Document
Government-Owned Inventions; Availability for Licensing
The invention listed below is owned by an agency of the U.S. Government and is available for licensing to achieve expeditious commercialization of results of federally-funded re...
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Technology description follows:
An Innovative Adapter for Expedited and Automated Thawing of viably Frozen Cells.
Description of Technology
This technology is a device and system for expediting the thawing frozen specimens (
e.g.,
cryopreserved cells) contained in cryo-vials, offering a breakthrough solution for researchers seeking efficiency and precision in their workflows. The device is equipped with a small elongated tubular adaptor that suspends a cryo-vial of frozen cells over a centrifuge tube containing culture medium in an inverted position. With a focus on speed, efficiency and automation, the adaptor dramatically expedites the process of recovering viable cells from frozen specimens. It reduces per-sample labor time for thawing from several minutes to a few seconds, enabling a single technician to simultaneously thaw multiple vials within the capacity of centrifuges. The cells, once thawed, are diluted instantly into growth medium contained in the centrifuge tubes and spend essentially no time in liquid cryopreservative.
The automated mechanism ensures a precise and controlled thawing environment maintaining optimal temperature conditions throughout the thawing process.
Potential Commercial Applications:
- This device can be used in sample preparation and cell culturing.
- Applicable for research materials, medical and non-medical devices and consumer products.
Competitive Advantages:
- Provides a faster process of recovering viable cells from frozen specimens.
- Eliminates multi-step processes.
- High throughput system with reduced variability.
- Constant environment control.
Development Stage:
Inventors:
Dr. Mario Roederer, Dr. Pratip Chattopadhyay and Margaret Beddall, all of NIAID.
Publications:
n/a.
Intellectual Property:
HHS Reference No. E-080-2015-0-EIR-00 U.S. Patent Application No. 14/661,449, filed on March 18, 2015; Published Patent Application US20160274004A1 on September 22, 2016; U.S. Patent 9,663,812 issued May 30, 2017.
Licensing Contact:
To license this technology, please contact Wade Green at (301) 761-7505 or
greenww@nih.gov.
and reference E-080-2015.
Collaborative Research Opportunity:
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is seeking statements of capability or interest from parties interested in collaborative research to further develop, evaluate, or commercialize this technology. For collaboration opportunities, please contact Wade Green at (301) 761-7505 or
greenww@nih.gov.
Dated: February 7, 2024.
Surekha Vathyam,
Deputy Director, Technology Transfer and Intellectual Property Office, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.