The Lyceum: Biotech & Life Sciences Weekly — Mar 24, 2026
Photo: lyceumnews.com
Week of March 24, 2026
The Big Picture
Biology is becoming predictable — and this week, the evidence arrived from every direction at once. Regulators validated neuroinflammation as an Alzheimer's target, cell-free biomanufacturing crossed a stability threshold that makes distributed production plausible, enzymatic plastic recycling hit price parity with virgin material at pilot scale, and a genome editor figured out how to evade immune detection. The common thread isn't any single breakthrough — it's that the engineering discipline is maturing fast enough that platform improvements are compounding across clinical, industrial, and agricultural biotech simultaneously.
What Just Shipped
- Pluvicto label expansion (Novartis): FDA expanded the radioligand therapy to pre-chemotherapy prostate cancer use, shifting targeted radiation to first-line treatment.
- Connected Multiomics spatial platform (Illumina): Launched whole-transcriptome spatial technology with software enabling commercial-scale gene expression mapping on tissue architecture; proteomics integration upcoming.
- CD19 CAR-T Phase 1 autoimmune data (Bristol Myers Squibb): Durable remission reported in lupus and systemic sclerosis patients via immune system reset; Phase 2 "Immune Reset" trials planned.
- INT-001 Phase 3 melanoma vaccine (Moderna/Merck): Personalized neoantigen mRNA vaccine progressing with five-year data showing a 49% reduction in recurrence or death over five years.
- Prime editing expansion (multiple groups): "Search-and-replace" genetic editors advancing beyond early leads for complex liver and lung conditions with reduced off-target effects.
- In vivo base editing for cardiovascular disease (multiple groups): Base editing techniques now targeting cardiovascular conditions directly in vivo, marking a gene-editing milestone.
- Molecular glue TPD candidates (multiple): Orally bioavailable molecular glues for degrading "undruggable" proteins advancing toward first-in-human data for neurodegeneration and inflammation.
This Week's Stories
A New Front Opens in the War on Alzheimer's as FDA Fast-Tracks Neuro-Inflammation Drug
For two decades, Alzheimer's drug development has been a story about amyloid plaques — the sticky protein clumps that accumulate in the brain. Clear the plaques, the theory went, and you slow the disease. That theory has produced a few approved drugs but frustratingly modest clinical benefits. This week, the FDA signaled it's ready to bet on a different mechanism entirely.
The agency granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation to AGT-101, a small molecule from AxoGlia Therapeutics that targets chronic neuroinflammation — specifically, overactive brain immune cells called microglia. Phase II results showed statistically significant slowing of cognitive decline over 18 months in Phase II, paired with biomarkers indicating reduced brain inflammation. The designation means an accelerated review path.
What changes if this works: The FDA is validating neuroinflammation as a high-priority Alzheimer's target, which could redirect billions in R&D spending and reshape the competitive landscape for companies that have built their pipelines around amyloid or tau. If AGT-101's Phase III confirms the signal, it creates a new therapeutic category. What failure looks like: Phase III doesn't replicate the biomarker-cognition link, and the field reverts to combination approaches layering anti-inflammatory agents on top of existing amyloid therapies. The signal to watch is whether other companies accelerate their own neuroinflammation programs into the clinic — that's the market's real-time vote of confidence.
Half of Tumors Shrank or Vanished in Rockefeller University's Phase 1 Injected Immunotherapy Trial
Inject medicine into one tumor. Watch tumors across the body start shrinking or disappearing. That's the headline from Rockefeller University's Phase 1 trial of 2141-V11, a redesigned antibody injected directly into tumors in 12 patients with metastatic cancers — including notoriously resistant pancreatic and bile-duct primaries. Injected tumors disappeared in the majority of patients, and some distant metastases shrank, with manageable local inflammation.
The mechanism is elegant: local immune modulation that triggers a systemic anti-tumor response — essentially training the immune system at one site to hunt cancer everywhere. If Phase 2 expansion replicates this: intratumoral delivery could make immunotherapy far cheaper and less toxic than continuous IV infusions, fundamentally changing the economics of solid-tumor treatment. If it doesn't replicate: the small cohort (12 patients) and selection effects in Phase 1 were doing the heavy lifting, and the approach joins a long list of promising-in-small-numbers immunotherapy stories. Watch the Phase 2 expansion cohort size and whether the effect holds in patients with higher tumor burden.
