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Introducing Chris Savile, Vice President, Business Development and Partnerships 

Today, Antheia is pleased to announce the appointment of biotech business development veteran Chris Savile as VP of Business Development and Partnerships. Ahead of today’s announcement, we sat down with Chris to learn more about his career journey, what inspired him to join Antheia’s mission, and what he’ll focus on in this new role.

Tell us about your background and career journey. How did you end up working in biotech? 

I’ve spent the last 20 years in industrial and commercial roles in the Bay Area. I’m an organic chemist by training — I started out wanting to be a synthetic chemist, but then I discovered enzymes and that biology could make a lot of things far more efficiently than chemical synthesis could. That led me to get my PhD in biocatalysis, engineering enzymes to perform different types of chemistry to make valuable molecules for pharma and other fine chemical industries. 

I started my career at Codexis in a technical role, developing enzymes for pharmaceutical manufacturing. I later transitioned into a commercial role — business development and commercial operations — and I’ve been in that space ever since, across different companies and different roles. I moved on to Intrexon before spending about seven years at Willow Biosciences in various capacities, including as CEO most recently.  

Through all of those roles, the core job has always been the same: bridging the gap between science and business, and finding alignment between what the technology can do and what real commercial opportunities exist. R&D often wants to pursue things that are scientifically fascinating but don’t have a clear business case, and business folks sometimes want to go after things that are unrealistic from a technical standpoint. My career over the past 15 years has been about cutting through the noise and focusing on projects that make sense from both sides of a biotech business. 

You’ve known Christina and the Antheia team for about 10 years. What made you say “yes” to joining at this point in the company’s journey? 

Antheia is the real deal when it comes to biosynthesis companies. They’ve succeeded where so many others have tried and fallen short. When I first crossed paths with Christina at Intrexon, we were actually working on similar projects — technically competitors, though both of us just wanted to see the science work. We kept in touch over the years, and even did some work together on plant alkaloids and thebaine. 

What really caught my attention last year was the success Antheia had achieved at commercial scale. Taking a complex biosynthetic pathway, getting carbon to flow efficiently through it, and producing a meaningful amount of product — that’s one thing, and a lot of companies have gotten there. But actually scaling it to produce metric tons of something as complex as thebaine? Nobody else has done that. That is exactly what I had been trying to accomplish at other companies, and Antheia has cracked the code. 

That changes everything in terms of the commercial conversations I get to have. Problems I looked at five or six years ago and had to set aside — because I wasn’t sure the technology could get there — I can now look at them and say, this team can do this. That’s a pretty exciting place to be. 

What are your primary responsibilities as VP of Business Development and Partnerships, and what does a typical day look like? 

The core of the role is continuing to build on what Antheia has already done. We’ve successfully developed, scaled, and commercialized our first product. The goal now is to apply all of that hard-won experience to identify and pursue similar opportunities in biomanufacturing with new targets that we can scale and bring to commercial markets. 

A big part of my job is determining which of those opportunities we pursue ourselves and which ones we’d like to develop with a partner. In some cases, it makes sense for Antheia to own the full process — invest, scale, produce, and sell. In others, it may make more sense to partner with someone who already owns that market or has complementary manufacturing capabilities. I’m working through those decisions across our current pipeline — identifying what’s practical in the near term, and also looking further out at higher-risk, higher-reward opportunities to start qualifying now. 

On a day-to-day basis, I spend a lot of time talking to the market directly. I’m not an over-analyzer — I’ll jot down a back-of-the-envelope idea, and then I pick up the phone. Oftentimes you have what seems like a great idea, and the market tells you something completely different. We’re a global company, so I’m talking with potential partners in Europe, Asia, and India to present our capabilities and start the dialogue. Every day brings surprises — you think you know what a meeting is going to be about, and you come out with an entirely new direction to explore. It’s very external facing, but equally important is bringing those market insights back to the internal team to further investigate and decide if we want to pursue. 

What does an ideal partner for Antheia look like, and where do you see the most opportunity? 

