Prins Hendrikstraat 1
5611HH Eindhoven
The Netherlands
info@clinlabint.com
PanGlobal Media is not responsible for any error or omission that might occur in the electronic display of product or company data.
November 2025
The leading international magazine for Clinical laboratory Equipment for everyone in the Vitro diagnostics
Prins Hendrikstraat 1
5611HH Eindhoven
The Netherlands
info@clinlabint.com
PanGlobal Media is not responsible for any error or omission that might occur in the electronic display of product or company data.
This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies.
Accept settingsHide notification onlyCookie settingsWe may ask you to place cookies on your device. We use cookies to let us know when you visit our websites, how you interact with us, to enrich your user experience and to customise your relationship with our website.
Click on the different sections for more information. You can also change some of your preferences. Please note that blocking some types of cookies may affect your experience on our websites and the services we can provide.
These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our website and to use some of its features.
Because these cookies are strictly necessary to provide the website, refusing them will affect the functioning of our site. You can always block or delete cookies by changing your browser settings and block all cookies on this website forcibly. But this will always ask you to accept/refuse cookies when you visit our site again.
We fully respect if you want to refuse cookies, but to avoid asking you each time again to kindly allow us to store a cookie for that purpose. You are always free to unsubscribe or other cookies to get a better experience. If you refuse cookies, we will delete all cookies set in our domain.
We provide you with a list of cookies stored on your computer in our domain, so that you can check what we have stored. For security reasons, we cannot display or modify cookies from other domains. You can check these in your browser's security settings.
.These cookies collect information that is used in aggregate form to help us understand how our website is used or how effective our marketing campaigns are, or to help us customise our website and application for you to improve your experience.
If you do not want us to track your visit to our site, you can disable this in your browser here:
.
We also use various external services such as Google Webfonts, Google Maps and external video providers. Since these providers may collect personal data such as your IP address, you can block them here. Please note that this may significantly reduce the functionality and appearance of our site. Changes will only be effective once you reload the page
Google Webfont Settings:
Google Maps Settings:
Google reCaptcha settings:
Vimeo and Youtube videos embedding:
.U kunt meer lezen over onze cookies en privacy-instellingen op onze Privacybeleid-pagina.
Privacy policy
Researchers devise AI method to speed up protein generation for drug development
Research, /in E-News /by panglobalResearchers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden have developed Artificial Intelligence that is capable of generating novel, functionally active proteins. The research represents a significant breakthrough in the field of synthetic protein development.
“What we are now able to demonstrate offers fantastic potential for a number of future applications, such as faster and more cost-efficient development of protein-based drugs,” said Aleksej Zelezniak, Associate Professor at the Department of Biology and Biological Engineering at Chalmers.
Martin Engqvist, Assistant Professor, also of the Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, who was involved in designing the experiments to test the AI synthesised proteins, commented on the development, saying that “accelerating the rate at which we engineer proteins is very important for driving down development costs for enzyme catalysts. This is the key for realising environmentally sustainable industrial processes and consumer products, and our AI model, as well as future models, will enable that. Our work is a vital contribution in that context.”
Protein-based drugs are very common – the diabetes drug insulin is one of the most prescribed. Some of the most expensive and effective cancer medicines are also protein-based, as well as the antibody formulas currently being used to treat COVID-19.
From digital design to working proteins in just a few weeks
Current methods used for protein engineering rely on introducing random mutations to protein sequences. However, with each additional random mutation introduced, the protein activity declines.
“Consequently, one must perform multiple rounds of very expensive and time-consuming experiments, screening millions of variants, to engineer proteins and enzymes that end up being significantly different from those found in nature,” explained Zelezniak, who lead the research.
“This engineering process is very slow, but now we have an AI-based method where we can go from computer design to working protein in just a few weeks.”
The researchers recently published their findings in the journal Nature Machine Intelligence.
ProteinGAN
The AI-based approach is called ProteinGAN and uses a generative deep learning approach.
In essence, the AI is provided with a large amount of data from well-studied proteins; it studies this data and attempts to create new proteins based on it. At the same time, another part of the AI tries to figure out if the synthetic proteins are fake or not. The proteins are sent back and forth in the system until the AI can no longer not tell apart natural and synthetic proteins. This method is well known for creating photos and videos of fictitious people, but in this study, it was used for producing highly diverse protein variants with naturalistic-like physical properties that could be tested for their functions.
The proteins widely used in everyday products are not always entirely natural but are made through synthetic biology and protein engineering techniques. Using these techniques, the original protein sequences are modified in the hope of creating synthetic novel protein variants that are more efficient, stable, and tailored towards particular applications. The new AI-based approach is of importance for developing efficient industrial enzymes as well as new protein-based therapies, such as antibodies and vaccines.
The next step for the researchers is to explore how the technology could be used for specific improvements to protein properties, such as increased stability, something which could have great benefit for proteins used in industrial technology.
Reference:
“Expanding functional protein sequence spaces using generative adversarial networks” in Nature Machine Intelligence.
Axol Bioscience merges with Censo Biotech
, /in E-News /by panglobalLiam Taylor, CEO Axol
Axol Bioscience, an established provider of iPSC-derived cells, media, and characterization services, has merged with CENSO Biotechnologies, a cell biology CRO with focused expertise in iPSC-related technologies.
