Clara Biotech hits $850K in seed funding roundup, preparing to launch first product
June 15, 2021 | Startland News Staff
An emerging biotech startup in the region is reporting a busy spring with a significant seed round already raised and key steps under way to launch its product: a solution that removes manufacturing roadblocks for breakthrough drugs.
“We’re in an exciting and growing space and currently have low regulatory hurdles in the research stage,” said Jim West, co-founder of Clara Biotech, a Lawrence-based company already buoyed by its founding team’s expertise in exosome technologies, pharmaceutical development, engineering and building life science companies.
Elevator pitch: Clara Biotech is building an exosome isolation platform that solves a huge roadblock around manufacturing that helps the entire biopharma industry make future breakthrough drugs that may not otherwise get approved. We founded Clara Biotech to help move exosomes from research to patient.

“We’re looking for smart money investors who can help us develop our market position, scale the technology and become the platform that companies can use to get exosome therapies to the patients who need them most,” he continued, detailing Clara Biotech’s momentum in a company snapshot update.
Off the heels of announcing an undisclosed investment by Kansas City-based Fountain Innovation Fund, the startup has raised $850,000 for its seed round, West said, with additional investments from angel investors in Boston, San Francisco, India and Kansas City.
Clara Biotech recently received a tranche of angel tax credits, still available to qualified investors, he added.
The seed round is expected to help the company debut its beta ExoRelease exosome isolation kit, as well as continue to scale, West said.
Click here to read Clara Biotech’s full snapshot update.
“We are generating revenue and launching our first product,” he said. “At a recent conference for exosome therapeutics, sample preparation quality was the major limiting factor in manufacturing and receiving FDA approval. Our groundbreaking solution resulted in a 70 percent lead conversion rate of all companies attending (which includes investment groups and competitors). We’re currently working with and growing a number of paying early customers including some major pharmaceutical players.”
Founded in 2018 at the Bioscience and Technology Business Center in Lawrence, Clara Biotech’s therapeutic applications range from personalized medicine, targeted drug delivery, immunotherapy, and orphan and rare diseases. It’s solutions are focused on early cancer detection, Alzheimer’s disease, and virus detection.
Click here to learn more about Clara Biotech and how its technology works.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that seeks to build inclusive prosperity through a prepared workforce and entrepreneur-focused economic development. The Foundation works to change conditions, address root causes, and break down systemic barriers so that all people – regardless of race, gender, or geography – have the opportunity to achieve economic stability, mobility, and prosperity.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect with us at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn.

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Cosmo Burger brings its mouth-watering tots, boozy milkshakes to East Crossroads’ bustling streets of eats
Bringing Cosmo Burger to the Crossroads required cousins Atit and Jugal Patel to cook their plans to perfection, serving up the brand’s first full-service brick-and-mortar location after years of trial by griddle. The result: a beefed up version of the owners’ original concept in one of the city’s most popular dining and entertainment districts. “This…
Independence day: Flipping from side-hustle to full-time requires grind behind glory
Founders found freedom in the journey (but they’re grateful for what they didn’t know was ahead) Jason Taylor walked away from big tech for good in January — leaving behind a dream résumé that included a long engineering career at Microsoft, then Google, for the freedom to pursue what had once been just a passion…
Family history, franchise model help second-chapter entrepreneur jump business obstacles
Throughout his career as a car salesman and mortgage broker, Brad Staples felt a calling toward entrepreneurship, he said. And when those industries ran dry, the Missouri native realized it was time to try on a familiar hat: running a family business. His venture, USA Ninja Challenge — a franchise kids’ fitness gym inspired by…
‘America the Entrepreneurial’: Can builders restore the promise of ‘the most courageous startup the world has ever seen?’
Risk-takers set the story of the United States of America in motion, said Victor W. Hwang, lamenting a modern day reality where needless barriers too often work against entrepreneurs and young businesses. An upcoming milestone birthday for the nation offers a focal point for restoring a coast-to-coast commitment to supporting builders and dreamers, he said,…



