Samstag, 14. März 2026

The Daily

A curated briefing

Wien heute: Sunny +13°C (feels +11°C), SSE 5 km/h wind, 57% humidity, sunrise 06:09 sunset 18:02

Biotech & Pharma

Ultragenyx hits a phase 3 co-primary endpoint in OTC deficiency — a cautious but real AAV rebound signal

Ultragenyx reported positive 36‑week interim data for its one‑time AAV gene therapy DTX301 in ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, showing an 18% placebo‑adjusted reduction in 24‑hour plasma ammonia and meeting one of the trial’s two co‑primary endpoints. The trial is small (37 patients), but that’s the reality in urea‑cycle disorders — and the ammonia endpoint is a hard, clinically anchored readout because hyperammonemic crises can be fatal. A key practical detail: Ultragenyx says ammonia stayed controlled even as patients reduced other meds and increased dietary protein, which is exactly the day‑to‑day tradeoff caregivers face. Safety looked “consistent” with prior DTX301 work, though there was one serious acute liver inflammation managed with steroids, and five crises plus one death occurred in the placebo arm. The second co‑primary endpoint (response via discontinuation/reduction of baseline disease management) is read at 64 weeks, with a larger dataset (including placebo crossover) expected in H1 2027. If that endpoint holds, this becomes a meaningful morale and pipeline stabilizer for a company that has recently faced manufacturing‑driven FDA friction and late‑stage setbacks.
Source: Fierce Biotech (Ultragenyx release; ClinicalTrials.gov)

BridgeBio’s BBP-418 keeps αDG biomarker gains through 12 months in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy — FDA path now looks more “traditional”

BridgeBio’s Phase 3 FORTIFY interim analysis in LGMD 2I/R9 showed BBP‑418 drove a 1.8× increase in the glycosylated α‑dystroglycan (αDG) biomarker at three months, with placebo seeing “approximately no change,” and the company says the biomarker lift remained statistically significant through 12 months. The mechanism is a neat substrate‑push strategy: BBP‑418 “bombards” the mutated FKRP enzyme with substrate to restore αDG glycosylation and improve muscle stability. The strategic wrinkle is regulatory: while the study was designed for accelerated approval using αDG as a surrogate, analysts report the FDA is pushing BridgeBio to orient the application toward traditional approval, implying the agency sees enough consistency (biomarker + function) to argue a stronger package. Investor notes highlighted early separation on clinical outcomes like a 100‑meter timed test and pulmonary function, which matters because muscle disorders live or die by real‑world function. BridgeBio plans to submit in H1 2026, with analysts penciling a late‑2026 or early‑2027 launch and peak sales models around $600M+.
Source: BioSpace (BridgeBio investor release; ClinicalTrials.gov)

Enodia picks up Kezar’s Sec61 program in a $128M backloaded deal — a reminder that “upstream” secretome control is having a moment

Paris‑based Enodia Therapeutics is acquiring Kezar’s preclinical Sec61 protein modulation program for $1M upfront plus up to $127M in development/regulatory/commercial milestones and tiered royalties. The science hook is Sec61’s role as a gatekeeper in protein production for eukaryotic cells — meaning you can potentially modulate disease‑relevant secreted and membrane proteins before they become downstream pharmacology headaches. Kezar has published preclinical work on KZR‑540, an oral Sec61 inhibitor designed to selectively block PD‑1 expression, which is a provocative immune‑modulation lever if selectivity and tolerability can be made real. Enodia’s angle is platform synergy: it’s already building a Sec61‑focused inhibitor pipeline rooted in Pasteur Institute research, and it raised a $25M seed round backed by Pfizer Ventures earlier this year. For Kezar, the deal reads like portfolio triage after a difficult regulatory period around its autoimmune hepatitis program — but the company still signals conviction in Sec61 as a target class. The next step to watch is how Enodia translates “selective upstream secretome modulation” into a clinical program with a clean therapeutic window.
Source: Fierce Biotech (Enodia/Kezar releases; Kezar preclinical publication)

AI & Tech

Gumloop raises $50M to make “every employee an agent builder” — the UI layer is becoming the moat

