Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center has created a new operating division to translate its academic and clinical research and discoveries into marketable products and services that will benefit patients. The new enterprise, Wake Forest Innovations, is being led by Chief Innovation Officer Eric Tomlinson, DSc, and Ph.D., who is also President of the Piedmont Triad Research Park.
The new division provides the institution with several new services:
Product Innovation & Commercialization Services is responsible for supporting the creation of innovative technology and products and commercializing these through licensing to existing and startup companies.
Scientific Business Services is a newly-formed business support group that helps to structure, promote and contract our research assets to external partners.
Park Development Services is focused on the growth of the Piedmont Triad Research Park –home for 10 Wake Forest Baptist departments and 30 companies – as a vibrant, knowledge-based community. More.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Wake Forest's Atala Named to Power List
Anthony Atala, MD, director of the Institute for
Regenerative Medicine, has been named to AARP Magazine’s “Power List – 50
People Who Make Your Life Better.”
Atala is one of 10 people over age 50 recognized for “Moving
Us to a Healthier Future” for his team’s work to engineer replacement organs in
the lab. AARP is one of the top-circulation magazines in the U.S., with more
than 23 million readers. More.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Wake Forest Scientists Develop Alternative to Fluorescent Bulbs
Wake Forest University scientists have developed a flicker-free, shatterproof alternative for large-scale lighting.
The lighting, based on field-induced polymer electroluminescent (FIPEL) technology, also gives off soft, white light – not the yellowish glint from fluorescents or bluish tinge from LEDs.
“People often complain that fluorescent lights bother their eyes, and the hum from the fluorescent tubes irritates anyone sitting at a desk underneath them,” said David Carroll, professor of physics and director of the Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials. “The new lights we have created can cure both of those problems and more.”
The team uses a nano-engineered polymer matrix to convert the charge into light. The technology allows the researchers to create an entirely new light bulb – overcoming one of the major barriers in using plastic lights in commercial buildings and homes. See more.
The lighting, based on field-induced polymer electroluminescent (FIPEL) technology, also gives off soft, white light – not the yellowish glint from fluorescents or bluish tinge from LEDs.
“People often complain that fluorescent lights bother their eyes, and the hum from the fluorescent tubes irritates anyone sitting at a desk underneath them,” said David Carroll, professor of physics and director of the Center for Nanotechnology and Molecular Materials. “The new lights we have created can cure both of those problems and more.”
The team uses a nano-engineered polymer matrix to convert the charge into light. The technology allows the researchers to create an entirely new light bulb – overcoming one of the major barriers in using plastic lights in commercial buildings and homes. See more.
Inmar CIO named to list of top 100 IT leaders
Mark Wright, chief information officer at Inmar Inc. in Winston-Salem, has been named to Computerworld's Premier 100 IT Leaders list for 2013.
Computerworld, an IT news magazine, says the 100 leaders on the list display exceptional technology leadership and envision innovative approaches to business solutions. The honorees will be featured in the Feb. 25 issue of the magazine.
Wright joined Inmar in 2010 and has since led the company’s growth as a retailer software and service provider. The company’s client base of 1,700 retailers, manufacturers, health care companies and government agencies utilize Inmar for management of e-commerce networks and cloud-based systems.
Inmar is preparing to relocate its 900 workers to two former R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. buildings in Winston-Salem’s Piedmont Triad Research Park by next December, a move that will cost more than $100 million in redevelopment and renovation. Read more.
Labels:
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Wake Forest University, Ameritox Team Up
Wake Forest University and Ameritox Ltd. said Tuesday they have formed a partnership aimed at furthering university chemistry research in developing technologies for medication monitoring and toxicology testing.
Ameritox provides laboratory services and management tools under the RxGuardian brand. The service helps assess whether patients are taking their pain medication consistent with the dosage prescribed by their doctors. It provides individual results by using the patient's height, weight, gender, age and prescribed dosage.
Christa Colyer, chairwoman of the university’s chemistry department, said having access to the Ameritox laboratory “will make it that much easier to collaborate and exchange ideas to realize testing breakthroughs.” Read more.
Friday, November 30, 2012
WFU Cancer Research Sparks Cover Story
The work of a team of Wake Forest University researchers
developing a novel drug for prostate cancer treatment is featured on the
cover of the Nov. 26 issue of the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry.
