Patents by Inventor Franz Ulrich Hartl

Franz Ulrich Hartl has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 6773707
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of a heat shock protein complexed to a hybrid antigen comprising an antigenic domain and a heat shock protein-binding domain. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 10, 2000
    Date of Patent: August 10, 2004
    Assignee: Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Patent number: 6761892
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of a heat shock protein complexed to a hybrid antigen comprising an antigenic domain and a heat shock protein-binding domain. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 20, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 13, 2004
    Assignee: Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040127684
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: July 1, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040071725
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040071721
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040071656
    Abstract: Methods and compositions are provided for modulating the immune response to an antigen based upon the finding that the cell surface protein CD40 is a mammalian heat shock protein (hsp) receptor. Cell surface CD40 mediates the binding, cell signaling, and uptake of hsp and particularly hsp with antigen bound thereto. Methods are provided for modulating hsp-antigen uptake and an immune response to the antigen by altering CD40 expression, as well as utilizing CD40-binding fragments of mammalian hsp and muteins thereof for targeting antigens to CD40-expressing cells. Screening methods for agonists and antagonists of the CD40-hsp interaction are also provided.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 23, 2002
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: Felix Wieland, Franz-Ulrich Hartl
  • Publication number: 20040071724
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040071720
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040071723
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Publication number: 20040071722
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of at least one heat shock protein in combination with one or more defined target antigens. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 14, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takechi, Mark Mayhew
  • Patent number: 6719974
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of a heat shock protein complexed to a hybrid antigen comprising an antigenic domain and a heat shock protein-binding domain. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 5, 2000
    Date of Patent: April 13, 2004
    Assignee: Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takeuchi, Mark Mayhew
  • Patent number: 6663868
    Abstract: The present invention relates to methods and compositions for inducing an immune response in a subject, wherein the subject is administered an effective amount of a heat shock protein complexed to a hybrid antigen comprising an antigenic domain and a heat shock protein-binding domain. These methods and compositions may be used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 13, 1998
    Date of Patent: December 16, 2003
    Assignee: Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research
    Inventors: James E. Rothman, Franz Ulrich Hartl, Mee H. Hoe, Alan Houghton, Yoshizumi Takeuchi, Mark Mayhew
  • Patent number: 5776724
    Abstract: The mechanisms and components required for chaperonin-dependent folding of proteins has been elucidated using the groEL and groES proteins of E. coli to reconstitute enzymatic activity of two monomeric enzymes, dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and rhodanese following dilution from denaturant. The essential elements for properly folding any protein are Mg-ATP (provided in the preferred embodiment as 5 mM Mg acetate and 1 mM ATP), groEL or hsp60, and groES or eukaryotic equivalent. These can be provided in purified form or as a semi-purified cell extract. The groES eukaryotic equivalent, encoded by a gene which does not hybridize to the groES gene, can be isolated using the same technique as was described to isolate Hsp60: isolation of a temperature sensitive lethal yeast mutant (petite at permissive temperature) defective in folding and assembly of imported proteolytically processed human ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 25, 1995
    Date of Patent: July 7, 1998
    Assignee: Yale University
    Inventors: Franz-Ulrich Hartl, Arthur L. Horwich
  • Patent number: 5302518
    Abstract: Denatured recombinant fusion proteins are correctly folded in the presence of a heat shock protein which acts according to the functional principle of the bacterial GroEL or of the equivalent mitochondrial component Hsp60, and of ATP. After cleaving off the foreign sequence, biologically and medically interesting proteins are obtained in the correct conformation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 3, 1992
    Date of Patent: April 12, 1994
    Assignee: Hoechst Aktiengesellschaft
    Inventors: Walter Neupert, Franz-Ulrich Hartl