Patents by Inventor Benjamin Leslie James Godber

Benjamin Leslie James Godber 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: 10870925
    Abstract: Protein arrays and their use to assay, in a parallel fashion, the protein products of highly homologous or related DNA coding sequences and described. By highly homologous or related it is meant those DNA coding sequences which share a common sequence and which differ only by one or more naturally occurring mutations such as single nucleotide polymorphisms, deletions or insertions, or those sequences which are considered to be haplotypes. Such highly homologous or related DNA coding sequences are generally naturally occurring variants of the same gene. Arrays according to the invention have two or more individual proteins deposited in a spatially defined pattern on a surface in a form whereby a property such as an activity or function of the proteins can be investigated or assayed in parallel by interrogation of the array.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 3, 2018
    Date of Patent: December 22, 2020
    Assignee: SENGENICS CORPORATION PTE LTD
    Inventors: Jonathan Mark Boutell, Benjamin Leslie James Godber, Darren James Hart, Jonathan Michael Blackburn
  • Publication number: 20180305840
    Abstract: Protein arrays and their use to assay, in a parallel fashion, the protein products of highly homologous or related DNA coding sequences and described. By highly homologous or related it is meant those DNA coding sequences which share a common sequence and which differ only by one or more naturally occurring mutations such as single nucleotide polymorphisms, deletions or insertions, or those sequences which are considered to be haplotypes. Such highly homologous or related DNA coding sequences are generally naturally occurring variants of the same gene. Arrays according to the invention have two or more individual proteins deposited in a spatially defined pattern on a surface in a form whereby a property such as an activity or function of the proteins can be investigated or assayed in parallel by interrogation of the array.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 3, 2018
    Publication date: October 25, 2018
    Inventors: Jonathan Mark BOUTELL, Benjamin Leslie James GODBER, Darren James HART, Jonathan Michael BLACKBURN
  • Publication number: 20090239761
    Abstract: The inventors herein describe methods for the production of a functional human, animal, plant or microbe protein arrays and methods to assay for interactions between the proteins on the array with molecules of interest, for example, using such arrays to determine the in vitro metabolite profile of any drug. Such protein arrays can be used, for example, to assay, in a parallel fashion, the protein products of DNA sequences encoding drug metabolizing enzymes (DMES) to obtain a toxicology profile. Also described herein is a novel DME expression and purification strategy using detergents and not requiring an ultra-centrifugation step.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 10, 2008
    Publication date: September 24, 2009
    Inventors: Jonathan Michael Blackburn, Benjamin Leslie James Godber, Darren James Hart, Nicholas A. Bockett, Roland Kozlowski, Michael Dyson
  • Publication number: 20040002078
    Abstract: Protein arrays and their use to assay, in a parallel fashion, the protein products of highly homologous or related DNA coding sequences and described. By highly homologous or related it is meant those DNA coding sequences which share a common sequence and which differ only by one or more naturally occurring mutations such as single nucleotide polymorphisms, deletions or insertions, or those sequences which are considered to be haplotypes. Such highly homologous or related DNA coding sequences are generally naturally occurring variants of the same gene. Arrays according to the invention have two or more individual proteins deposited in a spatially defined pattern on a surface in a form whereby a property such as an activity or function of the proteins can be investigated or assayed in parallel by interrogation of the array.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 5, 2002
    Publication date: January 1, 2004
    Applicant: Sense Proteomic Limited
    Inventors: Jonathan Mark Boutell, Benjamin Leslie James Godber, Darren James Hart, Jonathan Michael Blackburn