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Dyadic Highlights Accelerated Interest in C1 Biomanufacturing Platform Amid Ebola Preparedness Activities and Growing Commercial Adoption

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(Moderate)
Rhea-AI Sentiment
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Dyadic (Nasdaq: DYAI) reports rising interest in its C1 microbial protein platform amid Bundibugyo Ebola preparedness and broader commercialization. The platform has progressed from viral gene sequence to purified antigen or monoclonal antibody in about 15 days, which Dyadic views as important for outbreak response.

According to the company, C1 is being evaluated in three Ebola-related tracks with Scripps Research, CEPI-focused proposals, and an initiative with Fondazione Biotecnopolo di Siena and the European Vaccines Hub. Dyadic also highlights commercial launches of C1- and Dapibus-produced proteins across biopharma, life sciences, food, nutrition and industrial markets.

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AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

Positive

  • C1 platform moves from viral gene sequence to purified antigen or antibody in ~15 days
  • Three Ebola-related tracks with Scripps Research, CEPI-linked proposals and European Vaccines Hub initiative
  • Commercial launch of recombinant human albumin via Proliant Health & Biologicals
  • Commercialization of recombinant DNase I through Fermbox Bio and global distribution via IBT Bioservices
  • Commercialization of recombinant bovine chymosin through Inzymes
  • DYAI-100 clinical study showed C1-produced antigens were generally safe and well tolerated

Negative

  • None.

News Market Reaction – DYAI

+16.70%
18 alerts
+16.70% News Effect
+7.4% Peak in 8 hr 29 min
+$4M Valuation Impact
$29.15M Market Cap
0.4x Rel. Volume

On the day this news was published, DYAI gained 16.70%, reflecting a significant positive market reaction. Argus tracked a peak move of +7.4% during that session. Our momentum scanner triggered 18 alerts that day, indicating notable trading interest and price volatility. This price movement added approximately $4M to the company's valuation, bringing the market cap to $29.15M at that time.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

Key Figures

C1 development timeline: Approximately 15 days Ineffective availability: 100% ineffective Addressable markets: $25 billion
3 metrics
C1 development timeline Approximately 15 days From viral gene sequence to purified antigen or antibody
Ineffective availability 100% ineffective Describes vaccines/antibodies that are unavailable or unaffordable
Addressable markets $25 billion Current addressable market Dyadic estimates across multiple applications

Peers on Argus

DYAI was slightly down (-0.04%) with light volume while only one momentum peer, ...
1 Down

DYAI was slightly down (-0.04%) with light volume while only one momentum peer, CLGN, showed a notable move, falling ~11.5%. Broader biotech peers in the affinity list were mixed, indicating this news is more stock-specific than part of a coordinated sector move.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: May 28 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
May 28 Infectious disease partnership Positive -6.6% C1-based hantavirus antibody and vaccine collaboration with Scripps Research.
May 13 Q1 2026 earnings Positive -2.9% Revenue up 182.3% with narrower loss and commercial progress highlighted.
Apr 29 Earnings call announcement Neutral +3.5% Scheduling Q1 2026 results release and investor conference call details.
Mar 25 2025 results Negative -19.6% 2025 revenue decline and wider net loss despite new commercial launches.
Mar 16 OEM distribution deal Positive +4.0% IBT Bioservices OEM agreement for recombinant DNase I and transferrin products.
Pattern Detected

Positive collaborations and revenue growth have often seen weak or negative next-day price reactions, while negative earnings have aligned with larger selloffs.

Recent Company History

Over the past six months, Dyadic has mixed financial and strategic signals. Earnings releases on Mar 25 and May 13 showed modest revenues, widened 2025 losses, and improved Q1 2026 results, yet shares fell after both. Partnership and distribution news on Mar 16 and May 28 around C1-based biologics and OEM agreements highlighted commercial traction but produced uneven reactions. Today’s platform-focused announcement builds on this infectious-disease and commercial protein narrative without changing the prior financial backdrop.