Gumloop’s pitch is deceptively simple: let non‑technical employees build and share AI agents that can handle multi‑step workflows without needing an engineer in the loop. Benchmark led a $50M Series B (Everett Randle’s first deal there), with participation from Nexus VP, First Round, Y Combinator, Box Group, The Cannon Project, and Shopify. The practical validation is adoption behavior: Benchmark says one customer gave employees three tools side‑by‑side, and after six months Gumloop was used daily/weekly while competitors were largely ignored. That’s a product signal, not a model signal — and it matters because the agent “market” is at risk of being flattened by foundational model vendors. Gumloop is leaning into a model‑agnostic stance (use whatever model is best/cheapest per task), which is a credible enterprise requirement now that many companies juggle OpenAI/Google/Anthropic credits and procurement constraints. The competitive field is crowded (Zapier, n8n, Dust, and native agent tooling from the big labs), so the next step is whether Gumloop can scale sales and integrations fast enough to become the default internal automation layer. If they pull it off, “agent builder” stops being a feature and becomes the new spreadsheet — an organizational habit.
Source: TechCrunch

Wonderful raises $150M at a $2B valuation — “AI ops teams” as a go-to-market strategy

Israeli startup Wonderful raised a $150M Series B at a $2B valuation just four months after a $100M Series A, bringing total funding to $286M. The company builds customer‑service AI agents, but its differentiation is operational: it sends local engineering teams (sometimes on‑prem) to integrate, tune, and deploy in non‑English markets across telecom, finance, healthcare, manufacturing, and beyond. That “deployment labor” looks expensive, yet it’s increasingly the bottleneck for enterprises that want AI in production rather than demos. Wonderful claims it now operates in 30 countries and plans to scale headcount from 300 to 900, which is an unusually aggressive expansion plan for an “AI software” company — and tells you what it thinks the product actually is. The next step is whether this services‑heavy motion can be made repeatable without collapsing margins, or whether it becomes a wedge into durable platform revenue once integrations are locked in.
Source: TechCrunch

Europe moves to outlaw AI practices that generate child sexual abuse material — and puts “deepfake enforcement” into the AI Act orbit

EU governments proposed adding a ban on AI practices that generate child sexual abuse material (CSAM) to the bloc’s landmark AI rules, effectively creating a new enforcement target inside the AI Act framework. The proposal is explicitly tied to a wave of scrutiny around sexualized deepfakes and explicit content, with Reuters noting investigations into xAI’s Grok in multiple jurisdictions (Britain, Ireland, Spain) for sexualized deepfake outputs. The political mechanics matter: the Council proposal needs European Parliament backing, and lawmakers are scheduled to vote on their own similar proposal soon, before the two sides negotiate. Reuters frames this as happening alongside debates over whether the European Commission will water down parts of the AI Act — a tension between “pro‑innovation” simplification and civil‑liberties enforcement. Timelines will be slow (discussions could take roughly a year before changes land), but the signal is immediate: generative‑content harms are increasingly being treated as AI governance issues rather than platform moderation quirks. For builders, the next step is designing model and product safeguards that are auditable under regulation, not just “best effort.”
Source: Reuters

Science

A three-cytokine “fusion scaffold” pushes CAR-T toward T memory stem cells — and holds up in relapse-like stress tests

A team led by Albert Einstein College of Medicine reports a manufacturing strategy that aims at the core weakness of many CAR‑T products: persistence. In a Science Advances paper, they replace the standard activation protocol with an engineered protein scaffold (HCW9206) that links IL‑7, IL‑15, and IL‑21 — cytokines known to support survival and immune memory. The result is a CAR‑T product where >50% of cells are enriched for T memory stem cells (self‑renewing, long‑lived), versus <5% with conventional manufacturing. In a human leukemia mouse model, both conventional and scaffold‑generated CAR‑T cleared initial disease, but only the scaffold approach prevented recurrence when investigators re‑infused leukemia cells to mimic relapse. They also tested in humanized HIV models, reporting deeper elimination of infected cells, and showed CAR‑T cells generated from people living with HIV could eradicate infected cells in the model system. The important “next step” question is translation: whether a cytokine‑scaffold manufacturing add‑on can be standardized, scaled, and regulated as part of a commercial workflow without introducing new variability or safety liabilities. But as a concept, this is a clean lever: you’re not changing the CAR, you’re changing the cell state.
Source: GEN (Science Advances DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aec2632)