First and foremost: Can they sell it? Making something is one challenge but getting it on the market is another entirely. If we’re producing a new active pharmaceutical ingredient, we want to work with a partner who knows how to manufacture at spec, knows how to release product through the appropriate regulatory channels, and has the existing customer relationships to get that new ingredient qualified and adopted. That commercial infrastructure is critical. 

Second, because everything we do requires fermentation, the ideal partner either has that capability themselves or has access to a manufacturing network that can do it cost-effectively. Bringing in additional contract manufacturing parties can add cost quickly, and if the scale-up economics don’t work, the opportunity doesn’t make sense. 

Third, and this one is important: we need a partner that genuinely believes in the technology. Engineering biology always requires more upfront investment than conventional chemistry. Chemistry can be faster in the short term, but the benefits are incremental. What we do is transformative, but it takes longer and you need an advocate on the other side who understands the long-term outlook and will stick with it. 

The good news is that we can partner at different stages depending on the situation. If an opportunity isn’t on our radar but someone else believes in it and wants to bring us in, we can partner early and co-fund the development. If it’s something we’ve already de-risked internally and want to capture more of the value, we might partner later or even take it to market ourselves. There’s a lot of flexibility in how we structure these arrangements. 

In terms of where the opportunities are, I’m looking at things similar to what Antheia has already accomplished with thebaine — large existing markets where the current chemistry is challenging or where supply chains are fragile and unreliable. People may not realize how many active pharmaceutical ingredients rely on variable plant harvests or animal agriculture. There are a lot of those situations across pharma, and our technology is well suited to address them. 

More broadly, our approach is agnostic to therapeutic indication. We’re evaluating molecules based on the difficulty of making them and the value of replacing a problematic process. That opens up opportunities across oncology, anticoagulants, immunosuppressants, anti-inflammatories, and more.  

What does success look like for you over the next 12–24 months? 

I’d like to see a handful of new partnerships take shape. One priority is exploring potential partners for some of our existing assets where the technical work has already been done and the pathways have been de-risked, but where the best path to value could be through a partnership rather than commercializing ourselves. When you go to a partner with something that already has proof of concept behind it, you’re in a much stronger position to realize tangible value from that work. 

Beyond those near-term assets, I’d also like to qualify new opportunities for our forward-looking pipeline. And as we think further out, I’d love to see some early groundwork laid on the discovery side, using the platform in more exploratory ways to generate new opportunities for future, breakthrough products.  

What hot topics or trends are you following, and is there anything you think is underappreciated or overhyped? 

The trend I’m most excited about is using biology for discovery. We’ve largely neglected natural products as a source of new pharmaceutical ingredients for many years. There’s a real opportunity to use platforms like ours to generate new chemical entities that can be evaluated as drug candidates. The challenge is that it’s still a bit too slow for the pace of industry, so we need to get more efficient and more thoughtful about how we approach it. Drug development is hard, engineering biology is hard, and doing both at once is even harder, but I think it’s an underinvested area with a lot of potential. 

AI is probably the most discussed topic in our space right now, and I’d say it’s simultaneously overhyped for some applications and under-appreciated for others. The challenge in biology specifically is that AI is only as good as the data sets it learns from, and biological data sets are notoriously messy. It’s starting to show real value in protein engineering, and I expect it will increasingly contribute to pathway engineering as those data sets improve. We’ve actually been applying machine learning approaches to understand how mutations affect protein function for over 25 years — it’s not new, it just goes by a trendier name now. What I am genuinely excited about is Antheia’s proprietary knowledge base for engineering yeast. That data represents years of real experimental work, and as the tools for working with it improve, it becomes increasingly valuable. The models need to be built to learn from that data effectively, and there’s a significant opportunity there. 

Based on your experience so far, what makes Antheia a great place to work? 

There’s a deep-seeded sense of trust that permeates through the entire company. Christina is an exceptional founder and CEO — she’s the face of the company and an extraordinary scientific visionary — but she also extends an enormous amount of trust to the people around her. She gives you the latitude to do what you need to do, with the expectation that you’ll be transparent about it and bring those insights back to the team so decisions can be made collectively. I couldn’t ask for a better working environment. 

