Granza Bio grabs $7M seed from Felicis and YC to advance delivery of cancer treatments
Ashwin Nandakumar and Ashwin Jainarayanan were working on their doctorates at adjacent departments in Oxford, but they didnât know each other. Nandakumar, who was studying oncology, one day stumbled across a curious dataset for prostate cancer, with which he needed sequencing help.
âI reached out to a few friends asking to help me analyze this data,â Nandakumar said. âThey said, âThereâs another guy with the name Ashwin, you should connect with him.ââ
The two Ashwins instantly clicked, and soon after their meeting, they began working in the lab of Jainarayananâs academic adviser, Michael Dustin, a professor of molecular immunology. Â
When Nandakumar and Jainarayanan were getting ready to graduate, they initially planned to get jobs with large pharmaceutical companies. But they were also fascinated by Dustinâs research. âMike discovered a whole new feature of the immune system that people didnât know existed,â Nandakumar said.
Nandakumar and Jainarayanan decided to explore the idea of turning that research into a company. They were introduced to Y Combinatorâs bio partner, Surbhi Sarna, and she convinced the two Ashwins to apply to the storied accelerator.
âThat conversation changed our lives,â Nandakumar said. âWe decided weâre not joining Big Pharma. Weâre going to make our own Big Pharma.â
Nandakumar, Jainarayanan and Dustin formed Granza Bio, a biotech startup working on a novel approach to delivering immunotherapy and other âattack particlesâ to various parts of the body. The two Ashwins entered the YC Winter 24 batch.
Granzaâs approach drew a lot of interest from investors. âOur plan initially was to raise $2.5 million to get very crucial experiments done,â Nandakumar said. âWe started fundraising on [a] Wednesday and hit that target on a Friday.â
Since investors were lining up to invest in Granza, the two Ashwins decided to raise a bigger round that would allow them to expand the biotechâs research beyond the initial experimentation phase.
On Wednesday, Granza Bio announced that it has raised a $7.14 million seed round led by Felicis and Refactor, with participation from Y Combinator.
Granza Bio fit perfectly into Felicisâ thesis: that the bodyâs own immune system could be activated to treat cancers and other autoimmune diseases, Tobi Coker, deal partner at Felicis, told TechCrunch. âThe research out of Professor Dustinâs lab is completely novel,â Coker said, adding that Granzaâs approach to the delivery of therapeutics across organ systems could have broad applications in oncology and autoimmune disease treatment.
While Felicis is best known as a firm that made early bets on tech companies like Notion, Canva, Adyen, Cruise, Flexport and Shopify, the 18-year-old venture outfit isnât a stranger to the biotech investment world. About 10% to 15% of the firmâs capital is invested in biology-focused startups, Coker said. Felicisâ most notable life sciences companies include now-publicly traded Ginkgo Bioworks and Recursion Pharmaceuticals.
âI think we have a good eye for new technological paradigms and potential platform companies,â Coker said. (In biotech, platform companies focus on creating underlying tools that could be used to develop numerous therapies.)
Felicis and other investors in Granza Bio are making a bet that the startupâs therapeutic cargo delivery mechanism can eventually help develop a whole host of new drugs.