Nature Medicine: Three trials put fecal microbiota transplantation back on the immunotherapy map — but in a context-specific way

A Nature Medicine News & Views argues that microbiome modulation is moving from “interesting correlation” toward an interventional strategy, based on three landmark trials where fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) was used to enhance immunotherapy efficacy in advanced solid tumors. The key takeaway isn’t that FMT is a universal booster; it’s that benefit appears to be context‑specific, which has major implications for how microbiome therapeutics should be built (defined consortia, donor selection logic, response biomarkers). This matters clinically because checkpoint therapy has a long tail of non‑responders and early progression, and the microbiome is one of the few systemic levers that is both modifiable and mechanistically connected to antigen presentation and inflammation. The authors frame these studies as confirming “promise” while also tightening the engineering constraints: a microbiome product has to be reproducible, safe, and regulated like a drug, not like a wellness intervention. The near‑term next step is identifying which patient segments and tumor contexts are most likely to benefit, and whether defined microbial products can match or beat donor‑derived approaches.
Source: Nature Medicine

Wien

Weekend-Preview Wien (12.–15.3.): Messe, Märkte, Flohmarkt — plus ein paar sehr brauchbare „Planbar“-Slots

Wenn du dieses Wochenende in Wien nicht in „wir schauen dann eh“ enden lassen willst: 1000things hat eine konkrete Liste mit gut planbaren Terminen von Donnerstag bis Sonntag. Der stärkste Fixpunkt ist die Messe „Wohnen & Interieur 2026“ (12.–15.3.) in der Messe Wien (Hallen A & B) — ein echtes „einmal hingehen, vieles sehen“-Format für Wohntrends, Möbel, Garten und Design. Für Freitag bis Sonntag ist außerdem ein Wiener Stoff-Flohmarkt (13.–15.3., Belvederegasse 35) angekündigt; das ist kein Glamour‑Event, aber ideal, wenn du nähen, reparieren oder einfach gute Materialien abgreifen willst. Am Samstag stehen u.a. „Frauen machen Handwerk“ (Markterei Markthalle, 1090) und die Fête de Funkhaus (Funkhaus Wien, 1040) im Kalender — beides Formate, die nicht nur „hingehen und konsumieren“ sind, sondern ein bisschen Szene‑Textur liefern. Sonntag wird’s mit „Kein Sonntag ohne Techno“ (Volksgarten Pavillon, 14–19 Uhr) wieder dayparty‑tauglich, plus ein Bio‑Jungpflanzenmarkt in der City Farm (14–18 Uhr). Der praktische Next Step: Wenn du nur ein Ding pickst, nimm die Messe (Zeitfenster frei wählbar) — und wenn du zwei Stunden „Stadtluft + Leute + Material“ willst, nimm den Stoff‑Flohmarkt.
Source: 1000thingsmagazine.com

St. Patrick’s Day (Wien): Parade heute, Donau-Schiff in Grün, Orpheum „St. Patrick’s Night“ — und sogar familienfreundliche Slots

Auch wenn der eigentliche St. Patrick’s Day erst am Dienstag (17.3.) ist, spielt Wien das Wochenende davor groß aus. Heute (Sa, 14.3.) startet die St. Patrick’s Day Parade um 12:15 beim Schottenstift und zieht etwa eine Stunde durch den 1. Bezirk bis vor das Burgtheater — klassisch mit „Vienna Pipes and Drums“ und viel Grün. Wer das Ganze als „richtige Aktivität“ statt nur Pub‑Hop will, kann am Abend eine DDSG‑Schifffahrt mit irischem Buffet und Live‑Musik machen (Boarding 18 Uhr, Abfahrt 19 Uhr bei der Reichsbrücke). Im Orpheum läuft außerdem am 14. und 15.3. die „St. Patrick’s Night“ mit Folk‑Band und Irish‑Dance‑Show. Spannend für Familien: Einige Programme setzen explizit auf kinderfreundliche Elemente (z.B. Aktivitäten/Face Painting in Pubs bzw. Straßenfest‑Formate in den Folgetagen). Wenn du nur einen Next Step brauchst: Parade mittags (low commitment), Schiff oder Orpheum abends (high vibe).
Source: heldenderfreizeit.com

