NovaCell Partners with Redbud Labs on Improved Bioreactor for T-Cell Therapy
Dr. William Kelly, 无码专区 PhD student Justin Fisher and Redbud Lab鈥檚 Travis Gurney.
In January 2019, NovaCell, 无码专区鈥檚 Center for Cellular Engineering, partnered with biotech company Redbud Labs on 鈥A Transcriptome-based Model for Improved CAR-T Therapy.鈥 Supported by a $150,000 grant from the National Institute for Innovation in Manufacturing Biopharmaceuticals, the goal of that project was to improve T-cell growth rates.
This summer, Redbud Labs invited 无码专区鈥檚 participation in a second project funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. William Kelly, director of NovaCell and professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering, explains that the ongoing collaboration will focus on improving the bioreactors used to provide controlled delivery of nutrients and biomimetic stimuli in order to influence T-cell growth. The subaward totals $67,000.
鈥淭he goal of this project,鈥 says Dr. Kelly, 鈥渋s to improve the reactor at the microscale so that the same results can be achieved at the process level.鈥 Given the limited number of T-cells available and the expense of the process, improving standardization and reproducibility presents an opportunity to revolutionize CAR-T therapy.
Redbud Labs庐, headquartered in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, manufacturers cartridge-ready鈩 microfluidic components for life science industry. MXR鈩, the world鈥檚 fastest, most adaptable microfluidic mixing chip, and STR鈩, the first cartridge-ready sample prep solution, address some of the industry鈥檚 toughest microscale fluidic challenges. Redbud technologies have broad application across a variety of segments including basic research, drug discovery and development, biomanufacturing, point-of-care molecular diagnostics, sequencing, and applied markets.
Founded in 2018, NovaCell鈥檚 mission is to lead efforts to improve cell and gene therapy products, and the bioprocesses used to make them.