All cells, both normal and diseased, rely on the PI3K cell signaling pathway for growth, so inhibiting the pathway selectively for cancer cells has long been a challenge for scientists in the fight against cancer. While turning PI3K inhibitors loose in the body would prevent the spread of cancer, doing so would also inhibit growth in lots of cells.
To effectively use this strategy in the treatment of cancer, the Wake Forest team had to target these inhibitors to specific kinds of cells. Using prostate cells as the target, they selected a protein that is specifically recognized by prostate cells and attach that protein to a PI3K inhibitor. Read more.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Tech Speaker Series Returns! New Technology Resources to Grow Your Business
“New Advanced Technology Resources to Grow Your Business”
Speakers
Tuesday, December 11
8:30 - 9:30 a.m. (networking & refreshments follow)
Did you know that within Winston-Salem’s Piedmont Triad Research Park some of the most advanced equipment and resources in the Southeast are now being made available to entire community? Our next Tech Speaker Series event on Tuesday, December 11 at 8:30 a.m. in Wake Forest Biotech Place will tell you all about it! Do you quickly need a prototype for a new product? Or access to cutting-edge medical research equipment? Come learn about what is available and how these items can help take your business to the next level.
Did you know that within Winston-Salem’s Piedmont Triad Research Park some of the most advanced equipment and resources in the Southeast are now being made available to entire community? Our next Tech Speaker Series event on Tuesday, December 11 at 8:30 a.m. in Wake Forest Biotech Place will tell you all about it! Do you quickly need a prototype for a new product? Or access to cutting-edge medical research equipment? Come learn about what is available and how these items can help take your business to the next level.
Speakers
- Eric Tomlinson, DSc, PhD; President, Piedmont Triad Research Park and Chief Innovation Officer, Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center
- Luke Burnett, PhD; Chief Science Officer, Keranetics
- Tom Clarkson, Associate Director, Entrepreneurship; Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center
- Carol Strohecker, PhD; Director, Center for Design Innovation
Wake Forest Biotech Place
575 N. Patterson Avenue
Hosted by the Tech Council of the Winston-Salem Chamber of Commerce. Free and open to the public though registration is required. Learn more and register.
Title Sponsor
Series Sponsors:
Food Sponsor
Hybrid 3-D Printer Used to Create Cartilage Implants at Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine
Scientists at the Wake Forest Institute of Regenerative
Medicine have pioneered an approach to replace damaged cartilage, combining two
low-cost techniques.
The team’s
breakthrough mixes electrospinning with medical
inkjet printing, also called bioprinting.
The development has potential for the medical field.
Injured natural cartilage is slow and difficult to heal, and has almost no
ability to regrow itself. Currently, surgeons treat cartilage damage caused from
injury or disease with techniques that remove small pieces of torn tissue or
create microscopic grafts. But as of yet, they have been unable
to fully regenerate the cushioning, lubricating tissue that keeps joints moving
freely and bones from wearing against each other. As a result, degenerative
cartilage conditions can eventually result in joint replacement surgery.
This new procedure may effectively eradicate these invasive
procedures and spell relief for countless people who suffer from cartilage
conditions. Read more.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Nanotech conference coming to Winston-Salem
For the first time, the Nanotech Commercialization Conference will be held in Winston-Salem.
The conference, which is in its fifth year, is aimed at spurring more research and business collaboration. It will be held April 9-10 at Wake Forest BioTech Place.
It is expected to attract more than 250 attendees and more than 50 speakers, of which there will be a significant Triad representation.
Nanobiotechnology is the science of developing materials at the atomic and molecular level and then using them to develop products and devices.
Hosting the conference “gives us the opportunity to again spotlight the opportunities in advanced manufacturing, coupled with advanced materials development that our community offers,” said David Carroll, director of the Center for Nanotechnology Molecular Materials at the university. Read more.
Friday, November 16, 2012
New Inmar Analytics unit looking to put data to use
Retailer software and service provider Inmar generates countless digital bytes of information from its clients each day as it redeems paper and electronic coupons, processes returns and generates promotions. The company’s newest division wants to make sure all that information is put to its best use.John Ross joined Inmar in August as president of Inmar Analytics, which currently has just four of Inmar’s 700-plus total Winston-Salem employees. The company announced earlier this year that it would relocate its headquarters to the Piedmont Triad Research Park by the end of next year and expand to more than 900 workers.
