Tag Archives: Small Times Magazine

April 27, 2006 – Researchers are busily ferreting out new agents that make drugs more effective. And when a drug works better, less of it is needed. But as more of these drug boosting agents — known as adjuvants — are put to use, a thorny medical problem has appeared. BioSante Pharmaceuticals thinks its calcium phosphate nanoparticles might be able to clear the way.

BioSante researchers say a specially formulated calcium phosphate, or CaP, can deliver treatment without the allergic reaction often associated with the aluminum salt derivatives in adjuvants. The company reported on Monday that preclinical animal studies demonstrated that its BioVant, a calcium phosphate-based mix of adjuvant and the experimental H5N1 antigen, was able to generate a doubling of the immune response in mice.

For drug developers, it’s a new avenue to explore in the quest to take a limited amount of vaccine and spread it among large populations fighting a potential pandemic.

“A vaccine with an adjuvant included may allow for better efficacy and lower doses per vaccination, which may help to prevent shortages,” said BioSante CEO Stephen Simes. “More importantly, addition of an adjuvant may enable more people to produce an immune response to protect them from disease.”

Adjuvants are considered particularly crucial for experimental bird flu vaccines, where only thin supplies would be available to protect people. In a recent report in the New England Journal of Medicine, an experimental vaccine developed by Sanofi-Aventis delivered without an adjuvant was effective in only slightly more than half of the subjects and only at the highest doses. Their goals are still somewhat inexact, but BioSante is hoping that much smaller doses will be able to reach much larger populations more effectively. Some new adjuvant-enhanced vaccines have demonstrated effectiveness at only a fraction of the amount typically needed to boost the human immune system.

BioSante combines tiny calcium phosphates with reagents to “come away with particles of defined size and other physiochemical characteristics,” said Steve Bell, vice president of research and preclinical development. The calcium phosphates that BioSante uses are 100 to 1,000 nanometers in size. Because they are natural materials that appear in bone and teeth, BioSante says they also don’t present any risks to the body, allowing researchers to combine them with therapeutics that can be delivered in new ways.

Like several other early-stage drug developers, BioSante has also been exploring how nanobio techniques can help improve the delivery of existing therapies. The Lincolnshire, Ill.-based company has several calcium phosphate programs underway, including one for insulin and a new way to deliver therapies to hemophiliacs.

“We have a few patented formulation procedures that involve a common theme: the ability to combine the active material, which could be a drug or small molecule or peptide or protein or nucleic acid or antigens derived from pathogens, with the inorganic salt in solution,” says Bell.

“In toto,” he added, “it’s a very rational science. It’s taking nano-sized combination particles that have been around forever that no one has ever looked at.”

One of the other advantages of calcium phosphate, said Bell, is that it allows a therapy to be delivered in various ways: inhaled through the nose, anally or injected, to name a few.

BioSante is one of several companies exploring new uses of calcium phosphate. Brian Genge, a researcher at the University of South Carolina, combined early experience working with his father pouring cement with later scientific work on bone formation to come up with a calcium phosphate paste that has potential in a variety of medical applications. Competitive Technologies (CTT) of Fairfield, Conn., licensed the technology.

“I guess the technology arose from the premise that we wanted to use the actual minerals involved, something that self hardened, and that could do it without generating heat that is deleterious to the body,” said Genge, who has worked with the Department of Defense on ways to speed the healing process. The nanomaterial starts dry and is mixed with a small amount of water. The resulting material is “twice the compressive strength of concrete in 15 to 20 minutes.”

A company has licensed the human spinal application of the work and Genge is researching new uses that range from cranial facial surgery and repair to cosmetic surgery to bone augmentation.

Calcium phosphates offer advantages in the commercialization process, says CTT’s Aris Despo, senior vice president of life sciences. Because they are using natural materials, the FDA will give the new processes an accelerated review as a medical device, cutting down the time and expense of getting a final decision from the agency.

