Oxford Nanopore Technologies, a UK-based portable DNA and RNA sequencer developer backed by genomics company Illumina, raised £100m ($126m) yesterday from a consortium led by investment fund GT Healthcare.
The round included intellectual property-focused investment firm IP Group, investment fund Woodford Investment Management and undisclosed new and existing backers.
Founded in 2005 as a spinout of Oxford University, Oxford Nanopore has created a portable device called the Minion that provides real-time biological analysis at low cost.
The technology has applications in areas such as disease and pathogen monitoring, environmental studies, food chain surveillance and microgravity biology. The Minion was released in 2015 and earlier this week became the first device of its kind to sequence multiple human genomes.
The funding will go towards an expansion of the company’s commercial activities, increased production and further development of its existing products and pipeline, which includes a mobile device-compatible sequencer dubbed Smidgion.
Oxford Nanopore has now raised a total of £351m, with IP Group participating in a £70m round in July 2015. Its other investors include Illumina, which provided $18m in 2009, Odey Asset Management, Invesco Perpetual, Top Technology Ventures and Lansdowne Partners.
– The original version of this article first appeared on our sister site, Global University Venturing. Image courtesy of Oxford Nanopore Technologies Ltd.