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Lyell Immunopharma develops next-generation CAR-T cell therapies designed to overcome T cell exhaustion and treat solid tumors, the frontier of cell therapy.
Lyell Immunopharma is a clinical-stage cell therapy company founded in 2018 by Rick Klausner and publicly traded on Nasdaq. The company focuses on next-generation CAR-T therapies that address the key limitations of first-generation products, particularly the exhaustion and dysfunction of engineered T cells that limits efficacy especially against solid tumors. Lyell has developed proprietary T cell reprogramming technologies including gene overexpression approaches that maintain T cell stemness and fitness during manufacturing and after infusion. The company is applying these technologies to both hematological malignancies and solid tumors in a pipeline of clinical programs. Lyell has established a research collaboration with GlaxoSmithKline to combine cell therapy expertise. While first-generation CAR-T products have demonstrated remarkable responses in blood cancers, Lyell is focused on the much larger unmet need in solid tumors where current CAR-T therapies have shown limited efficacy. The company represents the scientific evolution of the cell therapy field toward more durable and broadly applicable treatments.
Roche subsidiary and founding biotech; invented the biologics industry with recombinant DNA. Blockbuster oncology franchise includes Herceptin, Avastin, Rituxan, and Tecentriq.
Genentech was founded in 1976 in South San Francisco by Herbert Boyer and Robert Swanson, becoming the first company to produce human insulin using recombinant DNA technology and essentially launching the modern biotechnology industry. Acquired by Roche in 2009 for $46.8 billion, Genentech continues to operate with significant R&D autonomy as the US hub for Roche's pharmaceutical innovation.\n\nThe company is best known for pioneering cancer biologics, developing Herceptin (trastuzumab) for HER2-positive breast cancer, Avastin (bevacizumab) for multiple cancers, Rituxan (rituximab) for lymphoma, and Tecentriq (atezolizumab) for PD-L1 immunotherapy. Its discovery engine spans oncology, neuroscience, ophthalmology, and immunology with a robust early-stage pipeline leveraging AI-assisted target identification.\n\nGenentech generates tens of billions in annual revenue through Roche's Pharmaceuticals Division and remains one of the most productive biotech research sites in the world, consistently ranked among top employers in life sciences. The South San Francisco campus employs over 13,000 scientists, clinicians, and engineers, anchoring the Bay Area as a global biotech hub.
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