Stock Markets June 24, 2026 04:37 PM

eXoZymes Wins $2.03M NIH Phase IIB SBIR Award to Advance Rare Cannabinoid Programs

Grant to fund enzyme expression development, analog expansion and preclinical receptor-binding work; shares ticked higher in after-hours trading

By Hana Yamamoto
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eXoZymes Inc. announced it has been awarded a $2,028,518 Phase IIB Small Business Innovation Research grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health. The funding, slated to start July 1, 2026, will back the company’s efforts to manufacture rare cannabinoids and develop cannabinoid analogs using its cell-free production platform. eXoZymes shares rose 3.9% in after-hours trading following the news.

eXoZymes Wins $2.03M NIH Phase IIB SBIR Award to Advance Rare Cannabinoid Programs
EXOZ
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Key Points

  • eXoZymes received a $2,028,518 Phase IIB SBIR award from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, with work to start July 1, 2026.
  • The grant funds enzyme expression development, expansion of cannabinoid analog production, and preclinical receptor-binding evaluations using the company’s cell-free platform.
  • The award increases eXoZymes’ total non-dilutive funding to $19.7 million and was accompanied by a 3.9% rise in after-hours trading; the development affects biotech R&D activity and the minor cannabinoids market.

Shares of eXoZymes Inc (NASDAQ:EXOZ) climbed 3.9% in after-hours trading on Wednesday after the company said it received a formal Notice of Award from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences for a Phase IIB Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant totaling $2,028,518.

The NIH-funded program is scheduled to start on July 1, 2026, and will support eXoZymes’ efforts to produce rare cannabinoids and to engineer a broader range of cannabinoid analogs. The award is structured with $1,034,289 allocated for the initial budget period and $994,229 earmarked for the second year, with the second-year payment contingent on continued program progress and the availability of funds.

With this grant, eXoZymes said total non-dilutive funding awarded to the company now stands at $19.7 million. The company described three central objectives under the SBIR program:

  • Advanced development of expression systems for cannabinoid cyclase enzymes that are critical to biosynthetic pathways.
  • Strategic expansion of the analog repertoire the company can produce, increasing the range of compounds accessible through its platform.
  • Preclinical evaluation of eXoZymes’ existing cannabinoid library using receptor-binding assays to characterize activity.

eXoZymes noted that this effort represents the second biosolution in its reported pipeline following NCT, which the company says is advancing toward partnership and commercialization. The company’s technology is a cell-free platform designed to synthesize rare cannabinoids outside of living cells at high purity.

The announcement referenced market projections for U.S. minor cannabinoids, noting an expected increase from roughly $11.5 billion in 2023 to $33.3 billion by 2030, which corresponds to an approximate compound annual growth rate of 15%.

Dr. Tyler Korman, co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of eXoZymes, will serve as Principal Investigator for the NIH-funded project. The program also includes a sub-award to the laboratory of Dr. Vikram Shende at Occidental College.

Investors reacted in after-hours trading, where the company’s shares rose 3.9% in the immediate session following the announcement. The structure of the grant - including the conditional second-year funding - and the preclinical nature of the planned evaluations highlight both near-term support for R&D and remaining development milestones that will determine the program’s trajectory.

Risks

  • Second-year funding of $994,229 is subject to continued progress and availability of funds, creating execution and funding risk that could affect the program - relevant to biotech financing and grant-dependent R&D.
  • Planned activities include preclinical receptor-binding assays, which are early-stage evaluations and carry scientific and regulatory uncertainty for potential downstream commercialization - relevant to pharmaceutical and biotech development timelines.
  • While the company references pipeline advancement toward partnership and commercialization for another biosolution (NCT), the outcome and timing of such commercialization or partnership efforts remain uncertain and could influence future funding and market access - relevant to corporate development and capital markets.

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