Beyond that, I feel like I’ve stripped away all the noise from previous roles and now get to focus almost entirely on what I actually love doing: identifying real opportunities, qualifying them, and figuring out how to get the technology to create value. And I’m doing that in an environment where people work hard, there’s a genuine culture of learning, and the team is receptive to input and experience from the outside. I’ve offered perspectives drawn from what worked and didn’t work at previous companies, and the reception has been really positive. That matters. 

Tell us about your life outside of work. 

I’m a typical Bay Area dad with a 10-year-old and a 12-year-old, which means life outside of work is pretty much all about the kids. That’s where my energy goes, and I’m happy to give it. I actually had about two and a half months off at the end of last year, which I had planned to extend, but I got so excited about this opportunity that I came back sooner than expected.  

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Adam Takos, PhD

Head of Drug Innovation and Managing Director, Singapore

Adam has spent two decades driven by a fascination with how we can harness biology to solve complex challenges. His journey has been a rewarding evolution—from making fundamental discoveries in plant specialized metabolism to leading industrial programs in metabolic engineering and drug discovery. Beyond the technical work, Adam is an advocate for “no-fear-of-failure” team cultures. Having worked across three countries, he values the diverse perspectives that drive innovation and help us turn ambitious research into practical, life-saving solutions.

Chris Savile, PhD

Head of Business Development and Partnerships

Chris has spent the past 20 years focused on the development and commercialization of biomanufacturing processes across multiple sectors and has spent his recent career focused on identifying high-value commercial opportunities and building strategic partnerships in pharma, food, and health and wellness. Prior to joining Antheia, he was CEO at Willow Biosciences, executive director, commercial operations at Intrexon, and associate director, business development and senior scientist, R&D at Codexis. Chris holds a PhD in organic chemistry from McGill University.

Dr. Stefan Bauer

Head of Analytical Development

Stefan is a senior biotechnology leader in analytical chemistry and a passionate scientific and technical expert in analytical methods and principles, especially chromatography and mass spectrometry, using an extensive range of instrumentations for a variety of analytes in complex matrices, such as microbial fermentations. With a 20-year career-long commitment to high quality standards, focusing on optimizing and simplifying workflows, he excels at developing high-throughput methods that drive efficiency, cost savings, operational excellence, and scientific innovation. Previously, he led the bioanalytical teams at UC Berkeley, Zymergen, Perfect Day, Novonutrients, Inscripta, and Manus.

Andrew Saarni

Head of Fermentation Process Development & Scale-Up

Andrew is a strategic bioprocess leader with over a decade of experience guiding fermentation process development and scale-up efforts from early-stage R&D through commercial deployment for small molecules, proteins, and now, vital alkaloid medicines. He has a proven track record of aligning technical execution with business strategy, driving technology transfer and manufacturing readiness at domestic and international CDMOs, and building fermentation infrastructures that deliver precision, throughput, and reproducibility. Before Antheia, he was Director of Fermentation at Geltor and a Senior Fermentation Engineer at Geno. He currently leads Antheia’s global fermentation scale-up efforts to secure next-generation supply chains for critical medicines.

Richard Sherwin

Head of Commercialization

Richard is an industry veteran with more than 30 years of experience in the KSM, API, and intermediate markets. He is responsible for leading the commercialization and revenue generation for Antheia’s robust pipeline of products. Richard brings an exceptional track record of leading international sales teams, driving revenue growth, building strategic partnerships, and delivering innovative products to market, including ANDA and NDA developments. Richard led commercial efforts at some of the leading global pharmaceutical companies and most recently, built his own consultancy business advising a range of clients, including $1B divisions of major multinationals.

Appropriate regulatory submissions will be prepared and submitted to support Antheia’s customers who need to reference and access necessary process-related information.