Bio-Manufacturing in a Box Just Got a Huge Upgrade
Cell-free protein synthesis — using the molecular machinery of a cell without the cell itself — has always been powerful but fragile, fizzling out after a few hours. A Nature Biotechnology paper from the Venter Institute describes engineered synthetic chaperone molecules that stabilize ribosomes and enzymes in cell-free reactions, extending productive lifetime from under 8 hours to over 100 hours — a tenfold-plus increase in stability and yield.
What this enables: Distributed biomanufacturing becomes plausible. A self-contained unit producing protein therapeutics on-demand in a field hospital, a remote clinic, or a forward military base no longer requires the cold chain and centralized infrastructure of traditional bioreactors. What could stall it: Regulatory frameworks for point-of-care biologics manufacturing don't exist yet, and quality control at distributed sites is an unsolved problem. The signal to watch is whether any procurement contract is issued for field-deployable CFPS units — that's the procurement signal that turns a lab result into infrastructure.
Complementing this, machine-learning-guided cell-free enzyme engineering is now delivering 1.6- to 42-fold activity improvements across multiple biocatalysts while testing far fewer variants — a capability that plugs directly into longer-lived CFPS platforms and makes bespoke enzyme production a routine engineering task. And separately, an MIT team trained a large language model on the molecular grammar of industrial yeast (Komagataella phaffii), re-encoding proteins to express far better in yeast and boosting titers by an order of magnitude in some cases — a sequence-level optimization that could shift more biologics toward cheaper industrial hosts.
The Math on Enzymatic Recycling Finally Flips
Enzymatic plastic recycling — using engineered enzymes to dissolve PET bottles back into virgin-quality chemical building blocks — has been "almost competitive" for years. This week, UK-based PlastiZyme announced it hit $1.50/kg for recycled terephthalic acid at its 10-ton-per-year pilot facility, per the company's announcement. That dips below current commodity pricing for virgin TPA.
The company credits a machine-learning-discovered enzyme that tolerates the impurities in real consumer waste streams, reducing pre-sorting costs. A separate techno-economic analysis tied to a Nature Chemical Engineering study models full enzymatic PET recycling at ~$1.51/kg versus $1.87/kg for U.S. virgin PET under realistic industrial assumptions.
What changes if this scales: The circular economy for plastics stops being a policy aspiration and becomes a bankable investment. Brands with recycled-content commitments get a supply source that actually works. What failure looks like: Pilot-scale economics don't survive the jump to 50,000-ton commercial plants — enzyme stability degrades at scale, or feedstock variability overwhelms the process. The near-term signal: watch Carbios' Longlaville, France commissioning run — the first commercial-scale enzymatic PET plant. If continuous operation holds there, the "proof at petrochemical scale" question is answered.
The Genome Editor That Sneaks Past Your Immune System
One of genome editing's dirtiest secrets: your immune system often destroys the editing machinery before it finishes the job. Double-stranded DNA delivery triggers innate immune alarms evolved to detect viral invasion. A new method published in Nature called INSTALL (INtegration via Single-Stranded tAmpLate and recombinase) sidesteps this by delivering new DNA as single-stranded templates — a form that largely evades immune detection — combined with a recombinase enzyme that stitches sequences into specific genomic sites. The result: large DNA insertions in human and mouse cells without the toxic immune responses that have plagued previous approaches.
What this unlocks: Many disease-causing mutations require inserting an entire functional gene — thousands of DNA letters. Current CRISPR tools handle small edits well but struggle with large payloads, especially in vivo. INSTALL-type tools could enable a generation of gene therapies that stalled on delivery toxicity. What could go wrong: The experiments are in cell lines, not primary patient cells or animal models. Recombinase specificity at genomic scale needs validation — off-target integration would be a dealbreaker. Watch for in vivo mouse data and whether any gene-therapy company licenses the technology within the next two quarters.
In parallel, the FDA lifted its clinical hold on Intellia's in vivo CRISPR program nex-z for hereditary angioedema, clearing Phase 3 MAGNITUDE enrollment — a signal that some in vivo editing programs are advancing under careful oversight even as safety concerns around AAV vectors push other programs toward ex vivo or transient approaches.
