Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Cambridge MA precision oncology biotech using Dynamo platform to exploit protein motion for drug design; lead asset RLY-2608 targets PI3Kα in breast cancer.
Relay Therapeutics was founded in 2016 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, emerging from research at MIT and D.E. Shaw Research. The company is built around its Dynamo platform, which integrates computational protein motion modeling (molecular dynamics simulations) with structural biology and medicinal chemistry to design small-molecule drugs that exploit the dynamic conformational states of disease-relevant proteins—a dimension traditional structure-based drug design ignores.\n\nRelay's lead program, RLY-2608, is a first-in-class allosteric, mutant-selective PI3Kα inhibitor for advanced breast cancer patients with PI3KCA mutations. Unlike approved PI3Kα inhibitors that cause metabolic toxicity by inhibiting wild-type PI3Kα in normal tissues, RLY-2608 selectively targets the mutant form. The compound has shown early clinical promise including objective responses in patients who progressed on prior alpelisib, supporting a differentiated profile. Additional programs target FGFR2 and SHP2 in solid tumors.\n\nRelay has raised over $1.2 billion in equity financing and holds substantial cash reserves. The company is conducting multiple clinical trials and building a pipeline that validates its Dynamo-guided discovery approach. Though revenue-stage remains early, Relay represents a leading example of next-generation computational oncology companies seeking to turn protein dynamics insights into selective, differentiated medicines.
Finch Therapeutics develops microbiome-based medicines targeting the gut-brain and gut-immune axis with programs in autism spectrum disorder and C. difficile.
Finch Therapeutics is a clinical-stage biotechnology company founded in 2015 that develops microbiome medicines targeting the relationship between the gut microbiome and systemic diseases. The company is focused on two primary therapeutic areas: gastrointestinal infections including C. difficile and conditions involving the gut-brain axis including autism spectrum disorder where gut microbiome alterations have been associated with symptom severity. Finch's lead microbiome program CP101 targets recurrent C. difficile infection, competing in the same emerging microbiome therapeutics space as Seres Therapeutics. The company also conducts research on the COMET platform for autism spectrum disorder, exploring whether microbiome restoration can improve behavioral symptoms through the gut-brain connection. Finch has raised over $165M and has conducted multiple clinical trials of its microbiome medicines. The company's autism program represents a particularly innovative and scientifically ambitious program given the emerging evidence that gut microbiome composition influences neurological development and behavior. Finch's work contributes to the broader scientific validation of microbiome medicine as a legitimate therapeutic class beyond C. difficile.
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