Tag: entrepreneurs

  • Cancer Institute Spins-Off Company, Gains Licensing Deal

    14 October 2015. Ontario Institute for Cancer Research is spinning off a new enterprise to discover therapies for blood-related cancers, and will partner with Janssen Biotech Inc. to take those therapies to market. The licensing deal between Novera Therapeutics Inc., the OICR spin-off company in Toronto, and Janssen Biotech, a division of Johnson & Johnson,…

  • Spin-Off to Provide Lower-Cost Molecular Imaging Technology

    13 October 2015. A new enterprise based on research at Harvard University is offering a technology that allows ordinary microscopes to display high resolution images of single molecules. The company, Ultivue Inc., is founded by and licensing technologies from the lab of Peng Yin at Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering. Yin and colleagues…

  • Harvard Spin-Off Commercializing Sepsis Treatment

    9 October 2015. A new enterprise spun-off from Harvard University is developing a device for treating sepsis, a life-threatening infection often contracted in hospitals. The company, Opsonix Inc. in Boston, also raised $8 million in its first round of venture funding. Opsonix is licensing a technology for treating sepsis developed in Harvard’s Wyss Institute for…

  • MD Anderson, Biotech Form Antibody Discovery Company

    7 October 2015. MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston is partnering with the biotechnology company Theraclone Sciences to form a new enterprise devoted to discovering antibodies for cancer therapies harnessing the immune system. The company named OncoResponse, also based in Houston, attracted $9.5 million in its first venture funding round. OncoResponse plans to adapt Theraclone’s…

  • Breakout Labs Adds Four Science-Based Start-Ups

    6 October 2015. Breakout Labs, an incubator of new enterprises based on discoveries from academic science labs, is adding four more companies to its portfolio. The new additions include companies developing advanced materials and sensors to measure food freshness, as well as discovering new therapies for diseases associated with the aging process. Breakout Labs is…

  • Influenza A Therapy Shown Working in Trial

    5 October 2015. A clinical trial testing a synthetic antibody designed to treat influenza A shows the treatment is effective in reducing the spread of flu viruses in humans. Visterra Inc., the therapy’s designer, also received a contract valued as much as $204.5 million from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to further…

  • Nanotech Cancer Center Gains $10.1M Funding

    1 October 2015. Cornell University and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center are developing cancer diagnostics and therapies with nanoscale particles, funded largely by a National Cancer Institute grant. NCI, part of National Institutes of Health, is providing $8.2 million to the institutions over five years, while Sloan Kettering is adding $1.9 million. Cornell and Sloan…

  • Manufacturing Process Devised for Skin-Patch Electronics

    30 September 2015. Engineers and materials scientists designed a manufacturing process for electronic health monitors worn like tattoos that cut their production time to about 20 minutes. The team led by engineering professor Nanshu Lu at University of Texas in Austin reported its findings last week in the journal Advanced Materials (paid subscription required). Lu…

  • Full Genome Sequencing Offered for Under $1,000

    29 September 2015. A genetics analysis company in Boston is offering full genomic sequencing, priced at under $1,000, for people willing to share the results with biomedical researchers. Veritas Genetics, a spin-off enterprise from Harvard Medical School, is making the offer to participants in the Personal Genome Project. Genomic sequencing reveals the order of nucleic acids, the…

  • Simpler Genome Editing Process Discovered

    25 September 2015. Researchers at the Broad Institute, a biomedical research center affiliated with Harvard University and MIT, revealed a simpler and potentially more accurate technique for editing mammalian genomes than used today. The team led by biomedical engineering professor Feng Zhang, a pioneer in genomic editing technologies at Broad Institute and MIT, published its…