MIT’s Jacks Leans on Disney Family, Not VCs, to Hatch New Startup

Tyler Jacks is a cancer research pioneer, one of the co-chairs of the White House’s ambitious Cancer “Moonshot” initiative, and has helped advise a number of companies developing cancer drugs over the years. But only now is Jacks building a cancer drug maker of his own: a stealthy startup called Dragonfly Therapeutics.

Dragonfly was formed in July 2015 by Jacks, together with his longtime friend, filmmaker and tech entrepreneur Bill Haney, and UC Berkeley immunologist David Raulet. The startup has toiled along relatively quietly outside of a few announcements about its board. It’s still just a 10-employee company with labs at two incubators in Cambridge, MA—LabCentral, and Cambridge BioLabs—and is likely years away from producing data from its drugs in human patients. Yet the startup has some noteworthy power behind it.

Harold Varmus, a Nobel Prize winner and the former director of the National Cancer Institute, and K. Dane Wittrup, a protein engineering specialist and the co-founder and chief scientific officer of Adimab, are both on Dragonfly’s scientific advisory board. And according to Haney, Dragonfly’s CEO, the startup already has years of financial runway thanks not to venture capitalists, as is typical in biotech, but to a small group of family offices, one of which is associated with Tim Disney, the great-nephew of Walt Disney.

That was a purposeful decision. Haney first reached out to families he’s worked with before and got funding for Dragonfly quickly—he wouldn’t say how much, though. The speed of the funding is “not usually the case with venture firms,” he says, adding that the financing structures VC firms can insist on, like Series A, B, C rounds and so on, can lead to tension and different incentives for different investors in a syndicate. He says Dragonfly doesn’t have that kind of financial pressure, thanks to its family office backers, and could return to them for more support when needed.

“We were very focused on maintaining control and executing our plan, and we think that gives us our best chance of doing that,” Jacks says.

They were able to do this because Jacks, Raulet, and Haney already had the experience and access to networks and resources that VCs typically bring to the table. For example, Tim Disney is a college friend of Haney’s from their undergrad days at Harvard University. Raulet and Jacks met one another at MIT two decades ago and stayed in contact; their scientific work is the basis of Dragonfly. And Jacks and Haney were college roommates and have remained friends, frequently catching up to play squash, poker, and sharing Red Sox tickets. They have different specialties—Haney has become a filmmaker and startup creator, and Jacks a world-renowned scientist—but have now connected as co-founders of Dragonfly. Jacks originally kicked around the idea of Dragonfly with Raulet, and then got Haney involved during a chat at opening day at Fenway Park last year.

Haney has helped form more than a dozen tech companies, most recently Blu Homes, a developer of eco-friendly houses. But he’s less experienced in life sciences, where he’s done primarily non-profit work at the Koch Institute and elsewhere and was a founding investor in Ironwood Pharmaceuticals (NASDSAQ: [[ticker:IRWD]]). He’s never taken an operational role in biotech.

“Steve Jobs and Bill Gates didn’t have a lot of background as software entrepreneurs or consumer electronics mavens before they started,” Haney says. “A lot of the qualities of building a successful startup are universal.”

Meanwhile, Jacks has been working in cancer research for decades. In the 1990s, he helped pioneer genetically engineered mouse models of human cancer that are now used by researchers around the world. He has been the director of the David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT since its founding in 2007, is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and has been a consultant or board member for several life sciences companies, including Thermo Fisher Scientific and Amgen. And though he’s been a co-founder of a startup before—diagnostics company T2 Biosystems—Dragonfly is the first company based on research out of his own lab.

“I’m not just a co-founder on paper,” Jacks says. “My connection is deeper, and my investment is deeper. My engagement is more extensive. I’ve just more involved than I have been in the past.”

Unsurprisingly, given Jacks’s and Raulet’s backgrounds in cancer and immunology, the company is developing

Author: Ben Fidler

Ben is former Xconomy Deputy Editor, Biotechnology. He is a seasoned business journalist that comes to Xconomy after a nine-year stint at The Deal, where he covered corporate transactions in industries ranging from biotech to auto parts and gaming. Most recently, Ben was The Deal’s senior healthcare writer, focusing on acquisitions, venture financings, IPOs, partnerships and industry trends in the pharmaceutical, biotech, diagnostics and med tech spaces. Ben wrote features on creative biotech financing models, analyses of middle market and large cap buyouts, spin-offs and restructurings, and enterprise pieces on legal issues such as pay-for-delay agreements and the Affordable Care Act. Before switching to the healthcare beat, Ben was The Deal's senior bankruptcy reporter, covering the restructurings of the Texas Rangers, Phoenix Coyotes, GM, Delphi, Trump Entertainment Resorts and Blockbuster, among others. Ben has a bachelor’s degree in English from Binghamton University.