For BioSante, a public company which has been raising much of its money from government contracts and grants, the next step is to move into the clinic as soon as possible to test the technology on people. It is also exploring potential partnerships with deep-pocket biopharma companies to take the nanotechnology further down the pipeline.

April 27, 2006 – Dimatix, a provider of commercial and industrial ink jet products, announced that researchers have used its cartridge-based Dimatix Materials Printer to repeatedly ink jet spatially controlled patterns of micron-sized drops of adhesives.

The work, done in conjunction with several universities, was done on a Dimatix DMP-2800. Mmicroscopic deposition of adhesives could enable better bonding for a range of electronic and biomedical applications.

“By printing such small and spatially aligned drops, the bond lines between materials are reduced, ultimately resulting in better adhesion,” said Jan Sumerel, manager of biomedical sciences at Dimatix, in a prepared statement.

April 26, 2006 – Abraxis BioScience Inc. (NASDAQ:ABBI) announced that it has entered into a definitive purchase agreement with Pfizer Inc. under which Abraxis will purchase Pfizer’s Cruce Davila manufacturing facility in Barceloneta, Puerto Rico.

The 56-acre site consists of a 172,000 square foot validated manufacturing plant with capabilities of producing EU and US compliant injectable pharmaceuticals, as well as protein based biologics and metered dosed inhalers. In addition, the acquisition includes a state-of-the-art, computer-controlled 90,000 square foot active pharmaceutical ingredients manufacturing plant, and two support facilities with quality assurance and laboratories, totaling 262,000 square feet.

The facility, which is expected to employ approximately 400 to 500 people when fully-operational, will provide a third manufacturing site using the company’s proprietary nanoparticle albumin bound technology to produce chemotherapeutics such as ABRAXANE for injectable suspension, the company’s first commercial product based on this technology. Financial details were not disclosed.

Under the agreement, Abraxis will lease the chemical raw material plant back to Pfizer to continue the manufacturing of Pfizer’s celecoxib, the active ingredient of Celebrex.

April 25, 2006 – Austin Community College and SEMATECH announced the launch of a $4 million, multi-year program to train technicians and engineers in nanoelectronics, including internships in the Advanced Technology Development Facility (ATDF), SEMATECH’s advanced technology R&D center.

The resulting Nanoelectronic Workforce Development Initiative combines the expertise of Austin Community College, SEMATECH, ATDF, and Texas State Technical College-Waco in a program that initially will train 160 two-year technical, undergraduate, and graduate students in nanoelectronics.

“This program is a cornerstone in the state’s new nanoelectronics initiative, for which SEMATECH is the leading partner,” said Randy Goodall, director of SEMATECH external programs, in a prepared statement. “This workforce program will include development of new nanoelectronics curriculum materials and a statewide outreach to highlight the educational need and importance of our industry to the emerging technology economy.”

The program also includes an internship opportunity that will provide students field experience in nanofabrication infrastructure and R&D operations through hands-on work in the ATDF.

April 25, 2006 – Lumera Corp. (Nasdaq:LMRA), a nanotechnology company, announced that Leroy Hood, president and co-founder of the Institute for Systems Biology, and Josh LaBaer, founder and director of the Institute of Proteomics at Harvard Medical School, have joined its scientific advisory board.

Hood is a leading scientist in molecular biotechnology and genomics. His research focuses on the study of molecular immunology and biotechnology. He has published more than 600 peer-reviewed papers and co-authored textbooks in biochemistry, immunology, molecular biology and genetics.

LaBaer is the inventor of a new protein array technology called Nucleic Acid Programmable Protein Arrays (NAPPA). The NAPPA technology, first published in the July 2004 issue of the journal Science, provides a simple, cost-effective way to produce, as a single element of a microarray, freshly synthesized protein corresponding to any gene of known sequence.

April 25, 2006 — Silicon Genesis Corp. (SiGen) announced that it has developed the process modifications to manufacture direct silicon bonded substrates.