Regulatory & Risk Context

Short Interest: 2.54%
Short Interest
2.54% of float
0% 15% 30%+
low as of 2026-05-29 Days to cover: 1

Market Pulse Summary

The stock surged +16.7% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with t...
Analysis

The stock surged +16.7% in the session following this news. A strong positive reaction aligns with the article’s emphasis on Dyadic’s C1 and Dapibus™ platforms addressing infectious disease and multi-market protein demand. Past news showed that even positive collaborations sometimes saw weak price follow-through, so a large move would have contrasted with that pattern. Investors would still need to weigh Nasdaq listing risks, negative equity, and execution on the $25 billion addressable markets highlighted in the announcement.

Key Terms

monoclonal antibodies, recombinant antigen, biomanufacturing, recombinant proteins, +4 more
8 terms
monoclonal antibodies medical
"rapidly manufacture vaccines, monoclonal antibodies and other biologics at sufficient scale"
Monoclonal antibodies are lab-made proteins designed to bind a single, specific target on cells or viruses, like identical keys cut to fit one lock. They are used as medicines, tests, or targeted delivery tools and can precisely block or mark disease processes. Investors care because they can become high-value drugs with large sales, long patent protection, and binary risks tied to clinical trial results, regulatory approval, manufacturing scale and pricing.
recombinant antigen medical
"to purified recombinant antigen or monoclonal antibody in approximately 15 days"
A recombinant antigen is a protein made in the laboratory by inserting the gene for a disease-related protein into a harmless host cell so the cell produces that protein. Investors care because these lab-made proteins are the active ingredients in many vaccines and the key parts of diagnostic tests, so their quality, scalability, and regulatory approval directly affect a biotech company's ability to sell products and generate revenue.
biomanufacturing technical
"C1 biomanufacturing platform amid Ebola preparedness activities"
Making medicines, vaccines and other products using living cells or biological systems instead of purely chemical processes; it is the industrial-scale “cooking” of biological ingredients into finished medical products. Investors care because biomanufacturing determines how quickly and cheaply a company can deliver therapies, meet demand, pass regulatory checks and protect earnings—like a bakery’s ovens and recipes deciding how much bread it can sell and at what cost.
recombinant proteins medical
"commercialize recombinant proteins and enzymes across multiple markets"
Recombinant proteins are proteins produced by inserting the gene that codes for them into a host cell (like bacteria, yeast or cultured animal cells) so the cell becomes a mini factory making that exact protein. Investors care because many medicines, vaccines and diagnostic tests rely on these lab-made proteins; their commercial value depends on how easily they can be produced at scale, protected by patents, and cleared by regulators—similar to how a reliable factory and exclusive recipe affect a consumer product’s profitability.
precision fermentation technical
"animal-free proteins, dairy and other enzymes, precision fermentation ingredients"
Precision fermentation uses edited microbes (like yeast or bacteria) as tiny, programmable factories to produce a single, specific ingredient—such as a protein, enzyme or flavor—rather than making whole foods. Think of it like coding a vending machine to dispense one exact product on demand. For investors, it matters because it can cut production costs, speed up scale-up, reduce reliance on traditional agriculture or chemical synthesis, and create new, high-margin products that can reshape markets and regulatory pathways.
cell culture media technical
"targeting cell culture media, cultivated meat, biomanufacturing and other applications"
A cell culture media is a liquid 'broth' of nutrients and chemicals used to keep biological cells alive and growing outside the body, similar to potting soil and fertilizer for plants. Investors care because media are an essential, recurring supply for research and drug manufacturing—their quality, availability, and cost affect the pace of development, production efficiency, regulatory compliance and the revenue and margins of suppliers in the biotech supply chain.
industrial biotechnology technical
"enzymes and specialty proteins for industrial processes, sustainability-focused manufacturing and industrial biotechnology"
Industrial biotechnology uses living cells or their components—such as microbes, enzymes, or plant cells—as tools to make chemicals, materials, fuels or ingredients in factories, akin to using baker’s yeast to turn flour into bread but on an industrial scale. Investors care because it can cut production costs, open access to novel or greener products, and shift supply chains, while also carrying technical development and regulatory risks that affect how profitable and fast commercialization can be.
pandemic preparedness medical
"Biopharmaceutical and Pandemic Preparedness: vaccine antigens, monoclonal antibodies"
Pandemic preparedness is the planning, resources and systems organizations and governments put in place to prevent, detect and respond to widespread infectious disease outbreaks, like an emergency kit and playbook for public health. It matters to investors because strong preparedness can limit business disruptions, protect supply chains and reduce unexpected costs, while gaps can lead to sudden revenue losses, regulatory actions or costly pivots that affect a company’s value.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

