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UC Davis Venture Catalyst Expands Program to Accelerate Technology Commercialization with STAIR-Plus Grants — Announces Recipients

John Voss STAIR Grant Recipient

To support campus innovators in advancing their cutting-edge technologies towards commercialization, Venture Catalyst – within the Technology Management and Corporate Relations division of the UC Davis Office of Research – has offered Science Translation and Innovative Research (STAIRTM) Grants for the last four years. The unique STAIR Grant program provides funding and support to help innovators demonstrate proof-of-concept and commercial feasibility for their technologies. To date, a total of $897,000 has been awarded to 19 faculty members as part of this program.

This year, Venture Catalyst announced the addition of the STAIR-Plus™ Grant program, intended to offer additional support to STAIR Grant recipients who have successfully achieved their projected commercialization milestones and are poised for commercial impact pending completion of specific targeted activities. Each recipient receives up to $20,000 in funding to be deployed over a one-year period. Funding for the STAIR-Plus program was made possible by the State of California’s Assembly Bill 2664, which was passed in 2016.

2017 STAIR-Plus Grant Recipients

Cortopassi

Gino Cortopassi, professor, Department of Molecular Biosciences

Transition to Patentable New Chemical Entity Shc inhibitors for Fatty Liver Disease

Cortopassi and his team have identified several compounds that inhibit Shc, a signaling protein that regulates the body’s response to insulin and resistance to pediatric nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. With assistance from the STAIR Grant, the team conducted medicinal chemistry optimization to narrow dozens of functional parent molecules down to several of the most productive candidates. The STAIR-Plus Grant will allow the team to conduct additional screening and test the two most potent inhibitors in-vivo in an animal model.

Simon

Tony Simon, professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Translation of Neurotherapeutic Video Games to Virtual Reality

Simon has invented a “neurotherapeutic” video game designed to help improve the cognitive abilities of children with one of several genetic disorders, the healthy aging and patients with many forms of traumatic brain injury or stroke. The STAIR Grant enabled Simon and his team to build prototypes utilizing desktop computers and game consoles which were used to conduct tests to provide evidence of clinical benefit. Simon plans to use funding from the STAIR-Plus Grant to develop, with his game design partner, a second generation prototype utilizing a virtual reality platform and to conduct preliminary tests for usability and efficacy potential.

John Voss, professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine

A Novel Nitroxide-based Agent to Produce Contrast Enhancement for Amyloid Beta Peptide Detection by MRI

Voss’s team is developing technology based on a small molecule with potential for the early detection of Alzheimer’s disease. The compound is innovative for its paramagnetic properties, which affect MRI intensities correlating to an early and prominent marker for Alzheimer’s. Unlike available imaging methods, this approach would be less expensive, enable greater patient access and eliminate radiation exposure for the patient. Voss utilized the STAIR Grant to conduct in vivo tests to demonstrate effectiveness and to synthesize nine novel small molecules. Voss plans to use the STAIR-Plus Grant to conduct additional optimization leading to the selection of a lead candidate. He also plans to use high resolution imaging to better correlate the contrast signal with identifiable brain structures.

Each application was reviewed by the STAIR-Plus Grant review committee, which included Office of Research staff and external industry reviewers with specific domain expertise. The review committee considered the technical merit, commercial potential, outcomes from previous STAIR Grant milestones and alignment of budget with projected activities for each project.

“I’m thrilled that the California Legislature’s investment in innovation and entrepreneurship at the university is enabling us to extend the bridge between cutting-edge research and its potential for transformative human impact,” said Dushyant Pathak, associate vice chancellor of Research and executive director of Venture Catalyst. “These funds, in addition to the prior investment by the university through our STAIR Grants, are accelerating the commercialization of new technologies from UC Davis.”

An important component of the STAIR-Plus program is the engagement of award recipients with additional entrepreneurial and technology commercialization support and resources through a unique collaboration between Venture Catalyst and the UC Davis Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Each award recipient will participate in a cohort-based series of innovation and commercialization clinics focused on helping awardees develop the skills and networks needed to develop the commercial potential and resulting societal impact of their ideas.

These highly customized business clinics will include engagement with industry experts and mentors to supplement the workshops, which will be focused on commercialization elements including market and business model validation and coaching for effective business communication.

