Patents Assigned to Massachusetts Institute Technology
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Patent number: 6869789Abstract: The invention relates to heparinase III and mutants thereof. Modified forms of heparinase III having reduced enzymatic activity which are useful for a variety of purposes, including sequencing of heparin-like glycosaminoglycans (HLGAGs), removing active heparan sulfate from a solution, inhibition of angiogenesis, etc. have been discovered according to the invention. The invention in other aspects relates to methods of treating cancer and inhibiting tumor cell growth and/or metastasis using heparinase III, or products produced by enzymatic cleavage by heparinase III of HLGAGs.Type: GrantFiled: March 8, 2001Date of Patent: March 22, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Dongfang Liu, Kevin Pojasek, Zachary Shriver, Kristine Holley, Yosuf El-Shabrawi, Ganesh Venkataraman, Ram Sasisekharan
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Publication number: 20050056125Abstract: A high bandwidth rotary fast tool servo provides tool motion in a direction nominally parallel to the surface-normal of a workpiece at the point of contact between the cutting tool and workpiece. Three or more flexure blades having all ends fixed are used to form an axis of rotation for a swing arm that carries a cutting tool at a set radius from the axis of rotation. An actuator rotates a swing arm assembly such that a cutting tool is moved in and away from the lathe-mounted, rotating workpiece in a rapid and controlled manner in order to machine the workpiece. A pair of position sensors provides rotation and position information for a swing arm to a control system. A control system commands and coordinates motion of the fast tool servo with the motion of a spindle, rotating table, cross-feed slide, and in-feed slide of a precision lathe.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 1, 2004Publication date: March 17, 2005Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventor: David Trumper
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Publication number: 20050057756Abstract: Preferred embodiments of the present invention are directed to systems for phase measurement which address the problem of phase noise using combinations of a number of strategies including, but not limited to, common-path interferometry, phase referencing, active stabilization and differential measurement. Embodiment are directed to optical devices for imaging small biological objects with light. These embodiments can be applied to the fields of, for example, cellular physiology and neuroscience. These preferred embodiments are based on principles of phase measurements and imaging technologies. The scientific motivation for using phase measurements and imaging technologies is derived from, for example, cellular biology at the sub-micron level which can include, without limitation, imaging origins of dysplasia, cellular communication, neuronal transmission and implementation of the genetic code.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 13, 2004Publication date: March 17, 2005Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Christopher Fang-Yen, Gabriel Popescu, Changhuei Yang, Adam Wax, Ramachandra Dasari, Michael Feld
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Patent number: 6867298Abstract: The present invention relates to copper-catalyzed carbon-heteroatom and carbon-carbon bond-forming methods. In certain embodiments, the present invention relates to copper-catalyzed methods of forming a carbon-nitrogen bond between the nitrogen atom of an amide or amine moiety and the activated carbon of an aryl, heteroaryl, or vinyl halide or sulfonate. In additional embodiments, the present invention relates to copper-catalyzed methods of forming a carbon-nitrogen bond between a nitrogen atom of an acyl hydrazine and the activated carbon of an aryl, heteroaryl, or vinyl halide or sulfonate. In other embodiments, the present invention relates to copper-catalyzed methods of forming a carbon-nitrogen bond between the nitrogen atom of a nitrogen-containing heteroaromatic, e.g., indole, pyrazole, and indazole, and the activated carbon of an aryl, heteroaryl, or vinyl halide or sulfonate.Type: GrantFiled: May 8, 2003Date of Patent: March 15, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Stephen L. Buchwald, Artis Klapars, Jon C. Antilla, Gabriel E. Job, Martina Wolter, Fuk Y. Kwong, Gero Nordmann, Edward J. Hennessy
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Patent number: 6867310Abstract: The present invention provides transition-metal-catalyst-based methods for the arylation and vinylation of activated methyl, methylene, and methine carbons with aryl halides, vinyl halides, and the like. The methods of the invention provide several improvements over existing methods, including the ability to synthesize efficiently and under mild conditions ?-aryl and ?-vinyl products from a wide range of starting materials, including ketones, esters, hydrazones, and imines. Furthermore, the methods of the invention may be used in an asymmetric sense, i.e. to produce enantiomerically-enriched chiral ?-aryl and ?-vinyl products.Type: GrantFiled: January 27, 1999Date of Patent: March 15, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Stephen L. Buchwald, John P. Wolfe, Jens Ahman, Malisa Troutman, Michael Palucki, Ken Kamikawa, Andre Chieffi
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Patent number: 6867415Abstract: An interface for introducing a non-gaseous sample as a predetermined gaseous form into an accelerator mass spectrometer which comprises a nebulizer that receives the non-gaseous sample to provide a fine spray of the sample, a converter that receives at least a portion of said fine spray and converts the desired elements to the predetermined gaseous form and a flow line that transports the predetermined gaseous form to the accelerator mass spectrometer.Type: GrantFiled: August 23, 2001Date of Patent: March 15, 2005Assignees: Newton Scientific, Inc., Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Barbara J. Hughey, Paul L. Skipper, John S. Wishnok, Ruth E. Shefer, Naomi A. Fried, John T. Mehl, Steven R. Tannenbaum