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Company’s C1 platform may help address urgent need for rapid, scalable vaccine and antibody manufacturing while supporting broader commercialization across life sciences, food, nutrition and industrial markets

JUPITER, Fla., June 15, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Dyadic International, Inc. (Nasdaq: DYAI), d/b/a Dyadic Applied BioSolutions (“Dyadic” or the “Company”), a biotechnology company focused on the development and commercialization of scalable microbial protein production platforms, today highlighted increasing interest in its proprietary C1 protein production platform as global infectious disease preparedness efforts intensify in response to the ongoing Bundibugyo Ebola virus (BDBV) outbreak and as the Company continues to advance commercial adoption across multiple high-growth markets.

The recent Ebola-related preparedness activity has brought renewed attention to one of the most important challenges in global health: the ability to rapidly manufacture vaccines, monoclonal antibodies and other biologics at sufficient scale and affordable cost. Dyadic believes its C1 platform is well positioned to help address this challenge through rapid strain development, high expression levels, flexible microbial manufacturing and reduced production timelines.

Dyadic’s C1 platform has demonstrated the ability to progress from receipt of a codon-optimized viral gene sequence to purified recombinant antigen or monoclonal antibody in approximately 15 days. The Company believes this speed may be particularly important during infectious disease outbreaks, where response time, manufacturing capacity and equitable access can directly affect preparedness outcomes.

“Recent outbreaks continue to demonstrate that speed matters,” said Mark A. Emalfarb, Chief Executive Officer of Dyadic Applied BioSolutions. “Scientific discovery alone is not enough. Vaccines and antibody therapies that cannot be manufactured quickly, affordably and at sufficient scale are unable to reach the people who need them most. A vaccine or antibody that is unavailable or unaffordable is 100% ineffective. Manufacturing matters.”

Ebola Preparedness Creates Timely Interest in Rapid Biomanufacturing

The Bundibugyo Ebola virus outbreak has led to enhanced surveillance, traveler screening, border monitoring and other public health measures associated with international travel and large public gatherings, such as the FIFA World Cup. These activities underscore the need for technologies that can support the rapid development, production and release of vaccines and antibody therapies during infectious disease threats.

Dyadic is experiencing growing interest in the potential application of its C1 microbial protein production platform for Ebola-related vaccine antigen and monoclonal antibody development programs. This interest reflects the growing need for technologies that can support rapid, scalable and cost-effective biologics manufacturing during infectious disease outbreaks.

Dyadic’s recently announced collaboration with Scripps Research represents one important track. The collaboration combines Scripps’ expertise in computational antigen design and viral immunology with Dyadic’s C1 protein production platform. Together, the organizations are evaluating approaches that may accelerate the development and production of vaccine antigens and monoclonal antibody candidates for infectious diseases, including Ebola, hantaviruses and other emerging viral threats.

A second track involves research proposals submitted in response to CEPI’s Ebola funding call that incorporate Dyadic’s C1 platform to support vaccine development and manufacturing. These submissions are focused on evaluating the potential use of C1 to support rapid vaccine antigen development and scalable manufacturing for Ebola preparedness.

A third track involves an additional monoclonal antibody initiative with Fondazione Biotecnopolo di Siena and the European Vaccines Hub. This initiative is focused on antibody programs targeting Ebola and hantavirus infections and further highlights the potential application of Dyadic’s C1 platform beyond vaccine antigen production and into scalable monoclonal antibody manufacturing.

Together, these three tracks underscore the growing relevance of Dyadic’s C1 platform in infectious disease preparedness, spanning vaccine antigen development, monoclonal antibody production and scalable biologics manufacturing.

C1 Platform Addresses a Critical Bottleneck: Manufacturing

Dyadic believes that as artificial intelligence has the potential to accelerate the discovery of new antibodies, antigens, enzymes and other proteins, scalable manufacturing platforms can play an increasingly important role in converting scientific innovation into real-world products.

The Company believes the C1 platform’s rapid strain development, high expression levels, use of standard microbial bioreactors, flexible manufacturing profile and potential cost advantages can help support regional manufacturing initiatives focused on vaccines, monoclonal antibodies and other biologics.

