Protagonist Criss-Crosses Pacific, in Search of New Peptide Drugs

If your definition of hard work depends on getting to the office at 7 am every day, then Dinesh Patel might sound pretty lazy. He doesn’t usually pull out of his driveway for work until 9 am.

He has a business reason for starting late, and it has little to do with beating traffic (although that’s a nice bonus). The reason is that his company, Menlo Park, CA-based Protagonist Therapeutics, has half of its scientific team located 17 hours ahead in Brisbane, Australia. And if you want people in different countries and time zones to work on the same page, it helps to get them on a daily work rhythm that’s at least somewhat similar.

“When it’s 3 pm in California, it’s 8 am the next day in Australia, so we have a lot of good time working together from 3 pm to 7 pm our time,” Patel says. “It’s challenging, but once you master the distance, there are advantages.” (One advantage is getting work done around the clock. The downside? Occasional after-dinner business calls.)

Protagonist, founded in 2007 by researcher Mark Smythe in Brisbane, has found a way to make progress in this unusual structure for a biotech startup. The company has raised about $9 million from a set of investors in Australia (Starfish Ventures, QBF, and IMB) as well as a name more familiar in the states, Lilly Ventures. The investment, and a couple of drug discovery partnerships with Cambridge, MA-based Ironwood Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: [[ticker:IRWD]]) and Copenhagen, Denmark-based Zealand Pharma, has come together around Protagonist’s idea for making new peptide drugs. These drugs are being designed so that they can be given as oral pills, or to hit molecular targets that were very tough to bind with, or might only have been reachable in the past with injectable protein drugs.

Dinesh Patel, CEO of Protagonist Therapeutics

It’s a complex drug discovery challenge. But if Protagonist can keep its small team of 22 people working on it seamlessly in two countries, it could end up with a big payoff. The ultimate prize would be oral pills against autoimmune disorders that affect millions of people.

“We want to make oral peptide drugs. It feels good to say that, but it’s a challenging task. We believe we are ready,” Patel says.

Patel has a long history of biotech entrepreneurship, as a co-founder of Vicuron Pharmaceuticals and Miikana Therapeutics, companies that ended up being acquired by Pfizer for $1.9 billion, and by Entremed for $39 million, respectively. Based on his experience in managing partnerships with drug companies, researchers, and contract research firms around the world, Patel says he developed a personal bias toward companies that have global footprints. So when he was approached about becoming Protagonist’s CEO late in 2008, his first reaction to the Aussie connection wasn’t “Geez, I’ll have to spend a lot of time on planes.”

“Most people shy away from these kind of arrangements, for me it was an added attraction,” Patel says. “It’s a personal bias, but I think there’s much to be gained from different cultures and different setups. Most find it challenging with the time zones and travel. For me, it’s fun going to Brisbane.”

Traveling to Brisbane might sound pretty good to an American tourist, but of course it takes real commitment to make a startup prosper when it has small teams so far apart. So Patel has made sure to keep the Aussie and American teams integrated on a daily basis. “I don’t want us to do ‘A’ in one place and ‘B’ in another. On purpose I’m doing cross pollination. It really encourages scientists to work together,” Patel says.

Protagonist’s teams are

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.