The deal, part of Bayer's new strategy, came after the company said
last week it was setting up an organization within its healthcare
division to speed up and support cell and gene therapy development
after recent takeovers.
With the agreement, the German drugmaker will get access to Atara's
CAR T-cell therapy for solid tumors, ATA3271, which had shown
anti-tumor activity in vitro in a pre-clinical study.
Bayer said it would make an upfront payment of $60 million to Atara.
The U.S. drugmaker will also be eligible to receive up to $610
million upon achievement of certain milestones, as well as tiered
royalties up to low double-digit percentage of net sales.
"This exciting collaboration between Atara and Bayer will accelerate
the development of mesothelin-targeted CAR T-cell therapies for
multiple solid tumors and helps us advance the power of our
allogeneic cell therapy platform to patients as quickly as
possible," Atara Chief Executive Officer Pascal Touchon said.
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Atara will lead studies and process development for ATA3271, while Bayer will be
responsible for subsequent clinical development and commercialization of the
therapy, the German drugmaker said in a statement.
(This story removes reference to 'manufacture' in headline, paragraph 1)
(Reporting by Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Aditya Soni)
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