INSIDE THE DEAL

Applying AI to global health challenges: Gates Foundation awards $4.2m to Exscientia

15 December 2020 By Allie Nawrat

Powered by 

Bill Gates, co-chair, Gates Foundation

Image: Ivan Kristianto/Shutterstock.com

UK-based artificial intelligence (AI) drug discovery company Exscientia has received a $4.2m two-year grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to apply its two Centaur platforms to three global health challenges: malaria, tuberculosis (TB), and non-hormonal contraception.

Exscientia’s AI platforms – Centaur Biologist and Centaur Chemist – will be leveraged to identify new next-generation targets and leads for these unmet needs in infectious disease and family planning.

The company’s CEO Andrew Hopkins noted: “Exscientia is committed to applying AI to deliver transformational drugs for the benefit of all patients. We are delighted to receive financial support from the foundation to develop much-needed first-in-class therapies to these disease areas to address key global health needs.”

Deep dive into the Centaur platforms

Exscientia portfolio manager Dr Denise Barrault explains that Centaur Biologist focuses on “identifying and quantifying new targets…for new therapies”. Target identification is one of the biggest challenges in drug discovery.

The platform leverages “large data sets from the literature, large-scale repositories, like genetic repositories, and other relevant data, including privately owned data if we can access it,” Barrault says. It applies deep learning algorithms to these data sets to pull out promising targets for a particular disease.

Centaur Chemist, Barrault notes, is used to actually develop new drugs using AI algorithms and machine learning. “The aim of the Centaur Chemist platform is to deliver small molecule drugs that have a high chance of success in the clinic,” adds Barrault.

She explains that Exscientia can design various features into novel treatments, including optimising their activity against certain targets or phenotypes, reducing toxicity and developing bispecific drugs against two targets.

Tackling unmet needs in malaria, TB and contraceptives

“The big picture is when you combine these two platforms and apply them to a major global health challenges you really get the full benefits of Exscientia,” says Barrault. “You can really open new targets and find new drug regimens for disease and hopefully cure more patients in the world.”

Malaria and TB are leading causes of death worldwide, a situation that is compounded by inadequate treatments marred by drug resistance. Barrault notes “by using a bispecific approach [which Centaur Chemist can do], we can almost reduce the chances of resistance to zero”.

Family planning has a crucial role to play in reducing maternal, infant and child mortality. “The project for non-hormonal contraceptives is really about unlocking these new opportunities for women and giving them new choices to control their fertility without the perceived side effects and health risks associated with hormonal contraceptives,” according to Barrault. Exscientia will be applying a single-target approach for the non-hormonal contraception project.

Barrault notes Exscientia has been talking to the Gates Foundation for many years and it became “very clear there were projects where it would make sense for us to collaborate”.

“Our platforms are disease-agnostic so we can apply them to any problem,” states Barrault. But this grant gives the company an “opportunity to explore disease areas we wouldn’t necessarily pursue on our own”, and therefore make a real difference in low-income countries to alleviate poverty and disease.

The two-year $4.2m grant also grants Exscientia access to databases, biological assets and expertise from the Gates Foundation. The partners hope that by combining this with Exscientia’s AI Centaur platforms, new therapies to address these unmet needs can be developed efficiently and reach patients as quickly as possible.

Barrault is hopeful that within the two-year grant period Exscientia will have “proved the platform is worth its while in [these] disease areas” and the drugs will be well on their way to the clinic.

For the latest pharmaceutical deals analysis, visit GlobalData's Pharmaceuticals Intelligence Centre.

Go to article: Home | Is Joe Biden good news for US pharma?Go to article: In this issueGo to article: ContentsGo to article: MimotopesGo to article: BriefingGo to article: Industry newsGo to article: The pharma industry briefingGo to article: Covid-19 executive briefing by GlobalDataGo to article: HOF Sonderanlagenbau Company Insight Go to article: HOF SonderanlagenbauGo to article: CommentGo to article: Pipeline agents in the RA marketGo to article: US seeing alarming increases in Covid-19 casesGo to article: IDMP: Where are we now and what lies ahead?Go to article: The rising role of the microbiomeGo to article: What the pandemic highlights about IDMP’s potentialGo to article: In DepthGo to article: Solving the puzzle of Hepatitis CGo to article: Why is President-elect Joe Biden a good pick for the pharma industry?Go to article: Is self-medication the future of pharma?Go to article: Restricted growth: Challenging attitudes to achondroplasiaGo to article: How do you fast-track a vaccine? UCL scientists weigh in Go to article: Fraudulent pharmaceuticals: the legacy of anti-counterfeit packagingGo to article: Are healthcare’s sustainability goals bold enough?Go to article: New Zealand: a promising destination for trials in a post-Covid-19 world?Go to article: In DataGo to article: Inside the dealGo to article: Deals analysisGo to article: The pharma industry key listGo to article: Global markets and indicesGo to article:  Macro-economic indicatorsGo to article: Macro-economic indicators (page 2)Go to article: EventsGo to article: Next issue