Through collaborations and grants involving organizations such as CEPI, the Gates Foundation, the European Vaccines Hub and Fondazione Biotecnopolo di Siena, Dyadic continues to advance and further validate its C1 platform. In addition, Dyadic’s DYAI-100 clinical study demonstrated that C1-produced antigens were generally safe and well tolerated, supporting the potential use of the platform for recombinant protein-based vaccine applications.

“Ebola preparedness is a timely example of why Dyadic’s platform matters,” Emalfarb said. “But the opportunity is much broader. The same capabilities being evaluated for outbreak preparedness are also being used to support commercial products across life sciences, food, nutrition and industrial markets.”

Commercial Adoption Expands Beyond Pandemic Preparedness

While infectious disease preparedness provides a high-profile and urgent use case for Dyadic’s technology, the Company is also leveraging its protein production capabilities to commercialize recombinant proteins and enzymes across multiple markets.

Recent commercial and development milestones include:

  • Launch of recombinant human albumin through Proliant Health & Biologicals
  • Commercialization of recombinant DNase I through Fermbox Bio
  • Global distribution activities through IBT Bioservices
  • Commercialization of recombinant bovine chymosin through Inzymes
  • Advancement of recombinant transferrin and growth factor products targeting cell culture media, cultivated meat, biomanufacturing and other high-growth life sciences applications

Dyadic believes these programs demonstrate that its C1 and Dapibus™ platforms are not limited to one disease, one product or one market. Instead, the Company is pursuing a diversified commercialization strategy that may include product sales, licensing, royalties, funded collaborations, supply relationships and strategic partnerships.

Multiple Markets, Multiple Shots on Goal

Dyadic’s C1 and Dapibus™ platforms are being developed to support recombinant protein production across several major categories:

Biopharmaceutical and Pandemic Preparedness: vaccine antigens, monoclonal antibodies, infectious disease response and regional biologics manufacturing.

Life Sciences and Biomanufacturing: recombinant albumin, DNase I, transferrin, growth factors, diagnostics, cell culture media and bioprocessing inputs.

Food, Nutrition and Wellness: animal-free proteins, dairy and other enzymes, precision fermentation ingredients and sustainable nutrition applications.

Industrial Biotechnology: enzymes and specialty proteins for industrial processes, sustainability-focused manufacturing and bioindustrial applications.

The Company believes this multi-market approach provides several potential pathways for long-term value creation while reducing dependence on any single clinical program, outbreak event or commercial product.

Dyadic Positioned at the Intersection of Global Health, AI and Scalable Protein Manufacturing

Dyadic believes the convergence of emerging infectious disease preparedness, AI-enabled protein discovery, and growing demand for animal-free and recombinant proteins is creating an opportunity for its scalable dual protein production platforms across global health and commercial markets.

As governments, global health organizations, biotechnology companies and academic institutions evaluate approaches to outbreak preparedness and equitable access to biologics, Dyadic believes manufacturing capacity, scalability, speed and cost efficiency are becoming increasingly important considerations.

“What makes this particularly exciting for Dyadic is that we have two complementary protein production platforms designed to serve distinct but significant markets,” Emalfarb said. “Our C1 platform is focused on life sciences and biopharmaceutical applications, including pandemic preparedness, vaccine antigens, monoclonal antibodies, other biologics, diagnostics and cell culture inputs. Our Dapibus™ platform is designed to support the commercialization of recombinant proteins and enzymes across food, nutrition, wellness and bioindustrial markets, including animal-free ingredients, precision fermentation, specialty enzymes and industrial biotechnology applications. Together, these platforms are targeting current addressable market opportunities that Dyadic estimates exceed $25 billion across life sciences, food/nutrition, wellness and bioindustrial applications. As demand continues to grow for biologics, animal-free proteins, cell culture inputs and industrial enzymes, we believe Dyadic’s platforms are increasingly well positioned to support both global health initiatives and commercial market opportunities.”

About Dyadic Applied BioSolutions

Dyadic Applied BioSolutions is a global biotechnology company that aims to develop and commercialize scalable, non-animal protein production platforms to meet growing global demand across the life sciences, food and nutrition, and bio-industrial markets. These high-value proteins are designed to enable customers to develop more efficient, scalable, and sustainable products. Dyadic’s proprietary Dapibus™ and C1 expression systems support rapid, cost-effective, and flexible manufacturing.

