Laura Brod has trod an unusual path into biotech, so perhaps it's not surprising that the company she leads is charting an unorthodox route for its ultrasmall precision-medicine technology. Several years ago Brod nearly entered the race for governor following a stint in the Legislature, but she changed course, serving as a regent for the University of Minnesota and becoming CEO of a Minnetonka company called GeneSegues Therapeutics, which was developing medical nanotechnology for cancer. Today Brod is also CEO of a spinoff company based in St. Cloud called RoverMed BioSciences, which is working to apply GeneSegues' technology to a broader array of diseases.
Q: Tell me about your company's technology.
A: RoverMed has developed a nanotechnology that aims to deliver the next generation of drugs. There are a number of therapeutics being developed by pharmaceutical companies that will never actually impact humans unless they have a precision-targeted delivery technology that is able to bring them directly to the disease cell. And that is what RoverMed does.
Q: The technology is really at the nano scale?
A: Our technology is actually 20 nanometers. One of the differentiators between our technology and other delivery technologies out on the market is the ultrasmall and crystallized design of our particles enables us to navigate a very challenging place called the body.
Q: So with cancer, for example, you can deliver a drug molecule that interacts with a specific RNA molecule in the way you intend?
A: Yes. In those cases, you are delivering proteins into a cell to change the dynamic of what's going on in the cells. Cancer is one place where we have experience delivering proteins. We also can do work in gene therapy. Gene therapy is essentially getting into a cell and altering the makeup of that cell.
Q: Is it being used in humans?