Ozempic Might Be Aging's New Wild Card — But Read the Fine Print
The most-discussed biotech story in technical communities this week isn't a new drug — it's a medRxiv preprint claiming semaglutide (the GLP-1 agonist in Ozempic) reversed biological aging by 3.1 years in a clinical trial. The study measured DNA methylation-based epigenetic clocks — tools that estimate cellular age from chemical marks on DNA — in adults with HIV-associated lipohypertrophy. In adjusted models, PCGrimAge (a mortality-linked clock) increased by 3.08 fewer "years per year" in the semaglutide arm. Organ-specific aging signals slowed in kidneys, hearts, and brains.
The fine print matters: this is a post-hoc exploratory analysis of a completed trial — not a study designed to measure aging. The patient population experiences accelerated aging from HIV. And epigenetic clocks show significant discrepancies across tissue types, raising questions about what they actually measure.
Why it matters anyway: The proposed mechanistic story — anti-inflammatory effects and visceral fat reduction consistent with observed epigenetic changes — suggests GLP-1 drugs may affect aging through metabolic pathways, not just weight loss. If true, that's a platform story that reshapes pricing, prescribing, and label expansion across the entire GLP-1 class. The test: Whether any pharma company designs a prospective, properly powered aging trial with epigenetic endpoints. That's the signal that separates "interesting preprint" from "new therapeutic category."
Plant-Based Meat Gets a Hard, Data-Driven Taste Test — And Almost Wins
A blinded sensory study — 2,684 consumers, 14 product categories, over 11,000 tastings — compared leading plant-based meats to animal counterparts and found some categories are within 0.1–0.3 points of parity on a 7-point liking scale. Unbreaded chicken filets, nuggets, and burgers were standouts: nearly half of tasters rated the plant version equal to or better than animal. Steaks still lag badly.
The preprint links sensory parity to market share: categories where plant-based nailed savoriness and juiciness captured 5–14% share in the markets analyzed, versus under 1% in those markets where the gap is wide. Complementing this, Swedish startup Melt&Marble achieved self-affirmed GRAS status for MeltyMarble — yeast-produced lipids engineered to mimic beef fat melting behavior — a practical ingredient that could close the "sizzle" gap.
What changes: Alt-protein's market problem may be a solvable engineering problem, not a fundamental consumer rejection. The open dataset gives product teams a specific roadmap. What doesn't change yet: Steaks, whole-muscle cuts, and anything requiring complex texture remain far from parity. Watch whether any major CPG company reformulates with precision-fermented fats in Q2 — that's the commercial signal that the data is being acted on.
Europe's Wall Around CRISPR Crops Begins to Crumble
The European Parliament's Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development (AGRI) voted in committee to advance the New Genomic Techniques framework, including the crucial Category 1 provision — a streamlined, notification-based path for plants with edits that could have occurred naturally. This would let drought-tolerant or disease-resistant gene-edited crops reach European farmers years faster and at a fraction of current regulatory cost.
However, the full plenary vote — originally expected this month — has slipped to May 2026, and European parliamentary schedules have a habit of slipping further. A hidden provision requiring disclosure of all relevant patents in a publicly available database for any NGT-1 application is the landmine IP teams aren't discussing enough.
On the U.S. side, USDA APHIS determined that a CRISPR-edited sorghum line with altered stomatal responses is not a regulated article — another example of gene-edited crops bypassing older GMO pathways.
If the EU framework passes: European ag-biotech investment unlocks, but patent transparency requirements create new strategic complexity. If it slips again: European breeders continue watching competitors in the Americas and Asia commercialize varieties they can't sell at home. The observable signal: whether the May plenary date holds, and whether any major European seed company announces a gene-edited variety pipeline contingent on passage.
A Pill to Treat a Deadly Immune Disease in Children — and the FDA Is Deciding Now
The FDA is reviewing marnetegragene autotemcel (marne-cel, brand name Kresladi) for severe leukocyte adhesion deficiency type I (LAD-I) — a rare genetic immune disorder where children suffer recurrent life-threatening infections because they lack a critical immune protein. The only current option is finding a matched donor for a stem cell transplant, which carries serious risks and isn't available to everyone.
Marne-cel collects a patient's own CD34+ stem cells, corrects them with a lentiviral vector carrying the functional ITGB2 gene, and infuses them back. The Phase 1/2 trial in 9 patients showed 100% alive at 12 months without needing transplant. Nine patients is tiny — but LAD-I is vanishingly rare, and untreated children typically die in infancy.