Yihui Zhu, PhD

Head of Fermentation

Yihui leads the fermentation team at Antheia. With over 25 years of hands-on experience in the field, he brings in-depth knowledge and expertise in microbial metabolism and fermentation process development. He is also skilled in developing comprehensive fermentation data collection, analysis, and visualization systems. Prior to joining Antheia, he served as a fermentation lead at Intrexon and Codexis where he successfully built fermentation labs and teams and led multiple biofuel and biochemical projects to reach stretch milestones and tech transfer. Yihui is passionate about the potential of fermentation and is dedicated to advancing the field through innovative research and development.

Audrey Wang

Head of Financial Planning and Analysis

Audrey leads financial planning and analysis at Antheia. With an MBA from Washington University in St. Louis, Audrey is passionate about leveraging financial analysis, digital technology, and data analytics to guide companies in making optimal investments and strategic business decisions. Audrey has a decade of experience in helping companies solve unique problems and creating long-term impact with unconventional approaches. Before joining Antheia, she was at Vir Biotechnology and Merck where she led various FP&A workstreams, including investment valuation, asset prioritization, and manufacturing sites operation finance support. Audrey completed CFA Level II and passed the U.S. CPA exam in 2011.

Antonij Tjahjadi, CPA

Head of Accounting

Antonij Tjahjadi leads accounting at Antheia and holds active CPA license. He joined Antheia with more than 20 years of experience in corporate accounting, bringing deep expertise in ramping up accounting operations for start-up companies, SEC reporting/technical accounting, and SOX implementation efforts. Before joining Antheia, he held various leading roles in both public and private company settings, including directing accounting functions at Ambys Medicines, where he successfully implemented Netsuite with Point Purchasing integration and set up various accounting policies and processes, and played a key role in the initial public offering of Nutanix, Inc.

Ken Takeoka

Head of Biology

Ken leads the Biology team at Antheia, which incorporates both strain and protein engineering functions. He has more than 16 years of experience in the synthetic biology field, working with leading companies, including Amyris and Novartis. One of his passions is molecular biology tool development and he previously worked to build the foundation for the automated strain engineering pipeline at Amyris. At Novartis, he modernized the molecular biology techniques and established a platform to model mechanisms of antibiotic resistance in a range of organisms.

Suzanne Sato

Head of Downstream Processing

Suzy leads downstream chemistry processes at Antheia. She has 19 years of experience in process development, including route development through synthetic chemistry and scale-up of small molecule APIs for GPCR targets under cGMP for Phase I-III trials. Before joining Antheia, Suzy led a full DSP team at Amyris where she successfully pivoted developments from biofuels hydrocarbon products to pharmaceutical intermediate, flavor, fragrance and nutraceutical products. She led a team that scaled 11 products and took five products to commercial manufacturing.

Farrah Pulce, PMP

Head of Project Management

Farrah leads program and project management at Antheia. She has over 20 years of experience leading program and project management, operations, and engineering for companies across the CPG, aerospace, and automotive industries. Prior to joining Antheia, Farrah implemented and led the sustaining program management team at Impossible Foods. She also led product operations, project management, and cost optimization at Blue Bottle Coffee and Tyson Foods to develop and commercialize new products. As a certified project management professional (PMP), Farrah has a proven record of successful project delivery, improving project management practices, and building collaborative teams.

Jordyn Lee

Head of Communications

Jordyn leads communications and external affairs at Antheia. She brings a decade of multidisciplinary communications experience in helping companies make complex science and technology accessible to broad audiences, all while maintaining technical accuracy and integrity. She has a passion for visionary storytelling and translating impact across the entire communications ecosystem – her work has spanned from public relations to corporate communications to marketing. Jordyn has served as an advisor to a number of different life sciences companies and most recently led corporate communications at Amyris.

Ben Kotopka, PhD

Head of Data Science

As Head of Data Science at Antheia, Ben manages in-house software development and external partnerships for storing and interpreting research data, executing bioinformatics analyses, and streamlining business processes. Prior to Antheia, Ben worked as an academic researcher at the intersection of machine learning, bioinformatics, and synthetic biology. Following this, as an entrepreneur and consultant, he developed and deployed data science solutions for biotechnology applications ranging from metabolomics-driven compound discovery to MRI segmentation.