For more information, please visit http://www.dyadic.com.

Safe Harbor Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act and Section 21E of the Exchange Act, including those regarding Dyadic International’s expectations, intentions, strategies, and beliefs pertaining to future events or future financial performance, such as the success of our clinical trial and interest in our protein production platforms, our research projects and third-party collaborations, as well as the availability of necessary funding. Forward-looking statements generally can be identified by use of the words “expect,” “should,” “intend,” “anticipate,” “will,” “project,” “may,” “might,” “potential,” or “continue” and other similar terms or variations of them or similar terminology. Dyadic International, Inc., and its subsidiaries caution readers that any forward-looking information is not a guarantee of future performance and that actual results could differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking information. Such statements reflect the current views of our management with respect to our operations, results of operations and future financial performance. Forward-looking statements involve many risks, uncertainties, or other factors beyond Dyadic’s control. These factors include, but are not limited to (i) our history of net losses; (ii) market and regulatory acceptance of our microbial protein production platforms and other technologies; (iii) failure to commercialize our microbial protein production platforms or our other technologies; (iv) competition, including from alternative technologies; (v) the results of nonclinical studies and clinical trials; (vi) our capital needs; (vii) changes in global economic and financial conditions; (viii) our reliance on information technology; (ix) our dependence on third parties; (x) government regulations and environmental, social and governance issues; (xi) intellectual property risks; (xii) our ability to comply with the listing standards of the Nasdaq Stock Market LLC; and (xii) other factors discussed in Dyadic’s publicly available filings, including information set forth under the caption “Risk Factors” in Dyadic’s annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on March 25, 2026, as amended on April 30, 2026, and quarterly report on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on May 13, 2026, as such factors may be updated from time to time in Dyadic’s periodic filings with the SEC, which are accessible on the SEC’s website and at www.dyadic.com. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are made only as of the date hereof, and except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statements for any reason after the date of this press release to conform these statements to actual results or to changes in our expectations.

Media contacts:

Dyadic Applied BioSolutions:
Ping Rawson
Chief Financial Officer
Phone: (561) 743-8333
Email: ir@dyadic.com


FAQ

How is Dyadic (DYAI) using its C1 platform for Ebola preparedness in 2026?

Dyadic is advancing three C1-based Ebola preparedness tracks, including work with Scripps Research and a monoclonal antibody initiative with European partners. According to Dyadic, these efforts target rapid vaccine antigen and antibody development and scalable manufacturing for Ebola and related viral threats.

What rapid biomanufacturing capability does Dyadic’s C1 platform offer investors should know about?

Dyadic reports that its C1 platform can progress from codon-optimized viral gene sequence to purified recombinant antigen or monoclonal antibody in about 15 days. According to Dyadic, this speed is aimed at improving response during infectious disease outbreaks requiring fast biologics production.

Which new commercial products are being launched using Dyadic’s C1 and Dapibus platforms (DYAI)?

Dyadic highlights recombinant human albumin with Proliant, recombinant DNase I with Fermbox Bio, and recombinant bovine chymosin with Inzymes. According to Dyadic, these launches, plus IBT Bioservices distribution, extend the platforms into life sciences, food, nutrition and industrial applications.

What did the DYAI-100 clinical study show about Dyadic’s C1-produced vaccine antigens?

Dyadic states that the DYAI-100 clinical study showed C1-produced antigens were generally safe and well tolerated. According to Dyadic, this supports the potential use of the C1 platform in recombinant protein-based vaccine applications and broader biopharmaceutical development.

How is Dyadic (DYAI) partnering with global health organizations on its C1 platform?

Dyadic is working through collaborations and grants involving CEPI, the Gates Foundation, the European Vaccines Hub and Fondazione Biotecnopolo di Siena. According to Dyadic, these relationships help advance and further validate C1 for vaccines, monoclonal antibodies and regional biologics manufacturing.

What markets are targeted by Dyadic’s C1 and Dapibus protein production platforms?

Dyadic’s platforms target biopharmaceuticals and pandemic preparedness, life sciences and biomanufacturing, food, nutrition and wellness, and industrial biotechnology. According to Dyadic, this multi-market strategy aims to create several potential value pathways while reducing reliance on any single program or product.