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Publication number: 20050053345Abstract: The invention provides techniques for drawing fibers that include conducting, semiconducting, and insulating materials in intimate contact and prescribed geometries. The resulting fiber exhibits engineered electrical and optical functionalities along extended fiber lengths. The invention provides corresponding processes for producing such fibers, including assembling a fiber preform of a plurality of distinct materials, e.g., of conducting, semiconducting, and insulating materials, and drawing the preform into a fiber.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 14, 2004Publication date: March 10, 2005Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Mehmet Bayindir, Fabien Sorin, Dursen Hinczewski, Shandon Hart, Yoel Fink, John Joannopoulos
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Patent number: 6865245Abstract: A guide ring is positioned in the reactor core vessel of a pebble-bed nuclear reactor to segregate fuel pebbles and reflector pebbles fed into the vessel through respective conduits. The reflector pebbles pass through the guide ring and form a central reflector column, while the fuel pebbles pass outside the guide ring and form an annular fuel column surrounding the central reflector column. The guide ring controls the size and shape of the reflector column and controls mixing of the two types of pebbles.Type: GrantFiled: October 3, 2002Date of Patent: March 8, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventor: Martin Z. Bazant
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Patent number: 6863220Abstract: A radio operated data card whose outer jacket forms a sealed protected housing for internal electrical components, including an RFID integrated circuit which incorporates data storage and a radio frequency transceiver, an on card antenna, and manually operated, normally open electrical switch contacts connected between the on-card electronic circuitry and the antenna. The open switch contacts normally disable the card, protecting the data on the card from being surreptitiously read until the switch contacts are intentionally closed by the cardholder to enable data transfer to occur. The cardholder may activate the card by applying external pressure to the surface of the card at a predetermined position, closing the switch contacts which open again automatically when pressure is removed. A tactile indicia on the surface of the card allows the cardholder to determine by touch where the card should be pressed to enable data transfers to occur.Type: GrantFiled: December 31, 2002Date of Patent: March 8, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventor: Edwin Joseph Selker
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Patent number: 6863781Abstract: Embodiments for the invention include a process for the production of hydrogen comprising a protic solution, a photocatalyst capable of a two-electron reduction of hydrogen ions; and a coproduct trap. The embodiment includes exposing the reaction medium to radiation capable of photoexciting the photocatalyst to produce hydrogen. The protic solution may comprise at least one of hydrohalic acid, a silane, and water, and the hydrohalic acid may be hydrochloric acid, hydrogen bromide, hydrogen fluoride or hydrogen iodide. The present application also describes novel transition metal compounds. Embodiments of the compounds include a compound comprising two transition metal atoms, wherein the transition metal atoms are in a two-electron mixed valence state and at least one transition metal is not rhodium; and at least one ligand capable of stabilizing the transition metal atom in a two-electron mixed valence state.Type: GrantFiled: February 26, 2002Date of Patent: March 8, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Daniel G. Nocera, Alan F. Heyduk
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Patent number: 6865246Abstract: A three-dimensional image of an object scanned with a plurality of cone-beam projections from a number of source positions is reconstructed using a method wherein intermediate transform functions are obtained from two-dimensional images of radiation attenuation in the scanned object. The intermediate transform functions are then filtered over a set of parallel planes using a moving-frame technique. The second-order radial derivative of the Radon transform can then be backprojected to generate an intermediate, locally-reconstructed, three-dimensional image. After repetition of this process, the plurality of intermediate, locally reconstructed, three-dimensional images are summed to obtain an ultimate, reconstructed, three-dimensional image of the object. In particular embodiments, the source and detector are displaced along helical paths and radiation scans of the object are taken at multiple positions along the paths.Type: GrantFiled: March 26, 2003Date of Patent: March 8, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventor: Xiaochun Yang
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Patent number: 6864822Abstract: A reconfigurable ADC includes a plurality of reconfigurable blocks for allowing the ADC to provide a plurality of architectures. In one embodiment, the ADC can be configured to operate in a pipeline mode and a sigma-delta mode. This arrangement provides an ADC having a relatively large range of bandwidth and resolution.Type: GrantFiled: January 12, 2004Date of Patent: March 8, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Kush Gulati, Hae-Seung Lee
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Publication number: 20050048079Abstract: The present invention relates to a method of inducing a CD8+ CTL response to a molecule in an individual deficient in CD4+ T cells comprising administering to the individual an hsp or a portion of an ATP binding domain of an hsp joined to the molecule. In one embodiment, the present invention relates to a method of treating HIV in an individual deficient in CD4+ T cells comprising administering to the individual an hsp or a portion of an ATP binding domain of an hsp joined to the molecule. Also encompassed by the present invention is a method of inducing a CD4+ independent CTL response in an individual comprising administering to the individual a portion of an ATP binding domain of an hsp joined to the molecule. The present invention also relates to a method of inducing a CD8+ CTL response in an individual comprising administering to the individual a portion of an ATP binding domain of an hsp joined to the molecule.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 1, 2004Publication date: March 3, 2005Applicants: Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Qian Huang, Joan Richmond, Bryan Cho, Deborah Palliser, Jianzhu Chen, Herman Eisen, Richard Young