Guerin Kob

Head of Supply Chain

Guerin is responsible for leading the design, development, management and improvement of Antheia’s end-to-end global supply chain. He has over 15 years of experience leading high-performing supply chain and procurement teams at leading biotechnology and specialty chemical companies, with extensive experience in process development and end-to-end supply chain optimization. Prior to joining Antheia, Guerin served as Senior Director of Global Supply Chain for Sumitomo Chemical’s biotechnology division with Valent Biosciences, where he led the end-to end supply chain including procurement, logistics and distribution, integrated business planning, materials management, customer service, and supply planning functions globally.

Eric d'Esparbes

Chief Financial Officer

Eric is a seasoned executive with 30 years of experience serving as the Chief Financial Officer for both private and public companies across various industries, including pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, diagnostics, and energy. He has successfully built and managed finance organizations for companies with a broad international footprint and annual sales of up to $3.5 billion. Eric has a proven track record in investor relations, capital raising to support organic growth and strategic partnerships/M&A, optimizing capital structures, and managing IPO processes, including transitions from private to public companies.

Jesse Ahrendt

Head of Quality Assurance and Regulatory Affairs

Jesse has more than 25 years of experience in regulatory affairs, quality systems, manufacturing quality, and regulated industries, ranging from early- to late-stage pharmaceuticals, biomanufacturing, consumer care, and medical devices. He has supported global product launches and the underlying quality supply chain components in industries that require strict adherence to internationally accepted quality standards. Before Antheia, he led quality efforts at Zymergen and Sandoz, and supported many global pharmaceutical companies during his time in Biotech Consulting at NSF International, all to bring quality to the forefront in manufacturing, standardize global processes, and support customer regulatory requirements.

Heidi Pucel

Chief People Officer

Heidi is a results-driven human resources executive and HR business partner who leverages decades of experience in empowering, motivating, and inspiring to drive transformation within high-performing and rapidly-growing workforces. A certified executive coach and passionate advocate for people-oriented solutions, Pucel serves as a partner to executive teams to design programs that support employee development, engagement, and recruitment and retention. Pucel most recently served as Chief People Officer for Countsy, where she worked as an interim HR executive for clients in the biotechnology and software industries, such as Ceribell and Tune Therapeutics.

Zack McGahey

Chief Operating Officer

Zack is a leading executive in operations management, specializing in bioprocess engineering and manufacturing management. He has over 20 years of experience leading manufacturing functions for companies across the pharmaceutical, synthetic biology, diagnostics, and automotive industries. Before joining Antheia, Zack was VP of manufacturing and capex project management at Zymergen. He also gained experience managing commercial scale facilities operations for Tesla, where he was responsible for managing 10 million square feet of factory, lab and warehouse space during the Model 3 ramp.

Kristy Hawkins, PhD

Co-Founder & CSO

Kristy has over 20 years of experience in the field of synthetic biology, focusing on yeast metabolic engineering for the production of small molecules. She did the founding work on the benzylisoquinoline alkaloid pathway during her graduate studies and gained valuable industry experience at Amyris and Lygos. Kristy is an expert in tool development, high-throughput screening, and host strain and heterologous pathway engineering.

Christina Smolke, PhD

Co-Founder & CEO

Christina is a pioneer in synthetic biology and metabolic engineering, where she has over 20 years of experience. As Professor of Bioengineering and Chemical Engineering at Stanford University, her laboratory led the breakthrough research to engineer baker’s yeast to produce some of the most complex and valuable medicines known. Under her leadership, Antheia’s advanced biosynthesis platform enables new possibilities for drug discovery and efficient, sustainable, transparent, and on-demand drug manufacturing at scale. Her vision and accomplishments have garnered numerous awards, including the Chan-Zuckerberg Biohub Investigator, NIH Director’s Pioneer Award, Nature’s 10, Novozymes Award for Excellence in Biochemical Engineering, and TR35 Award.

Antheia Appoints Dr. Chris Savile as VP of Business Development and Partnerships

Appropriate regulatory submissions will be prepared and submitted to support Antheia’s customers who need to reference and access necessary process-related information.