1000things: Parade + St. Patrick’s Day am Schiff — die zwei „einfachen“ Picks, wenn du nur kurz Zeit hast

1000things macht es angenehm pragmatisch und nennt für den 14.3. zwei klare Optionen: die Parade (12–13 Uhr, Schottenstift → Burgtheater) und die DDSG‑St.-Patrick’s‑Schifffahrt (18–22:30 Uhr, Ticket 75 €). Der Vorteil dieser Kombi ist, dass sie Wien‑zentral ist und ohne lange Entscheidungslogik funktioniert: erst Straße, dann Donau. Die Schiffsfahrt wird „irisch“ inszeniert (grüne Beleuchtung, irische Musik) und richtet sich an Leute, die lieber einen fixen Ablauf als Pub‑Hopping haben. Fürs Wochenende ist das auch das bessere Wetter‑Hedge: wenn’s kalt wird, sitzt du am Schiff drinnen. Und ja: Das ist nicht „authentisch Dublin“, aber als Wien‑Format ist es ziemlich sauber gebaut.
Source: 1000thingsmagazine.com

Travel

Venedig im März: Die „Giornate FAI“ öffnen (kurz!) Türen, die sonst zu sind — Palazzi, Archive, Klöster

Die „Giornate FAI di Primavera“ sind in Italien so etwas wie ein Kultur‑Cheatcode: für wenige Tage öffnen Orte, die normalerweise nicht zugänglich sind, und das Ganze wird von Freiwilligen organisiert. Der Venice‑Box‑Artikel verkauft das (völlig zu Recht) als „Venezia Segreta“-Moment: statt San‑Marco‑Strom gehst du durch eine unscheinbare Tür in eine enge Calle — und stehst plötzlich in einem Innenhof, Garten oder in einem historischen Archiv. Der praktische Haken ist genau die Attraktion: Plätze sind limitiert und man muss vorab Timeslots reservieren; für manche Sites lohnt sich eine FAI‑Mitgliedschaft wegen bevorzugtem Zugang. Ich mag den Ansatz auch deshalb, weil er „Overtourism“ nicht moralisch diskutiert, sondern die Stadt anders zugänglich macht: weniger Masse, mehr Substanz, mehr Kontext. Wenn du das als Reise‑Baustein denkst, ist der Next Step simpel: jetzt schauen, welche Orte im Programm sind, und die zwei besten Slots sichern — das ist die Art Venedig, die sich nicht spontan ergibt.
Source: venice-box.com (IT → Summary DE)

Puglia, March 9–15: a dense week of concerts, film screenings, theater, and exhibitions — useful if you want a “base + day trips” plan

This curated list is essentially a week‑planner for Puglia, spanning March 9–15 and mixing music, cinema, theater, exhibitions, and food/culture events across the region. What makes it valuable is the structure: it’s not one “festival story,” it’s a set of options with links for locations, times, and tickets — the kind of thing you can use to shape an itinerary around a stable base (say: Bari or the Valle d’Itria) and then branch out. Highlights mentioned include concerts in Bari/Monopoli, recurring classical programming, film screenings (including a Breathless screening in Bari), and multiple contemporary art exhibitions (e.g., “Proxemica” in Bari). There’s also explicitly family‑friendly theater listed (a commedia dell’arte show suitable for kids), which is rare in generic travel roundups. The next step here is to treat it like a menu: pick one “anchor night” (concert/theater) and one daytime exhibition, then keep the rest as weather‑dependent backups.
Source: viaggiando-italia.it (EN)

NBA

Luka Dončić drops 51 on the Bulls as the Lakers win 142–130 — a near triple-double and a statement run

