Stacey Franklin
Vice President
BioTech Primer
638 Dunkirk Road, Baltimore, MD 21212
Peter Hughes
Chief Technologist
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Mail Code 502
Greenbelt, MD 20771
Peter Kiener
Senior Vice President of R&D
MedImmune
1 MedImmune Way, Gaithersburg, MD 20878
Alvin LaVoie
Director, Emerging Technologies
Rohm and Haas
727 Norristown Road, PO Box 904,
Spring House, Pa 19477-0904
Robert J. LeRoy
Director, East Coast Operations
Sensing & Exploration Systems
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company
7474 Greenway Center Drive, Suite 200
Greenbelt, MD 20770
Paul Silber
(former President, InVitro Technologies)
1450 South Rolling Road
Baltimore, MD 21227
Jerry Skotnicki Director, Chemical and Screening Sciences
Wyeth Research
401 N. Middletown Rd, Pearl River, NY 10965
Terry Turpin
Chief Scientist
Essex Corp
6708 Alexander Bell Drive, Columbia, Maryland 21046-2100
Nancy Welker Chief Technologist
National Security Agency
9800 Savage Rd, # 6496, Ft Meade, MD 20755
George Young
VP, Business Development
GRACE Davison
7500 Grace Drive, Columbia, MD 21044
UMBC Members
Geoff Summers
Dean, College of Natural and Mathematical Sciences
UMBC
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
Mike Hayden
Chair, Physics
UMBC
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
Lasse Lindahl Chair, Biological Sciences
UMBC
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
Nagaraj Neerchal
Chair, Mathematics and Statistics
UMBC
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
William LaCourse
Chair, Chemistry and Biochemistry
UMBC
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
CNMS faculty at UMBC are on the cutting edge of
applied research through the development of novel technologies and
systems. Collaborations with corporations, near and fa, using these
inventions take place via license agreements developed through the UMBC
Office of Technology Development. A sampling of these agreements
includes:
• Nabi
Biopharmaceuticals: Headquartered in Boca Raton, FL with a
branch office at Rockville, MD. Ramachandra
S. Hosmane, Professor, UMBC Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
Engaged in R&D, Nabi has licensed from UMBC the Hosmane lab's
patent on ring-expanded nucleosides and nucleotides (RENs) that
have shown promising in vitro anti-tumor and antiviral activities.
Nabi's main focus at the moment is to develop anti-hapatitis therapeutics
based on REN technology.
• Novadaq:
Headdquartered in Toronto, Canada. Ramachandra
S. Hosmane, Professor, UMBC Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.
Novadaq is engaged in novel technologies related to medical practice.
It has licensed the Hosmane lab technology on a designer dye for
surgical use in opthamology. The dye allows a surgeon to visually
trace the flow of vascular fluids during operations, which would
otherwise not be possible.
•Aurora
Analytics, LLC, techcenter@UMBC, Baltimore, MD William
R. LaCourse, CEO - Professor of Analytical Chemistry, UMBC
Aristotle G. Kalivretenos, COO - Adjunct Assistant Professor of
Chemistry, UMBC Aurora Analytics, LLC is an innovative boutique
chemistry company providing expert chemical synthesis to create
novel consumer and research diagnostic products, as well as specialized
contract chemical synthesis for R&D and production
projects. Aurora currently offers alcohol diagnostic reagents (G-Mark) and seeks
to expand its presence in the alcohol biomarker market. Aurora is developing
the Freshdicator product line for food freshness testing and LumiPro products
for protein labeling based on proprietary technology. According to Dr. LaCourse: "The “1-Hydroxybenzotriazole-6-Carboxylic
Acid, Derivatives Thereof and Uses Thereof” (UMBC Ref. 2387AK)”
technology is the basis of the biogenic amine detection system,
and “A Novel Method for the Determination of Glucuronides
in Physiological Samples” (UMBC Ref. 2445WL)” technology
is used in methods for glucuronide determination, see below.
A biogenic amine detection system. Naturally occurring amines (e.g.
putrescine and cadaverine from rotting fish, proteins) are modified
via this technology to visually detectable compounds using an immobilized
reagent. With strategic benefits of sensitivity, rapid results,
ease of use and low-cost, the amine modification technology has
broad application in food safety and research diagnostics.
Glucuronide Diagnostic reagents and methods. Glucuronide metabolite
analysis is a fast growing market for drug and alcohol use analysis
(e.g. opioids, diazepines and alcohol) with unlimited potential.
Aurora has secured rights to glucuronide sample preparation methods
with much broader application than existing methods.
The explosives technology uses high-performance liquid chromatography
with photo-assisted electrochemical detection (HPLC-PAED) is used
in conjunction with ultraviolet detection (UV) for determining
explosives in environmental samples. The system utilizes an on-line
solid phase extraction technique for sample pretreatment and concentration,
thus reducing the required ground water sample size from 1L to
2mL and minimizing sample handling. Limits of detection for explosives
using solid phase extraction and photo-assisted electrochemical
detection range from 0.0007 mg/L to 0.4 mg/L, well below those
achieved with ultraviolet detection for several important explosives.
The method has demonstrated good accuracy, precision, and recovery
for all tested explosives, thus proving that the method is suitable
for evaluation of explosives in ground water with competitive advantages
over the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Method
8330. A system adaptable for the on-site environmental analysis
of explosives has been developed and validated, which is the basis
of the patent."
• Achillion
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., New Haven, CT Michael
Summers-UMBC Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry; Howard
Hughes Medical Institute Investigator The license to Achillion
relates to the N-terminal portion of the immature HIV-1 gag
polyprotein, which regulates maturation and infectivity of
the human immunodeficiency virus (“HIV”) (UMBC
Ref. 2392MS; HHMI Ref. 02368), and a number of compounds
which bind to the HIV-1 gag polyprotein and interfere with
its maturation, and therefore, the replication of HIV (UMBC
Ref. 2398MS; HHMI Ref. 02457). According to Dr. Summers, this
license to Achillion enables the development of a new class of
antiviral agents, discovered at UMBC, that bind to the capsid domain
of the immature HIV-1 Gag polyprotein and inhibit the formation
of core particles during viral maturation.