AB 2664 Spurs Innovation and Entrepreneurship

Assembly Bill 2664, also referred to as the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Expansion bill, was authored by Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin, D-Thousand Oaks, and signed last fall by Governor Jerry Brown. AB 2664 is designed to propel new innovation and entrepreneurship efforts across the University of California through investments in infrastructure, incubators and entrepreneurship education programs. The $22 million investment was dispersed equally to each of the ten UC campuses at the beginning of 2017. Venture Catalyst is the program lead at UC Davis and is implementing a variety of innovation and entrepreneurship expansion activities in conjunction with partners on campus, including the Mike and Renee Child Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, the Engineering Student Startup Center, the Office of the Provost, Graduate Studies and the Internship and Career Center, as well as external community partners.

 

Innovative Startups Commercializing UC Davis Technologies

 

venture catalyst startup handbook bg

During the past fiscal year, 15 emerging startups executed agreements to access patented technology developed at the University of California, Davis.

“Startups play an essential role in advancing and commercializing new technologies that are developed by researchers and innovators at UC Davis,” said Prasant Mohapatra, vice chancellor of research at UC Davis. “These partnerships lead to substantial contributions to society in the form of new products, services and economic growth.”

Storx Technologies is commercializing a noninvasive fetal pulse oximeter for use during deliveries. Founded by the inventors — Soheil Ghiasi, a professor of electrical and computer engineering, and Daniel Fong, who recently received his Ph.D. in electrical and computer engineering from UC Davis — the company’s innovation may lead to safer births and fewer cesarian sections.

Two of the medical technology companies that licensed technology this past year are developing vaccine innovations.

Tendel Therapies has licensed foundational technologies developed in the laboratories of Dennis Hartigan-O’Connor, associate professor in the Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, and Peter Barry, professor emeritus with the Center for Immunology and Infectious Diseases. The company is commercializing first-in-class, genetically adjuvanted vaccines engineered for durable B- and T-cell immune memory. Tendel has adapted their technology to fight the COVID-19 pandemic and is preparing for a Phase I safety trial of their vaccine candidate.

The Vaccine Group, a biotechnology firm in the United Kingdom, licensed foundational UC Davis intellectual property that provides a non-PCR (polymerase chain reaction) method to create a recombinant DNA fragment for insertion into a target sequence. The company is developing herpesvirus-based vaccine platforms to protect animals against infectious diseases, including zoonotic diseases that are transferred from animals to humans.

“The majority of startups accessing intellectual property from UC Davis this past year are focused on medical technologies and solutions, including several that are developing therapeutics and improved diagnostics for specific cancers,” said Bill Tucker, interim associate vice chancellor for Innovation and Technology Commercialization. “We also have startups advancing solutions related to novel food technology platforms and nutrition.”

Food-tech company BCD Bioscience is developing proprietary techniques around natural carbohydrate structures to create and commercialize novel prebiotics, synbiotics and immuno-modulatory therapies for human and animal health. UC Davis professors Carlito Lebrilla, David Mills and Bruce German are the founding scientists for the company.

In agricultural innovations, Spectral Analytix, launched by Christian Nansen, an associate professor in the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, applies machine vision and machine learning to the classification and sorting of insects and also seeds, creating fast and nondestructive methods to eliminate nonviable seeds.

Additional companies that acquired rights to foundational intellectual property from UC Davis during the 2019-20 fiscal year include:

  • Alphacait — Novel leukemia stem cell-targeted ligand and nanotherapeutics for human leukemia treatment.
  • AmCyt — Automated rapid onsite evaluation device that mitigates the 20 percent sampling error in fine needle aspiration biopsies.
  • Breeze Biosciences — New method for targeting nuclear receptor ROR-gamma in tumor cells for prostate cancer treatment.
  • Carrisan Technologies — Novel antimicrobial solutions to prevent the spread of foodborne illnesses and minimize food losses due to pathogens.
  • HistoliX— Rapid slide-free tissue imaging and decision-support tools that provide real-time results to address critical needs in cancer care and medical diagnostics.
  • InStatin — Lung-targeted inhaled therapies to treat chronic respiratory diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD.
  • Matrubials — Novel and selective antimicrobial therapies to treat bacterial infections based on antimicrobial peptides found in milk.
  • NanoElements Technologies — Revolutionary nanotechnology-based intellectual property to remove lung-penetrating sub-0.3 micron air pollution particles and viruses.
  • Orox BioSciences — Dual inhibitors of soluble epoxide hydrolase and cyclooxygenase-2 for the treatment of inflammation, pain and cancers.
  • Sarya — Alpha-4 Beta-1integrin ligands for imaging and treatments of cancer, autoimmune diseases and inflammatory diseases.

