For more than a decade, Carleton University biochemist Kyle Biggar has been toiling away at treatments that could one day improve the lives of millions of people with cancer and other diseases. The award-winning researcher is the co-founder of NuvoBio, a company based at Carleton that uses an artificial intelligence-powered platform to develop peptides for […]
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For more than a decade, Carleton University biochemist Kyle Biggar has been toiling away at treatments that could one day improve the lives of millions of people with cancer and other diseases.
The award-winning researcher is the co-founder of NuvoBio, a company based at Carleton that uses an artificial intelligence-powered platform to develop peptides for medical purposes.
Peptides, short chains of amino acids that build proteins, have a wide range of uses in the body. Examples of peptides include insulin and semaglutide, which is used to treat diabetes and obesity under brand names such as Ozempic.
Biggar and his team of researchers are focused on developing peptides that treat cancer and various infectious diseases, with the aim of creating medications that are safer and more effective than current treatments.
NuvoBio’s main product, NeoPeptix, targets fungal meningitis, a rare infection that causes swelling around the brain and spinal cord and is responsible for up to 15 per cent of HIV-related deaths.
The company's biggest financial backer is a well-known name in Ottawa business circles: Michael Cowpland, best-known for co-founding telecom giant Mitel in the early 1970s and launching graphics design software firm Corel in the mid-1980s.
“Mike really, truly is a visionary,” says Biggar, who met Cowpland in 2016 after the legendary entrepreneur read a news story about Biggar and contacted him.
Biggar, Cowpland and tech executive Jim Stechyson, a longtime colleague of Cowpland, launched NuvoBio later that year with the goal of turning the Carleton professor’s research into viable products.
NuvoBio was a wholly owned subsidiary of Zim, a database software firm led by Cowpland, until it was spun off into a separate company last year. It now has four full-time employees as well as a heavy-hitting group of advisers that includes Cowpland, Stechyson and finance guru John Chapman, who previously served as CFO of Zim and Ottawa tech startups Giatec Scientific and Equispheres.
“A lot more would be keeping me up at night if I didn’t have that team really helping to push NuvoBio forward, because I’m a scientist at heart,” Biggar says.
Still, the cost of developing treatments such as NeoPeptix is staggering – around $2.5 million for a single clinical trial, Biggar explains. He’s aiming to submit a request to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to start clinical trials in that country by 2027, but a lot of work remains to get to that point – including more laboratory experiments and testing on live animals such as mice.