Anne Wojcicki to buy back 23andMe and its data for $305M

2025-06-142:455513www.cnbc.com

Anne Wojcicki to buy back 23andMe and its data for $305 million

23andMe founder Anne Wojcicki speaks during a House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform hearing in Washington, D.C., on June 10, 2025.

Anne Wojcicki, the co-founder and former CEO of 23andMe, has regained control over the embattled genetic testing company after her new nonprofit, TTAM Research Institute, outbid Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, the company announced Friday. 

TTAM will acquire substantially all of 23andMe's assets for $305 million, including its Personal Genome Service and Research Services business lines as well as telehealth subsidiary Lemonaid Health. It's a big win for Wojcicki, who stepped down from her role as CEO when 23andMe filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in March.

Last month, Regeneron announced it would purchase most of 23andMe's assets for $256 million after it came out on top during a bankruptcy auction. But Wojcicki submitted a separate $305 million bid through TTAM and pushed to reopen the auction. TTAM is an acronym for the first letters of 23andMe, according to The Wall Street Journal.

"I am thrilled that TTAM Research Institute will be able to continue the mission of 23andMe to help people access, understand and benefit from the human genome," Wojcicki said in a statement.

23andMe gained popularity because of its at-home DNA testing kits that gave customers insight into their family histories and genetic profiles. The five-time CNBC Disruptor 50 company went public in 2021 via a merger with a special purpose acquisition company. At its peak, 23andMe was valued at around $6 billion.

The company struggled to generate recurring revenue and stand up viable research and therapeutics businesses after going public, and it has been plagued by privacy concerns since hackers accessed the information of nearly seven million customers in 2023.

TTAM's acquisition is still subject to approval by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Missouri.

Regeneron CEO on 23andMe bid: Trying to balance individual privacy with biotech & genetics research

Read the original article

Comments

  • By teruakohatu 2025-06-145:01

    Wojcicki's non-profit "TTAM Research Institute" domain was registered last month [1] and the current Powered by GoDaddy landing page went online around 5 June. [2]

    Anyone know if its a legitimate non-profit or one of the "sort of" non-profit?

    From the press release [3] ...

    > TTAM Research Institute (“TTAM”), a nonprofit public benefit corporation based in California ... The TTAM Research Institute is a nonprofit medical research organization dedicated to helping scientists and non-scientists join together to unravel the mysteries of DNA - the code of life. TTAM believes everyone should have the opportunity to access their individual genetic code and be empowered to contribute it to scientific research. The TTAM Research Institute was founded and is led by Anne Wojcicki.

    [1] https://who.is/whois/ttamresearchinstitute.org

    [2] https://web.archive.org/web/20250000000000*/https://ttamrese...

    [3] https://investors.23andme.com/news-releases/news-release-det...

  • By iamwil 2025-06-144:061 reply

    How did she get the money to buy it back? I understand it’s from the non-profit, but how did they get the money?

    • By antisthenes 2025-06-144:362 reply

      You realize that's probably peanuts compared to what she walked away with in the divorce?

      • By testbjjl 2025-06-144:381 reply

        Is this speculation or do you have a source?

        • By notjoemama 2025-06-145:23

          Sounds like a normal conversational speculation to me. I simply searched for her name + divorce. The Yahoo Finance article I read said there was a prenuptial in place but they settled for an undisclosed amount. At the time he was worth $30B so a $350M buyout for 23andme is probably in a reasonable assumption of what the settlement could have been. Conversationally speaking of course. We don't know either way.

      • By iamwil 2025-06-1419:20

        No. I have no idea. It's an honest question how people managed to find the money to buy it back.

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