Milestones for previous startups

During the past 10 years, a total of 115 startups have been formed with an emphasis on commercializing UC Davis technologies. Approximately 75 percent are still active.

Several of these UC Davis-associated startups experienced important milestones this past year as they transitioned from product development to commercialization.

  • PvP Biologics, a spinout from UC Davis and the University of Washington, was purchased by Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited following a Phase 1 proof-of-mechanism study of investigational medicine TAK-062 for the treatment of celiac disease.
  • Bouncer, which was incorporated in May 2019, was accepted into the Y Combinator accelerator, which will invest $125,000 in the company. Bouncer provides powerful verification with a simple scan for any card or identification, while cleanly flagging stolen cards and high-risk transactions
  • EicOsis LLC was awarded a $15 million grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to support human clinical trials of a non-opioid pain therapy for neuropathic pain, EC5026. The drug candidate also received Fast Track designation from the Food and Drug Administration.
  • Molecular Matrix announced it formed a strategic alliance with Philosys Healthcare to expand the availability of a next-generation bone graft substitute technology to the Asian market.
  • Novoheart announced a partnership with AstraZeneca to develop the world’s first human-specific, in vitro, functional model of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.

Building a culture of entrepreneurship

Enabling startups through the licensing of intellectual property from UC Davis is just one of the ways that the university is building a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship, with the goal of translating research into societal and economic impact.

Venture Catalyst, within the Innovation and Technology Commercialization division, also offers grants to campus innovators to facilitate commercial proof-of-concept studies; support services; and connections to a network of resources to help them succeed. Over the past fiscal year, Venture Catalyst supported 33 new startups with direct ties to the university through foundational technology and/or faculty, students, staff and alumni. During the 2019-20 fiscal year alone, startups that Venture Catalyst has assisted through its programs raised approximately $60 million in funding.

Fueled by innovation

InnovationAccess received 141 invention disclosures from campus innovators over the prior fiscal year. The majority of these relate to biomedical and human health, followed by inventions in engineering and physical sciences, agricultural and animal health applications. Over the same year, InnovationAccess filed 182 patent applications and received 89 domestic and foreign patents with UC Davis researchers named as inventors. InnovationAccess also executed 40 plant and utility licenses, 72 copyright licenses, 152 data transfer agreements and 937 material transfer agreements. Almost half of the MTAs executed were in support of medical research.

Media Resources

AJ Cheline, Office of Research, 530-752-1101, [email protected]

Andy Fell, News and Media Relations, 530-752-4533, [email protected]

UC Davis Venture Catalyst Expands Program to Accelerate Technology Commercialization with STAIR-Plus Grants — Announces Recipients

John Voss STAIR Plus recipient

To support campus innovators in advancing their cutting-edge technologies towards commercialization, Venture Catalyst –within the Technology Management and Corporate Relations division of the UC Davis Office of Research – has offered Science Translation and Innovative Research (STAIRTM) Grants for the last four years. The unique STAIR Grant program provides funding and support to help innovators demonstrate proof-of-concept and commercial feasibility for their technologies. To date, a total of $897,000 has been awarded to 19 faculty members as part of this program.

This year, Venture Catalyst announced the addition of the STAIR-Plus™ Grant program, intended to offer additional support to STAIR Grant recipients who have successfully achieved their projected commercialization milestones and are poised for commercial impact pending completion of specific targeted activities. Each recipient receives up to $20,000 in funding to be deployed over a one year period. Funding for the STAIR-Plus program was made possible by the State of California’s Assembly Bill 2664, which was passed in late 2016.

