PacBio Chief Scientist Heads to NYC to Run New $100M Genomics Center at Mt. Sinai

Eric Schadt, one of the world’s top researchers looking at how changes in the genome lead to disease, is leaving his full-time job as chief scientist of Pacific Biosciences to spearhead a new genomics research center armed with more than $100 million of financial backing at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York.

This new arrangement is being set up as a bi-coastal collaboration between Menlo Park, CA-based PacBio (NASDAQ: [[ticker:PACB]]) and Mt. Sinai, in which Schadt will divide time between academia and industry. Schadt will still be chief scientist of PacBio, helping craft company strategy, but it will be a part-time role. Schadt, 46, says he will spend about 75-80 percent of his time as director of Mt. Sinai’s new Institute for Genomics and Multiscale Biology, and as chair of the medical school’s department of genetics. His Mt. Sinai teams will seek to get the most bang out of PacBio’s fast new gene sequencing machines and tools made by rivals like Illumina (NASDAQ: [[ticker:ILMN]]) and Life Technologies (NASDAQ: [[ticker:LIFE]]).

The union of PacBio and Mt. Sinai is a high-profile effort to bridge the traditional divide between lab research and clinical treatment of patients. For Mt. Sinai, hiring a star like Schadt means it will likely attract more donations, and be able to recruit many more bright young physicians and scientists interested in genomic-based personalized medicine. For PacBio, it hopes to learn how to best position its instrument with customers around the world, after hearing from Schadt how it works in the trenches.

And for Schadt, it gives him the chance to work on the inside of an ambitious medical system in the nation’s biggest city, which sees about 500,000 patients a year, giving it the potential to capture lots of biological samples from patients. Those precious samples, which can be hard to obtain and share in traditional academic settings, will be kept on electronic medical records in the Mt. Sinai system. The records will capture results of genomic tests, plus more traditional lab tests of disease. Those are dots that rarely get fully connected in today’s medical centers.

“This is enormous for us. If you’re not world-class in genetics, you can’t be a world-class medical school and academic medical center. By adding Eric, it assures we’ll be among the very best places in genetics,” says Dennis Charney, the dean of Mt. Sinai School of Medicine. “We see Mt. Sinai being at the vanguard of the genomic revolution. When these genetic findings become actionable for medicine, Mt Sinai could be a major place that makes it all happen.”

Says Schadt: “This is the exact right thing I’ve always wanted to do. I won’t have anybody else to blame if I can’t pull off something significant here.” PacBio CEO Hugh Martin added in a statement: “With a strong commitment, shared vision, and extensive access to patient samples, we believe Mount Sinai is a perfect partner.”

Schadt, who I profiled in these pages in March 2009 and who was more recently written about in a 6,000-word piece by Esquire’s Tom Junod, made his name in biology over the past decade while at Merck’s Rosetta Inpharmatics unit in Seattle. There, Schadt and his colleagues published seminal papers that sought to go beyond the basic sequence of 3 billion chemical units that make up a human genome. Schadt and his colleagues tackled the immensely complex next step of trying to help explain what all those data points mean. The concept, sometimes called “network biology,” is about looking at faulty DNA and showing it causes faulty transcriptions of RNA, which leads to the production of proteins that go awry and cause diseases like cancer.

Schadt eventually left Merck in the spring of 2009, insisting that

Author: Luke Timmerman

Luke is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences. He has served as national biotechnology editor for Xconomy and national biotechnology reporter for Bloomberg News. Luke got started covering life sciences at The Seattle Times, where he was the lead reporter on an investigation of doctors who leaked confidential information about clinical trials to investors. The story won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and several other national prizes. Luke holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and during the 2005-2006 academic year, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT.