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MTech awards $3.3M to 16 Maryland company and faculty teams developing promising tech products

The Maryland Industrial Partnerships Program (MIPS), an initiative of the Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute (Mtech) at the University of Maryland, has awarded $3.3 million to 16 teams of Maryland companies and faculty developing commercially promising technology products. All the funding goes to the faculty members conducting the research and development on company products.

Projects for this round of funding include floating wetlands to clean the Chesapeake Bay, bolts that change color as they are tightened, faster Internet-via-satellite upstream, wireless sensors for monitoring home energy use, bioremediation for restaurant oil, and a backup mass-emergency electrical system. Treatments, vaccines or tests for anthrax, malaria, influenza, staph infections and infertility are also included.

Totaling $3.3 million, the projects combine $1.9 million from participating companies and $1.4 million from MIPS. Funding supports research in the laboratories of participating university faculty, who work closely with partner companies to advance their products.

Nine company partners are in Montgomery County; four are in the Baltimore area, one is in Howard County, one is in Frederick and one is in Frostburg.

Projects awarded include:

  • Silver Spring-based Bio-Quick Corporation and Richard Zhao, associate professor and division head, pathology, University of Maryland, Baltimore received $195,570 for the clinical study of Bio-Quick's ultrasound-facilitated tissue preservation system, which cuts down the time it takes medical and research facilities to preserve tissue samples from two days to one hour.

  • Ellicott City-based BlueWing Environmental Solutions & Technologies LLC and Joshua McGrath, assistant professor, environmental science & technology, University of Maryland, College Park was awarded $139,000 to develop BioHaven Floating Islands, which closely model natural floating island systems commonly found in clean waterways, to remove harmful nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus from impaired waters such as the Chesapeake Bay.

  • Rockville-based Cellex Inc. and Richard Zhao, associate professor and division head, pathology, University of Maryland, Baltimore recieved $172,600 to perform a second phase clinical evaluation on the QFLU test, which simultaneously diagnoses influenza and detects flu virus drug resistance in point-of-care settings.

  • Frederick-based Cerona Networks Corporation and John Baras, Lockheed Martin Chair in Systems Engineering, and professor, electrical and computer engineering and Institute for Systems Research, University of Maryland, College Park was awarded $161,500 to develop algorithms for Internet via satellite communications to improve upload speeds from users to the Internet, support more subscribers per satellite and enable communications on the move.

  • Takoma Park-based CoolCAD Electronics LLC and Shuvra Bhattacharyya, professor, electrical and computer engineering and Institute for Advanced Computer Studies, University of Maryland, College Park will use its $150,000 grant to develop a cost- and power-consumption-optimized wireless sensor network for monitoring energy use in residential and commercial buildings.

  • Lutherville-based Corridor Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Gerald Rosen, professor, pharmaceutical sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore will test the use of a compound against bacillus anthracis, the bacterium that causes anthrax with its $223,031 award.

  • Olney-based EcoEmergence Corporation and Jianhong Meng, director, Institute for Food Safety and Nutrition, University of Maryland, College Park will developing the first industry standard test to evaluate the efficacy of bioremediation products (including EcoEmergence's bacteria mixture) for fats, oils and grease, which clog sewer systems and have a negative impact on the environment using its $440,745 in MTech funds.

  • Baltimore-based Encore Path, Inc. and Jill Whitall, professor, physical therapy and rehabilitation science, University of Maryland, Baltimore will use the $138,872 award developing a new rehabilitative TREADTRAC Device to facilitate the recovery of walking in individuals with stroke in clinical and, eventually, community settings.

  • Baltimore-based Fyodor Biotechnologies, Inc. and Ganesh Sriram, assistant professor, chemical and biomolecular engineering, University of Maryland, College Park will use the $180,330 developing and optimizing a yeast-based platform to reliably produce the drug artemisinin, a therapeutic effective against malaria and other diseases.

  • Frostburg-based Instant Access Networks LLC and Hilkat Soysal, lecturer, physics and engineering, Frostburg State University will put the funds toward the $225,000 development of an economically viable backup electricity system by combining battery and hydrogen storage with renewable energy sources to provide power for mission-critical infrastructures in the case of a disaster when the electric grid becomes unavailable for a long period of time.

  • Germantown-based Integrated BioTherapeutics, Inc. and Mary-Claire Roghmann, professor, University of Maryland, Baltimore will use the $137,277 developing a toxin-based vaccine against Staphylococcus aureus, a common cause of both hospital-acquired and community-acquired infections and bacterial sepsis.

  • Halethorpe-based KYDES Pharmaceuticals, LLC and Stephen Hoag, professor, pharmaceutical sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore will use the $300,399 to develop compounds that deactivate drugs such as opiates, amphetamines and benzodiazepines when they are tampered with to prevent their abuse.

  • Rockville-based Opticul Diagnostics Corporation and Richard Venezia, professor, pathology, University of Maryland, Baltimore will put the $325,849 towards pre-clinical and clinical testing of Opticul's rapid, point-of-care test system for antibiotic-sensitive and antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, the bacterium that causes staph infections such as MRSA.

  • Gaithersburg-based Pregmama, LLC and Istvan Merchenthaler, professor, epidemiology and preventative medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore will use the $143,278 to develop a therapeutic regimen called Fertamax to prevent egg aneuploidy, infertility, miscarriages, and trisomic pregnancies for women over 35.

  • Bethesda-based StarEnergyCo, Inc. and Nam Sun Wang, professor, chemical and biomolecular engineering, University of Maryland, College Park will use the $225,848 award to develop an economical, turn-key process to produce astaxanthin--useful as an antioxidant and as a pigment in aquaculture--from algae and using carbon dioxide emitted from ethanol plants.

  • Bethesda-based Stress Indicators Inc.and Chandrashekhar Thamire, professor, mechanical engineering, University of Maryland, College Park will be use $200,000 developing a reliable process for manufacturing the company's High Resolution (HR) Smartbolts, fasteners which are fitted with special visual tension indicators that show whether a joint is loose or tight with a clear, reversible color change.

Source: Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute
Writer: Walaika Haskins

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