The kind of data that Inmar generates companywide about shopper behavior could give brick-and-mortar retailers a “dot-com-like view of what’s going on in the business,” down to how a recommendation of one product impacts sales of another product, Ross said. That’s the kind of information that Amazon.com and other online retailers rely on routinely but is difficult for physical retailers to replicate, Ross said. Read more.
Wake Forest Doctors Working To Heal Wounded Warriors
Almost 50,000 American servicemen and women have been wounded while serving our country in Afghanistan and Iraq. Of those, nearly 450 are from North Carolina.
At the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM), doctors are researching ways to help these wounded warriors.
"It's a very simple concept, we're trying to repair these massive muscle loss injures."explains Dr. George Christ, WFIRM.
Wake Forest joins 34 universities on a more than $300 million mission to change the way wounded soldiers are treated on the battlefield.
Dr. Christ is the lead researcher for a project on muscle reconstruction. When these muscles are implanted into the body, the chances of healing are much greater, actually 70 to 80% greater, but that's just the beginning.
"This is something that maybe can be injected into the muscle, provide a water-based source of oxygen." Dr. Christ hopes an oxygen gel they're developing can be applied to open wounds on the battlefield and save limbs, and maybe even lives because it buys the soldier crucial time keeping tissue alive until surgery. Read more.
At the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine (WFIRM), doctors are researching ways to help these wounded warriors.
"It's a very simple concept, we're trying to repair these massive muscle loss injures."explains Dr. George Christ, WFIRM.
Wake Forest joins 34 universities on a more than $300 million mission to change the way wounded soldiers are treated on the battlefield.
Dr. Christ is the lead researcher for a project on muscle reconstruction. When these muscles are implanted into the body, the chances of healing are much greater, actually 70 to 80% greater, but that's just the beginning.
"This is something that maybe can be injected into the muscle, provide a water-based source of oxygen." Dr. Christ hopes an oxygen gel they're developing can be applied to open wounds on the battlefield and save limbs, and maybe even lives because it buys the soldier crucial time keeping tissue alive until surgery. Read more.
Caterpillar playing role in economic remaking of Winston-Salem
The first year of Caterpillar Inc. in Winston-Salem was filled mostly with sunshine. The $426 million plant officially began a year ago today axle-assembly production for the massive Caterpillar trucks used in the mining industry.
Caterpillar is an important part of the economic remaking of Winston-Salem and the Triad, said Michael Walden, an economics professor at N.C. State University.
The company committed to have 510 total jobs -- 392 full-time and 118 contract workers -- when the 850,000-square-foot plant is at full capacity. Read more.
Winston-Salem's Targacept names new CEO
Dr. Stephen Hill, a surgeon and the former CEO of both Solvay Pharmaceuticals and ArQule Inc., has been named the new president and chief executive officer of Targacept Inc.Hill's background includes leading the U.S. arm of the Belgian company Solvay Pharmaceuticals and its 1,200 employees in the period leading up to its acquisition by Abbott Laboratories in 2010.
At the Massachusetts-based ArQule, Hill led the transition from a fee-for-service discovery chemistry model to one with the company's own proprietary pipeline, according to an announcement from Targacept. Read more.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Tech Briefing iBook
The Winston-Salem Chamber's Tech Briefing convened designers of airplane seats, clothing, medical devices, solar cells, beet juice, mobile apps, and more. See them on an iBook created by Josh Tan (or choose the .pdf).Read more and view iBook.
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Biotech center will benefit with Doug Edgeton on board
It’s always good to see seasoned professionals land a new position where they can be all the more beneficial. That’s the case with Doug Edgeton, who has landed an executive position with the N.C. Biotechnology Center.
Edgeton, the former president of the Piedmont Triad Research Park, was instrumental in helping to build that park into the biotech foundation it has become. He had been the park’s president since 2007, a time in which he energetically led the park in growth and prestige. Although the park will continue to shine under new leader Eric Tomlinson, we hated to see Edgeton leave.
But we’re glad he’ll now be putting his considerable talents to use at the biotech center.
The center, a nonprofit financed by the legislature, seeks to help create jobs by supporting biotechnology research, business, education and strategic policy statewide. It’s based in Research Triangle Park, but has regional offices in Winston-Salem, Asheville, Greater Charlotte, Greenville and Wilmington.
