Stanford researchers have developed a device that combines one-photon and two-photon microscopy using fast temporal multiplexing enabling 3D alignment between in vivo and ex vivo data for neuroscience and spatial biology applications.
Cancers including breast, lung, colon and prostate account for almost ten million deaths worldwide every year. The main cause of cancer deaths is metastasis, which is the propensity of cancer cells to spread throughout the body.
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectored products are currently leading candidates for gene therapy applications with multiple approved products and many more in clinical trials.
Stanford inventors have found that Stanniocalcin 2 (STC2) treatment following stoke leads to improved functional recovery and a pharmaceutical composition containing STC2 as an active ingredient can be used to facilitate post stroke recovery.
Stanford inventors in the Katrin Svensson laboratory have identified the protein Isthmin-1 (ISM1) as a treatment for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH).
IPEX syndrome is a severe autoimmune disease with limited treatment options caused by mutations in the forkhead box protein 3 (FOXP3) gene, which plays a critical role in immune regulation.
Researchers at Stanford University, UCSB and MIT have invented a novel video compression pipeline, called Txt2Vid, which substantially reduces data transmission rates by compressing webcam videos ("talking-head videos") to a text transcript.
Inventors at Stanford University have developed a colorimetric device to visualize microstructural features in tissue biopsies towards clinical diagnostics.
Stanford inventors have developed technologies for improved islet transplantation using a bioscaffold platform that maintains islet health during and after their transplantation.
Stanford inventors have developed technologies for improved islet transplantation using a bioscaffold platform that maintains islet health during and after their transplantation.