The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has issued a patent on an innovation to stimulate T cells for immunotherapy. The innovation was created by the Yan Yu lab of IU Bloomington.
T cells can be used to fight cancer, enhance immune therapy, fight viral infection and induce tolerance in autoimmune disease. An essential step in employing T cells for those uses is to stimulate their activation in vitro, however the gold standard for in vitro stimulation does not truly mimic the cells. Additionally, a method to stimulate T cells in vivo is time-consuming, expensive and difficult to reproduce.
The IU innovation includes the methods to produce and use biomimetic Janus particles capable of activating T cells in vitro.
The innovation was disclosed to the IU Innovation and Commercialization Office. The mission of the office is to drive innovation to the market for the benefit of the public, the university and innovators for state, national and global commerce. IU personnel can disclose an invention online.
Patent awarded to IU innovation that could activate T cells for immunotherapies :Department of Chemistry
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gregory velligan
Congratulations on your hard work and efforts resulting in the T cell patent.
Is there a investment opportunity into your company?
Than you in advance for your reply back.
IU chemists create chemical probe to better understand immune response: News at IU: Indiana University - IU Newsroom - Zimbabwe Focus | ZimFocus News
[…] viral infection and induce tolerance in autoimmune disease. The latter work is the subject of a patent filing with U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. She has also filed a provisional patent on the newly reported […]