Bionic Woman: Exec perseveres, while biotech struggles for momentum
Milt Capps
Leslie Wisner-Lynch, DDS, DMSc, hesitated only briefly when asked in a recent VNC interview whether it's true she picked Nashville as the new home for BioMimetic Therapeutics, thus setting in motion the company's move here from Long Island in 2000.Pressed on her role in the relocation, Wisner-Lynch - who is director of applied research in the $188 million (market cap) company created by husband and CEO Sam Lynch - at first only discreetly thanked her husband for crediting her with the relocation, as he often does publicly. Then, in a footnote sure to warm the hearts of local industry recruiters, she explained that breaking the relocation news to BioMimetic's venture-capital investors, who were at that point reviewing a BioMimetic term sheet, was a delicate matter. However, she said, BioMimetic's budding relationship with Vanderbilt University, state and local government support and the area's livability were among factors that eased investors' minds. However the decision actually came about, Wisner-Lynch's pro-technology influence seems to be growing still - even while Tennessee's biotech industry struggles to establish momentum and a friendlier environment for new ventures.
TBA Chairman and President Bob Acuff (right) recently told VNC that TBA recognizes the importance of being more
"We also think Nashville has a transformational opportunity," said Cromwell, "in leveraging the state's leading innovation cluster - healthcare services - to expand into other emerging industries... If we are ultimately successful, it will be a product of great innovation from our research institutions, the active engagement of the venture capital community, and the rise of an entrepreneurial class that is equal parts home grown and attracted to Tennessee from biotech epicenters on the coasts. If we do our jobs well, we will have made a strong case for state support and, most importantly, private sector leadership..." In a separate interview, Wisner-Lynch's perspective seemed consistent with Cromwell's when she noted that the nation's "'hotbeds' of biotechnology were once upon a time just like us... it took many years for them to come to where they are today." She also stressed "there are some really wonderful areas of research on-going and happening right here." However, she said, the region's "pockets" of activity are not yet linked via "coordinated and collaborative activity" that is essential to "translation of discovery to the marketplace." She noted that - as is true on campuses nationwide - the state's campus technology transfer initiatives must achieve improved collaboration with other stakeholders in order to accelerate tech commercialization. Such state and regional collaboration are vital, she said, given how aggressively Alabama and other neighboring states are marketing their grants, facilities and infrastructure.
While CEO Lynch and BioMimetic's senior management team managed the growth of the company's operations, facilities and workforce, Virginia- and Harvard-educated Wisner-Lynch continues to champion innovation. She has proven her abililty to navigate in the realms of government, acadème and other institutions. She is a member of the boards of Cromwell's TTDC, Acuff's TBA and Mind2Marketplace, the Rutherford County-centered tech-commercialization initiative. After more than two years' work, Wisner-Lynch recently launched via the BioTN Foundation (co-founded with her husband) a science- and technology-education initiative that is training 13 adults and three high-school students at Independence High School in Williamson County. The enrollees will receive 900 hours of instruction - including 300 hours working with industry - and will emerge prepared for jobs of varying sophistication in biotech, life sciences and healthcare services. ♦
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