Resources
BNET Resources
- sort by:
- Relevance
- Date
- Popularity
- Engaging Indiana: universities get involved with Indiana businesses and communities.(EDUCATION)(Company overview)
- Engagement. If you picture a guy on one knee when you see this word, you're not tuned into the university world. There the word takes on a bigger connotation, a lively connection between the institution and the community, the region, the state: a friendly front door....
- Research articles 2007-02-01
- Cook Biotech Remains Determined to Uphold Life Sciences Patent Rights
- WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit denied Cook Biotech's petition to reconsider the Court's earlier decision to overturn the verdict reached by a jury in the Federal Court for the Northern District of Indiana concerning biomaterials derived from bladder tissue for use as...
- Research articles 2006-10-23
- Corn In A Cave
- It's dark and cold. Why would anyone grow corn in an underground warehouse? For Doug Ausenbaugh, owner of Controlled Pharming Ventures, the atmosphere is ideal. "Down this far underground [in an old limestone mine], it is a constant 51 [Degrees] F temperature," Ausenbaugh explains. "That makes it easier...
- Research articles 2006-09-29
- Cook Biotech Resolves to Pursue Life Sciences Patent Infringement Case Against ACell Inc
- WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. -- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit recently overturned the verdict reached by a jury in the Federal Court for the Northern District of Indiana concerning biomaterials derived from bladder tissue for use as medical products. The patent at issue is one in a...
- Research articles 2006-08-28
- Appeals court rules for Jessup firm on biotech patent
- A Jessup company won a patent dispute against Purdue University in a federal appeals court last week, permitting it to continue producing tissue-graft biotechnology used to treat this year's Preakness favorite, Barbaro, after the horse broke its ankle just out of the starting gate. The U.S. Court of...
- Research articles 2006-08-24
- Children's Blocks, Libraries Help Students Unravel Genomics.
- Byline: Purdue University WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 29 AScribe Newswire -- Simple children's plastic building blocks and other familiar objects are teaching high school and college students the intricacies of biotechnology and genomics through an educational model that Purdue University researchers have developed....
- Research articles 2005-09-29
- Gene mystery.(in plants)(Brief Article)
- Gregor Mendel must be spinning in his grave. Geneticists at Purdue University studying the Arabidopsis above found plants that had a normal version of a gene that was defective in its parents. That's not supposed to be possible. The source of the "healthy" DNA is unknown,...
- Research articles 2005-06-01
- Purdue Research Park: state's largest concentration of technology companies.
- WHEN ASKED TO NAME which businesses, corporations and organizations were those that the state could ill afford to lose, Indiana business leaders ranked Purdue Research Park No. 7 on the "Indiana's 25 Keepers: Keeping Good Company" list (Indy Men's Magazine and Inside INdiana Business with Gerry...
- Research articles 2005-06-01
- Mendel will be turning in his grave.(Brief Article)
- Mar 29, 2005 (New Scientist - ABIX via COMTEX) The weedy cress has challenged the Mendelian inheritance theory, which is central to genetics. The plant, known as Arabidopsis thaliana, is able to inherit DNA from previous generations that were not present in its parents,...
- Research articles 2005-03-30
- DNA Wires Promise Self Assembling Electronics.
- Researchers at Purdue University have attached magnetic "nanoparticles" to DNA and then cut these "DNA wires" into pieces, offering the promise of creating low-cost, self-assembling devices for future computers. The findings are detailed in a paper published online in February in the Journal of the American...
- Research articles 2005-03-01
- BIOTECHNOLOGY: Aligned Nanotubes Could Improve Artificial Joints.
- Artificial joints might be improved by making implants out of carbon nanotubes and filaments that are all aligned in the same direction, mimicking the alignment of collagen fibers and natural ceramic crystals in real bones, according to a research team from Purdue University. ...
- Research articles 2005-02-01
- Genetic engineering's fishy results
- Public debate over genetically modified organisms GMOs has largely focused around their benefits and drawbacks to human beings (see "Food Fight," cover story, July/August 2003), but a recent study conducted at Purdue University is likely to lead the discussion in a different direction: environmental safety. Male Japanese medaka fish, genetically...
- Research articles 2004-11-01
- Genetic engineering's fishy results.(Updates)(http://news.uns.purdue.edu)(Brief Article)
- Public debate over genetically modified organisms GMOs has largely focused around their benefits and drawbacks to human beings (see "Food Fight," cover story, July/August 2003), but a recent study conducted at Purdue University is likely to lead the discussion in a different direction: environmental safety. Male...
- Research articles 2004-11-01
- Purdue Yeast Makes More Ethanol.
- A strain of yeast developed at Purdue University more effectively makes ethanol from agricultural residues that would otherwise be discarded or used as animal feed, and the first license for the yeast has been issued to the biotechnology company Iogen Corp. Iogen specializes in producing ethanol...
- Research articles 2004-07-01
- Yeast Plus Agricultural Wastes Equals Ethanol
- WEST LAFAYETTE, Indiana ENS ? A strain of yeast developed at Purdue University makes ethanol from agricultural residues more effectively than other yeast strains. Purdue's genetically altered yeast allows about 40 percent more ethanol to be made from sugars derived from agricultural residues, such as corn stalks and wheat...
- Research articles 2004-06-29
- Inproteo, a partnership between Indiana University, Purdue University and Eli Lilly and Company that was formerly known as the Indiana Proteomics Consortium, licensed the "HisTag"
- Inproteo, a partnership between Indiana University, Purdue University and Eli Lilly and Company that was formerly known as the Indiana Proteomics Consortium, licensed the "HisTag" fusion protein purification technique to Biogen, Pierce Biotechnology and ZymoGenetics.
- Research articles 2004-02-15
- Indiana Life-Sciences Firm Cook Biotech Breaks Ground on Expansion.
- By Jeff Swiatek, The Indianapolis Star Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News May 7--With a lawsuit against its landlord resolved, Cook Biotech breaks ground today on a five-fold expansion of its facilities in Purdue Research Park in West Lafayette. Construction of...
- Research articles 2003-05-07
- Purdue University, Bloomington, Ind., Biotech Company Reach Settlement.
- By Jeff Swiatek, The Indianapolis Star Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Feb. 7--Purdue University and Cook Group Inc. said Thursday they settled their dispute over licensing rights to a tissue-growth material. The flap had led to a federal lawsuit filed by...
- Research articles 2003-02-07
- Plant genomics may double crop efficiency - Horticulture - Brief Article
- Environmental stresses such as frost, heat, and drought cause massive crop-yield losses each year--more, in fact, than those from insects and weeds. To combat such losses, Ray Bressan, professor of horticulture and director of Purdue University's Center for Plant Environmental Stress Physiology, West Lafayette, Ind., and Mike Hasegawa, a professor...
- Research articles 2003-01-01
- Hot topic. (From the Editor).
- DURING THE PAST FEW MONTHS I HAVE NOTICED AN INCREASED AMOUNT OF news items regarding tree propagation. For example, I received a news item a few weeks ago about scientists who are conducting research to create faster-growing, richer-grained and disease-resistant hardwood trees. Purdue...
- Research articles 2002-12-01
- << Previous
- page 1 of 2
- Next >>