer Laura Norris — has a team of a dozen that operates out of about 5,000 square feet of leased lab space in CU’S Biofrontie­rs Institute

in Boulder.

Part of the Series A proceeds will go toward a modest boost of the company’s headcount, Azofeifa said.

Arpeggio’s core technology was patented by the company’s founders during their time as CU researcher­s. When the company was formed, the technology was licensed through CU’S technology-transfer process for use by Arpeggio.

The company’s proximity to CU and the broader Boulder biotech ecosystem allowed Arpeggio’s leadership team to tap into venture-capital networks, research-tomarket programs, investor showcases and public grant opportunit­ies, Azofeifa said.

“All of that was really helpful in the early days — it’s been great,” he said of support offered by the local life-sciences community.

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Azofeifa
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Norris
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Read

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