Direct silicon bond (DSB) substrates are fabricated by bonding and electrically attaching a film of single-crystal silicon of differing crystal orientation onto a base substrate. The company says its DSB substrates exhibit bulk-like properties and are compatible with existing electronic design and circuit design tools.

SiGen’s main process developments included modifications to the plasma-activated bond process to allow for a thin interfacial layer. In addition, SiGen focused on eliminating the interfacial layer to produce an electrically robust inter-layer connection.

April 25, 2006 – sp3 Diamond Technologies Inc., a Santa Clara, Calif., supplier of diamond film products, equipment and services, introduced its Model 650 hot filament CVD diamond deposition reactor.

The Model 650 is a fourth generation system which builds on the process automation and safety features of sp3’s earlier CVD reactors while adding fully integrated process control that allows unattended operation and external monitoring. The company calls it an economical system for the production of high quality diamond products. It can be configured to produce finely tuned deposition processes in ultra-smooth nano-crystalline or rougher micro- crystalline structures from submicron to 50-micron plus in thickness.

Predecessors of the machine have been used to grow thermal films on silicon wafers up to 300mm, silicon-diamond-silicon wafers successfully used as a base wafer for successful GaN growth, and nanocrystalline films for MEMS wafers. sp3’s Model 650 is intended to address more applications such as diamond on wafers in sizes up to 300mm, wear coatings, substrates for thermal management, amorphous silicon deposition for solar cells and other products, electrodes for water treatment and electrochemistry, passivation layers for semiconductor chucks, as well as cutting tools.

April 25, 2006 – Cascade Microtech of Beaverton, Ore., announced the introduction of a 150mm device measurement platform for measuring anything from semiconductor wafers, ICs, printed circuit boards and MEMS to bioscience devices.

The M150 Measurement Platform is intended to offer customer flexibility to switch between applications within minutes and to save the expense of buying a new measurement station for each discrete application.

The platform is customer configurable with interchangeable standard parts and accessories optimized for specific measurement needs. It is intended to help customers solve device problems such as those related to power consumption, operating frequency, signal isolation, signal integrity and channel bandwidth.

April 24, 2006 – AMO GmbH, an Aachen, Germany, research foundry for nanoelectronics, photonics and biotechnology, announced it has added a new nanostructuring equipment tool.

Under a joint development program between AMO and EV Group, an Austrian maker of nanotech tools, an automated step and repeat UV-based Nanoimprint Lithogaphy (UV-NIL) system called the EVG770 NILStepper was developed and manufactured, and then installed at AMO.

UV-NIL is a next-generation lithography technology technique and a potential contender to succeed optical lithography for the 32-nm node, according to the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors. AMO is working on UV-NIL for performing R&D and small scale production for applications in the area of photonic devices, nanoelectronics and life sciences.

The new stepper includes features such as imprint under reduced environmental pressure, which enables low input pressures, fast process times and enhanced pattern fidelity. The step-and-repeat NIL system offers lithography resolution down to 10 nm and targets sub-50-nm overlay alignment accuracy via a novel dual-stage alignment approach.

April 24, 2006 – The University of Massachusetts at Amherst was awarded $16 million from the National Science Foundation to establish the Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing, the university announced today. Combined with state matching funds, the investment is expected to accelerate research and production of nanotechnology-based devices, creating new manufacturing opportunities and stimulating economic development.

The announcement was made at a State House news conference at which Gov. Mitt Romney said that the John Adams Innovation Institute will contribute $2 million in state matching funds to connect the center’s research with Massachusetts companies. The governor said he is filing legislation to secure an additional $5 million in matching funds.

The UMass Amherst project will be one of 16 Nanoscale Science and Engineering Centers in the nation. More than 50 UMass faculty members work in nanotechnology. The center is headed by James Watkins, professor of polymer science and engineering, and Mark Tuominen, professor of physics. Research collaborators will include TIAX, Lucent Technologies and IBM.