Edgeton will be the senior vice president for financial planning and development. Norris Tolson, the head of the center, told the Journal’s Richard Craver that Edgeton’s job will include educating legislators about the importance of the economic impact of biotech. Tolson said Edgeton is “tailor-made to do the things we do here.”
Indeed. Edgeton should make the center shine in the same fashion that he made the Piedmont Triad Research Park shine. Edgeton should help ensure that biotech continues to help build our future. Read more.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
A Google Search for Drug Discovery
It’s what scholars dream about: getting to work
with the latest technology and leading researchers in the industry to
develop a scientific breakthrough.
Gagliano is part of the physics department team at Wake Forest developing a technology called Next-Gen Lab-on-Bead. The tool uses next-generation genetic sequencing to make the drug development process thousands of times faster, much like a Google search.
“I usually just tell people I am trying to find new drugs for cancer,” he said.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has awarded the team a $700,000 grant to bring Next-Gen Lab-on-Bead to market. The NIH awarded the funding through its Small Business Innovation Research program, and Wake Forest will share the funds with partner NanoMedica, a Winston-Salem company that has licensed the patent for Next-Gen Lab-on-Bead. Read More.
Friday, October 19, 2012
PTRP innovation among top priorities for Eric Tomlinson
People may know Eric Tomlinson as the president named this summer to head the Piedmont Triad Research Park, but for him, it’s his second title — chief innovation officer for Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center — that’s most important.
“When I was approached for the job, it was president of PTRP, and oh, by the way, chief innovation officer of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center,” Tomlinson said. “But actually the job is chief innovation officer, of which part is to develop the park.”
That change speaks to a shift in focus for the research park, which includes 145 developable acres next to the heart of downtown. The park is expected to support more than 6 million square feet of building space as it’s built out.
Earlier this year saw the opening of Wake Forest Biotech Place, followed by the announcement that Winston-Salem-based Inmar will relocate its 900 workers to the park. Employment in the park is expected to approach 2,000 by the end of 2013, with hundreds of thousands of renovated square feet coming online. Read more.
Labels:
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Inmar,
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Thursday, October 18, 2012
November Frameworks Session
Access Your Readiness To
Acquire External Resources
When:
November 1, 2012
7:30am-9:00am
Where:
Wake Forest Biotech Place
575 N Patterson Ave., Winston-Salem, NC
Click Here for directions and parking
information.
Who:
Anyone interested in
entrepreneurship, considering commercializing new ideas, planning a new venture,
working in a startup, developing new initiatives at larger companies, interested
in exploring the potential of ideas with others, or improving their
entrepreneurial and commercialization skills.
What:
A monthly educational and networking series organized by
the
Wake Forest University New Venture Incubator. There is no
charge to attend Frameworks! seminars. Refreshments will be served.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Creative Corridors unveils twin arches theme for Winston-Salem's major interchanges
When the Salem Creek Connector roadway is built in 2016, two overlapping "twin arches" might soar dramatically over the connector's juncture with U.S. 52.
Crosswalks, sidewalks, landscaping and ornamental lighting will make the entire connector more appealing for drivers, cyclists and pedestrians as they find a safer, more direct route to downtown from Winston-Salem State University and Salem College.
That's the vision that was presented Tuesday in designs unveiled at a meeting of the Creative Corridors Coalition. It's a nonprofit that has been tapping community residents for how to influence the look of the roadwork that the N.C. Department of Transportation and the city of Winston-Salem will do in the next several years around downtown.
The work will include the replacement of 11 bridges along a downtown stretch of Business 40.
Read more.
BB&T to Add 1,700 Jobs
BB&T Corporation will lease the former American Express call center in Greensboro to create a new office to handle administrative and back office tasks, a move that could create as many as 1,700 jobs over the next five years.
The Winston-Salem-based bank said it plans to eventually have as many as 2,500 employees working at what will now be called BB&T Triad Corporate Center.
The office should open by the end of the year, with 50 to 100 employees.
The company's headquarters will remain in downtown Winston-Salem. Read more.
The Winston-Salem-based bank said it plans to eventually have as many as 2,500 employees working at what will now be called BB&T Triad Corporate Center.
The office should open by the end of the year, with 50 to 100 employees.
The company's headquarters will remain in downtown Winston-Salem. Read more.
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