The Lakers beat Chicago 142–130 behind Luka Dončić’s 51 points, which USA Today notes as his first 50‑point game in a Lakers jersey. The box score is loud: 17‑for‑31 from the field, 9‑for‑14 from three, plus 10 rebounds, 9 assists, and 3 steals in 37 minutes — basically one assist short of a triple‑double. Context matters: Los Angeles has now won four straight and seven of the last eight, the kind of stretch that turns “chemistry questions” into “seeding math.” It’s also a reminder of how the spacing and tempo change when Dončić is cooking: you can lose defensive possessions and still keep the scoreboard pressure constant. The next step is sustainability: if the Lakers can pair these offensive peaks with enough defensive competence, they’re the kind of team nobody wants in a seven‑game series.
Source: USA Today

Adam Silver in Portland after Oregon lawmakers back Moda Center renovation financing — and the WNBA Fire is part of the pitch

NBA commissioner Adam Silver visited Portland after the Oregon Legislature approved a measure that creates a mechanism to secure $365M for renovations to the 30‑year‑old Moda Center. The bill reportedly gives the state joint ownership with the city, and it lands at a politically sensitive time as the Blazers are being sold by Paul Allen’s estate to a group led by Tom Dundon. Silver framed arenas as multi‑use civic infrastructure — not just “for the NBA” — explicitly listing conventions, concerts, and graduations, and he also emphasized that the building will be home to the expansion Portland Fire in the WNBA. The Blazers’ argument is simple: they’ve lost bids for big events because the arena hasn’t been updated, and the total renovation is estimated around $600M. The next step is the ownership approval process (NBA Board of Governors) and whether renovation timelines line up with future All‑Star and NCAA tournament bids.
Source: AP News

Kids Vienna

ZOOM Kindermuseum: Neue Donau-Ausstellung „Donaurauschen und Flussgeflüster“ — viel Bewegung, viel Inhalt, erstaunlich gut erklärt

Das ZOOM Kindermuseum im MQ hat eine neue Ausstellung für Kinder von 6 bis 12 Jahren eröffnet: „Donaurauschen und Flussgeflüster“. Der Clou ist die Kombination aus Körper‑Action (Unterwasser‑Hüpfburg, Steuerrad, Algen‑Tunnel, Kostüme) und echten Lerninhalten: Die Donau wird als Ökosystem, Transportweg und Energielieferant gezeigt — nicht nur als „Fluss zum Draufschauen“. Harte Fakten kommen auch vor: Die Donau ist laut ZOOM‑Direktorin 2.857 km lang und fließt durch zehn Länder, also perfekt für eine Ausstellung, die über Wien hinausdenken lässt. Die Ausstellung ist bis Ende Juni 2027 (Di–So) zu sehen; für Schulklassen ist der Eintritt kostenlos. Als Next Step ist das ein ziemlich gutes Wochenend‑Modul: 2–3 Stunden MQ, Kinder bewegen sich, Eltern haben trotzdem das Gefühl, es war nicht nur „Spielplatz indoor“.
Source: meinbezirk.at

Robinson Abenteuerspielplatz (19.): 7.000 m² „wildes Spielen“ ohne TÜV-Ästhetik — offen Mi/Sa/So 14–18 Uhr

Der Robinson‑Spielplatz der Kinderfreunde im 19. Bezirk ist das Gegenteil von „normiertem“ Spielplatz: Baumhäuser, Tipis und Hütten entstehen laut Leiterin Anna Kiffmann gemeinsam mit den Kindern, bewusst ohne die glatte Sicherheits‑Ästhetik. Das Gelände ist groß (7.000 m²) und setzt auf Naturerfahrung: Barfußweg mit unterschiedlichen Untergründen, Biotop (u.a. Berg‑ und Teichmolche), Nisthilfen für Bienen, plus Werk‑ und Bauprojekte (aktuell z.B. ein Lehmhaus). Für Kinder, die lieber bauen als „nur“ rutschen, ist das ziemlich ideal — und nebenbei ein Motorik‑Training (Wurzeln, Unebenheiten, Risiko lernen). Praktische Öffnungszeiten: Mittwoch, Samstag und Sonntag 14:00–18:00 (in Ferien Mo–Fr 14–18). Next Step: Wenn das Wetter ok ist, ist das ein starkes „gratis + draußen + lang spielbar“-Programm, besonders ab etwa 5–6 Jahren.
Source: Falter (DE)