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Patent number: 6861254Abstract: Disclosed are novel isolated nucleic acids and substantially pure protein preparations for naturally occurring and synthetic or chimeric heparan sulfate D-glicosaminyl 3-O-sulfo-transferases (3-OSTs). Also disclosed are uses for these genes and proteins, including uses for the modification and sequencing of glycosaminoglycans.Type: GrantFiled: April 24, 2000Date of Patent: March 1, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Robert D. Rosenberg, Nicholas W. Shworak, Jian Liu, Linda M. S. Fritze, John J. Schwartz, Lijuan Zhang
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Patent number: 6861155Abstract: A coated nanocrystal capable of light emission includes a substantially monodisperse nanoparticle selected from the group consisting of CdX, where x=S, Se, Te and an overcoating of ZnY, where Y=S, Se, uniformly deposited thereon, said coated nanoparticle characterized in that when irradiated the particles exhibit photoluminescence in a narrow spectral range of no greater than about 60 nm, and most preferably 40 nm, at full width half max (FWHM). The particle size of the nanocrystallite core is in the range of about 20 ? to about 125 ?, with a deviation of less than 10% in the core. The coated nanocrystal exhibits photoluminescence having quantum yields of greater than 30%.Type: GrantFiled: August 19, 2003Date of Patent: March 1, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Moungi Bawendi, Klaus F. Jensen, Bashir O. Dabbousi, Javier Rodriguez-Viejo, Frederic Victor Mikulec
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Publication number: 20050044407Abstract: A system and method for communicating data from a low security assurance source to a high security assurance destination in which information data is transferred from the low end source to the high end destination, but acknowledgments from the high end destination are not directly returned back to the originating source. Rather, receipt of an acknowledgment from a high end destination triggers the generation of a new acknowledgment which is then transmitted back to the originating low end source to acknowledge receipt of the information data. The low end acknowledgment may be generated from an acknowledgment template in which the data payload is empty.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 19, 2003Publication date: February 24, 2005Applicant: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Douglas Marquis, James Calvin
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Patent number: 6859571Abstract: A system of integrating electronic and optical functions includes an electronic chip that also includes monolithic IC electronics for performing electronic functions. Furthermore, the electronic chip includes a plurality of solder bumps for receiving input for processing. An optical chip receives an optical signal and performs optical functions on the signal, and outputs electrical signals indicative of the optical functions performed on the signal. Moreover, the optical chip includes a plurality of solder bumps for sending the electrical signals as input to the electronic chip. The solder bumps of the electronic chip and optical chip are bonded to together so that a hybrid integration is formed that separates the yield of the optical and electrical circuits forming the electronic and optical chip.Type: GrantFiled: October 25, 2002Date of Patent: February 22, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventor: Lionel C. Kimerling
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Patent number: 6859321Abstract: A photonic bandgap device includes a first mirror region including alternating layers of different materials. A second mirror region includes alternating layers of different materials. An air gap cavity region is positioned between the first mirror region and second region. The air gap cavity changes its thickness when a voltage is applied so that the device is tuned to a particular resonant wavelength.Type: GrantFiled: March 28, 2003Date of Patent: February 22, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Lionel C. Kimerling, Kazumi Wada, Yasha Yi
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Patent number: 6859801Abstract: The invention features a method and system for identifying a plurality of tags using an efficient memoryless protocol. The system includes a reader and a plurality of tags. The reader is adapted to maintain an ordered set of query strings; select a string from the set of query strings; broadcast a query message containing the selected string or a portion of the selected string to the tags; and receive a response from one of the tags. The tags operate without batteries and are adapted to respond to the selected string broadcast by the reader. Accordingly, the tag identification methods are efficient in terms of both time and communication complexities.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 2001Date of Patent: February 22, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Ching Law, Kayi Lee, Kai-Yeung Siu
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Patent number: 6859268Abstract: A real-time optical compensating apparatus reduces the PMD in an optical fiber by determining the principal states of polarization of the optical fiber and delaying one principal state of polarization with respect to the other.Type: GrantFiled: February 15, 2001Date of Patent: February 22, 2005Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyInventors: Patrick C. Chou, John M. Fini, Hermann A. Haus