Theonie Anastassiadis
Founding President at Prologue Medicines
Theonie Anastassiadis
Founding President at Prologue Medicines
Boston, Massachusetts
Overview
Work Experience
Founding President
2023 - Current
Senior Principal
2023
Principal
2021 - 2023
Senior Associate
2019 - 2021
Associate
2018 - 2019
I work as part of a team of entrepreneurial scientists to conceive, create, resource and develop the next generation of Flagship’s first-in-category ventures. As part of the founding team, I develop the science, intellectual property and business strategy for these breakthrough ventures.
Cofounder and Chief Innovation Officer
2018
Scientific Strategy and Operations
2018 - 2018
Ohana is a Flagship company with near-term opportunities to transform the field of reproductive medicine by pioneering research in sperm biology. Ohana is developing technologies to (1) prevent inherited disease without gene editing, (2) deliver a highly effective, safe, reversible, non-hormonal contraceptive, and (3) treat male infertility, traditionally ignored but responsible for half of infertility issues.
PhD student in Cell and Molecular Biology (Cancer Biology)
2011 - 2017
Fellow
2017 - 2017
Research Specialist
2009 - 2011
Research Project 1: Exploring features of target selectivity using large-scale kinase inhibitor profiling Research Project 2: Understanding and optimizing the mechanism of inhibition of novel insulin receptor kinase inhibitor via crystallography Research Project 3: Determining the role of the non-receptor tyrosine kinase Ack1 in EGFR signaling and identifying Ack1 substrates and inhibitors
Discovery Science volunteer
2009 - 2010
Outreach volunteer introducing 3rd and 4th graders to various fields of science through hands-on learning.
Research Thesis Student
2008 - 2009
Bachelor Thesis Mentor: Dr. Karl Johnson, PhD Bachelor Thesis Title: Using streptavidin-biotin interactions to engineer viral assembly at the nanoscale
Research Assistant
2008 - 2008
Research Mentor: Dr. Andrew F. Hill, PhD Research Project: Generating a rabbit kidney epithelial cell line stably expressing the TimD4 gene to study the role of TimD4 in prion infection and intercellular propagation.