If approved: Marne-cel becomes the first gene therapy for LAD-I and another proof point that ex vivo gene correction — fixing a patient's own cells outside the body — is maturing into a reliable platform. If rejected: The FDA signals it needs larger natural-history comparators even for ultra-rare diseases, which would slow every similar program. The PDUFA decision is expected in March 2026.
⚡ What Most People Missed
- A proteomics "AND gate" for drug combos. A bioRxiv preprint introduces CoPISA, a workflow measuring how protein stability shifts when you treat leukemia cells with two drugs together versus alone. The finding: some combinations produce unique proteome changes — an AND-gate at the protein-network level — that turns vague "synergy" into a concrete map of which pathways only activate under the combo, including DNA-damage and mitochondrial nodes. Early, but this could make designing combination regimens look more like circuit engineering.
- Legionella typing goes push-button. A preprint introduces el_gato, a tool that takes raw whole-genome sequencing data from Legionella pneumophila and outputs standardized strain IDs automatically. If adopted by reference labs, outbreak investigators could go from genome reads to globally comparable typing with one pipeline — a meaningful upgrade for Legionnaires' disease surveillance.
- A causal-discovery engine that admits biology isn't linear. NLCD, a new methods preprint, explicitly hunts for nonlinear causal relationships in gene-expression data rather than assuming "more X = more Y." If even a few predicted nonlinear regulatory links validate experimentally, metabolic engineers get a sharper shortlist of knobs to turn — but wet-lab confirmation is still needed.
- Endothelial inflammation gets a chromatin address. A cell-biology preprint shows the DOT1L/AF10 enzyme complex drives a specific histone mark (H3K79me3) that keeps blood vessel cells locked in an inflammatory state. Disrupting that interaction calms inflammatory gene programs in vitro — a mechanistic clue that could eventually explain why some people's vasculature stays "angry" after sepsis or metabolic stress, and a specific enzyme target for medicinal chemists.
- Precision fermentation gets its Rosetta Stone. The PREFER ontology — a machine-readable standard for logging bioreactor runs across sites — sounds dry but is exactly the data plumbing needed before "AI for bioprocess optimization" becomes more than slideware. If even a few CDMOs adopt it, multi-site yield prediction and scale-up troubleshooting become tractable.
📅 What to Watch
- If Eli Lilly's orforglipron wins FDA approval this month, it becomes the first small-molecule oral GLP-1 on the U.S. market — removing cold-chain and injection-administration constraints and enabling different retail distribution and pricing models that could compress list-to-net spreads across the obesity drug category.
- If the EU NGT plenary vote holds its May date, the patent-transparency requirement buried in the framework will force IP strategy rethinks at every major European seed company before a single edited crop reaches market.
- If Carbios demonstrates continuous enzymatic PET recycling at its Longlaville plant, the "proof at petrochemical scale" question for bio-based plastic recycling is answered — and the first large CPG supply contracts should follow within quarters.
- If any pharma company announces a prospective aging trial with epigenetic clock endpoints, that's the signal GLP-1 drugs are being repositioned as a longevity platform — not just a weight-loss one.
- If SMA spatial transcriptomics findings (preprint) replicate, the current generation of motor-neuron-focused therapies may be leaving non-neural tissue dysfunction on the table — opening a second-generation therapeutic opportunity with different target-product profiles.
The Closer
A bacterium eating air and weaving spider silk. A nine-patient trial where every child survived. An enzyme that dissolves a Coke bottle cheaper than making a new one.
Somewhere, a CRISPR-edited fungus is growing 88% faster on 44% less sugar, and the reason it's trending isn't the science — it's that marketers realized you can sell "we deleted genes" to a public that panics at "we added genes." Marketing has always been biology's toughest substrate.
Until next week — stay curious, stay skeptical.
If someone you know is watching the GLP-1 or gene-editing space and hasn't seen this, forward it their way.
From the Lyceum
- The White House handed Congress a formal AI legislative blueprint in March 2026 that could preempt state-level rules — relevant if you build biotech AI or clinical decision tools. Read → The White House Hands Congress an AI Rulebook
- New longevity research reframes biological age: how fast your epigenetic clock moves matters more than where it starts. Read → Your Epigenetic Clock's Speed Matters More Than Where It Starts
- China quietly approved the first commercial brain implant for paralysis — the actual regulatory milestone while the U.S. debates demos. Read → China Quietly Approves the First Commercial Brain Implant for Paralysis