The new entity will become a leading provider of product and service solutions in the iPSC-based neuroscience, immune cell, and cardiac modeling for drug discovery and screening markets. It will offer customers validated ready-to-use cell lines and a suite of services with broader expertise, robust functional data, and customization capabilities, all with shorter lead times.
Axol Bioscience’s investors include Dr Jonathan Milner and award-winning EIS fund manager, Calculus Capital. CENSO Biotechnologies’ major investor is leading Edinburgh-based EIS fund manager, Par Equity. The transaction is accompanied by a fundraising round in excess £3.8m, led by Calculus Capital and Par Equity. The investment will be used to enable growth of the business and acquisition of talent.
“Axol has experienced a rapid increase in demand for their iPSC-based products and services over the last three years. Merging with CENSO immediately and significantly grows our scientific team and breadth of expertise. That, and the addition of two sites for iPSC-derived cell line manufacturing and custom service work, will increase our production capacity and future-proof our organization to ensure demand can continue to be met with the short lead times and quality that our customers depend on,” said Liam Taylor, CEO Axol.
Dr Tom Stratford, non-executive director of the combined board, on behalf of Par Equity
Under the terms of the agreement, Taylor, and the Axol senior leadership team will take over the management of the combined entity, with the intent to migrate the brand to Axol Bioscience. The agreement sees CENSO’s interim CEO, Dr Tom Stratford, appointed non-executive director of the combined board, on behalf of Par Equity.
Dr Stratford commented: “CENSO’s strength is our scientific team, as trusted partners in designing, executing, and managing custom project work. The combined entity will now be able to leverage Axol’s strength in iPSC-derived cells as well as complementary services such as electrophysiology to further our ability and efficiency to serve customers. We bring to bear capabilities, bandwidth, and expertise to scale the manufacturing of those tools in a way that benefits both customer bases and the wider market.”
Beckman Coulter assists expansion of national network of HIV testing in Uganda
, /in E-News /by Beckman Coulter Life SciencesDespite significant progress in its prevention and treatment, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) remains a serious public health threat across the globe. The United Nations programme UNAIDS has led the global effort to address the HIV/ AIDS crisis and has set out its 90-90-90 target: 90 percent of all people living with HIV (PLHIV) will know […]
Siemens Healthineers, Sysmex extend haemostasis distributor, sales agreement
, /in E-News /by SiemensSiemens Healthineers and Sysmex Corporation have renewed their long-standing global supply, distributorship, sales and service agreement for a broad portfolio of haemostasis products including a multi-year extension. Additionally, the companies’ agreement includes the future distribution of Sysmex’s CN-Series automated blood coagulation analysers, the CN-3000 and CN-6000, by Siemens Healthineers bringing the next generation of fully-automated […]
Albumedix to collaborate with Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult
, /in E-News /by panglobalAlbumedix, a Nottingham, UK-based biotech company and world leader in recombinant human albumin (rAlb), will collaborate with the Cell and Gene Therapy Catapult (CGT Catapult) to investigate the use of Albumedix’s proprietary albumin-based solutions for advanced therapy applications, including viral vectors manufacturing.
SPT Labtech acquires BioMicroLab
, /in E-News /by Labtech International LtdSPT Labtech, a global leader in the design and development of automated instrumentation and consumables for life science applications, has acquired BioMicroLab, a robotics automation provider for life science laboratories.
NovalGen forms partnership with HALIX B.V. to manufacture clinical materials
, /in E-News /by panglobalNovalGen, a biopharmaceutical company developing breakthrough cancer therapies and HALIX B.V., a contract development and manufacturing organisation, have agreed a strategic partnership wherein HALIX will manufacture clinical supplies for NovalGen’s therapies.
WuXi AppTec acquires OXGENE to strengthen cell and gene therapy offerings
, /in E-News /by panglobalWuXi AppTec, a Shanghai, China-headquartered global provider of R&D- and manufacturingenabling services in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical device industries, has acquired OXGENE, a pioneering United Kingdom-based contract research and development organization that designs and develops scalable gene therapy technologies. This acquisition enables WuXi AppTec to offer its customers end-to-end support in the creation and […]
LJI gives Leinco Tech exclusive access to SARSCoV- 2 antibodies against nucleocapsid protein
, /in E-News /by panglobalLa Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI), a leading research organization focussed on studying the immune system has signed a licensing agreement with Leinco Technologies, a premier developer and manufacturer of leading-edge recombinant proteins, antibodies, and conjugates. Leinco also provides custom manufacturing services to the diagnostic and biopharmaceutical industries to leverage proprietary COVID-19 antibodies developed at […]
UPM Biomedicals and CELLINK form collaboration for groundbreaking 3D bioprinting developments
, /in E-News /by panglobalUPM Biomedicals will collaborate with bioconvergence company CELLINK to bring together UPM’s expertise for producing non-animal derived, nanocellulose biomaterials with CELLINK’s years of experience in method development for 3D bioprinting, offering new ground-breaking solutions to this growing life sciences market.