2017 STAIR-Plus Grant Recipients

Cortopassi

Gino Cortopassi, professor, Department of Molecular Biosciences

Transition to patentable New Chemical Entity Shc inhibitors for Fatty Liver Disease

Cortopassi and his team have identified several compounds that inhibit Shc, a signaling protein that regulates the body’s response to insulin and resistance to pediatric nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. With assistance from the STAIR grant, the team conducted medicinal chemistry optimization to narrow dozens of functional parent molecules down to several of the most productive candidates. The STAIR-Plus Grant will allow the team to conduct additional screening and test the two most potent inhibitors in-vivo in an animal model.

Simon

Tony Simon, professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Translation of Neurotherapeutic Video Games to Virtual Reality

Simon has invented a “neurotherapeutic” video game designed to help improve the cognitive abilities of children with one of several genetic disorders, the healthy aging and patients with many forms of Traumatic Brain Injury or Stroke. The STAIR Grant enabled Simon and his team to build prototypes utilizing desktop computers and game consoles which were used to conduct tests to provide evidence of clinical benefit. Simon plans to use funding from the STAIR-Plus Grant to develop, with his game design partner, a second generation prototype utilizing a virtual reality platform and to conduct preliminary tests for usability and efficacy potential.

John Voss, professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine

A novel nitroxide-based agent to produce contrast enhancement

for amyloid beta peptide detection by MRI

Voss’s team is developing technology based on a small molecule with potential for the early detection of Alzheimer’s disease. The compound is innovative for its paramagnetic properties, which affect MRI intensities correlating to an early and prominent marker for Alzheimer’s. Unlike available imaging methods, this approach would be less expensive, enable greater patient access and eliminate radiation exposure for the patient. Voss utilized the STAIR Grant to conduct in vivo tests to demonstrate effectiveness and to synthesize nine novel small molecules. Voss plans to use the STAIR-Plus Grant to conduct additional optimization leading to the selection of a lead candidate. He also plans to use high resolution imaging to better correlate the contrast signal with identifiable brain structures.

Each application was reviewed by the STAIR-Plus Grant Review Committee, which included Office of Research staff and external industry reviewers with specific domain expertise. The Review Committee considered the technical merit, commercial potential, outcomes from previous STAIR Grant milestones, and alignment of budget with projected activities for each project.

”I’m thrilled that the California legislature’s investment in innovation and entrepreneurship at the university is enabling us to extend the bridge between cutting-edge research and its potential for transformative human impact,” said Dushyant Pathak, associate vice chancellor of Research and executive director of Venture Catalyst. ”These funds, in addition to the prior investment by the university through our STAIR grants, are accelerating the commercialization of new technologies from UC Davis.”

An important component of the STAIR-Plus program is the engagement of award recipients with additional entrepreneurial and technology commercialization support and resources through a unique collaboration between Venture Catalyst and the Mike and Renee Child Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship at UC Davis. Award recipients will participate in a cohort-based series of innovation and commercialization clinics designed to develop the skills and networks needed to explore and expand the commercial potential and resulting societal impact of their ideas.

These highly customized business clinics will include engagement with industry experts and mentors to supplement the workshops, which will be focused on commercialization elements including market and business model validation and coaching for effective business communication.

“We’re honored to help such talented innovators from across our campus to commercialize their work and ensure that the benefits of their research move from the lab and out into the world,” said Cleveland Justis, the institute’s executive director.

AB 2664 Spurs Innovation and Entrepreneurship

Assembly Bill 2664, also referred to as the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Expansion bill, was authored by Assembly member Jacqui Irwin, D-Thousand Oaks, and signed last fall by Governor Jerry Brown. AB 2664 is designed to propel new innovation and entrepreneurship efforts across the University of California through investments in infrastructure, incubators and entrepreneurship education programs. The $22 million investment was dispersed equally to each of the ten UC campuses at the beginning of 2017. Venture Catalyst is the program lead at UC Davis and is implementing a variety of innovation and entrepreneurship expansion activities in conjunction with partners on campus, including the Mike and Renee Child Institute for Innovation & Entrepreneurship, the Engineering Student Startup Center, the Office of the Provost, Graduate Studies and the Internship and Career Center, as well as external community partners.

Media Contacts

AJ Cheline (530)219-8739

Links

STAIR grant program
• “Digital neurotherapeutic” game in development at the UC Davis MIND Institute