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Tech

Biotech firm InvenireX secures £2m investment to accelerate medical advances

The Newcastle University spin-out will use the funding to grow its team and expand its operations

InvenireX team in the lab(Image: InvenireX)

A Newcastle technology company has secured £2m in investment to accelerate the commercialisation of work that aims to detect diseases at earlier stages.

InvenireX, which builds on Dr Dan Todd’s PhD research at Newcastle University, has secured the funding from DSW Ventures, with participation from XTX Ventures, Cambridge Technology Capital and angel investors, plus grant funding from Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The company aims to address limitations in the science of molecular detection. InvenireX’s platform uses programmable DNA nanostructures to capture specific genetic markers inside custom microfluidic chips.

AI is then used to detection disease markers at concentrations existing methods cannot capture. In pilot testing, InvenireX has demonstrated greater sensitivity than existing methods, while also reducing time and cost for tests.

Dr Todd said: “Our machine could pick up cancer, HIV or sepsis earlier - any disease with a nucleic acid trace.

“We’re made of DNA - that’s the source code. If you can pick up traces of faults and errors in that code, you can detect problems across the board before symptoms appear. We’ve built the ultimate needle-in-a-haystack detector, a tool that we can put in the hands of scientists to enable the discoveries of tomorrow.”

Jonathan O’Halloran, founder of Newcastle biotech company QuantuMDx, has become an angel investor in InvenireX.

He said: “There are moments in your life that make you tingle. The first one for me was watching Craig Venter announce the first draft of the human genome, then next was hearing about Solexa, then Oxford Nanopore’s DNA sequencing technologies.