Patents by Inventor Daniela Witten

Daniela Witten 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: 10815277
    Abstract: The invention relates to inhibitory nucleotide signal sequences or “INS” sequences in the genomes of lentiviruses. In particular the invention relates to the AGG motif present in all viral genomes. The AGG motif may have an inhibitory effect on a virus, for example by reducing the levels of, or maintaining low steady-state levels of, viral RNAs in host cells, and inducing and/or maintaining in viral latency. In one aspect, the invention provides vaccines that contain, or are produced from, viral nucleic acids in which the AGG sequences have been mutated. In another aspect, the invention provides methods and compositions for affecting the function of the AGG motif, and methods for identifying other INS sequences in viral genomes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 2016
    Date of Patent: October 27, 2020
    Assignee: INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY
    Inventors: Raul Rabadan, Michael Krasnitz, Harlan Robins, Daniela Witten, Arnold Levine
  • Publication number: 20170073376
    Abstract: The invention relates to inhibitory nucleotide signal sequences or “INS” sequences in the genomes of lentiviruses. In particular the invention relates to the AGG motif present in all viral genomes. The AGG motif may have an inhibitory effect on a virus, for example by reducing the levels of, or maintaining low steady-state levels of, viral RNAs in host cells, and inducing and/or maintaining in viral latency. In one aspect, the invention provides vaccines that contain, or are produced from, viral nucleic acids in which the AGG sequences have been mutated. In another aspect, the invention provides methods and compositions for affecting the function of the AGG motif, and methods for identifying other INS sequences in viral genomes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 4, 2016
    Publication date: March 16, 2017
    Inventors: Raul RABADAN, Michael KRASNITZ, Harlan ROBINS, Daniela WITTEN, Arnold LEVINE
  • Publication number: 20160357903
    Abstract: Current methods for annotating and interpreting human genetic variation typically exploit only a single information type (e.g., conservation) and/or are restricted in scope (e.g., to missense changes). Here, a method for objectively integrating many diverse annotations into a single measure (integrated deleteriousness score, or C-score) for each variant is described. The method may be implemented as a support vector machine (SVM) trained to differentiate high-frequency human-derived alleles from simulated variants. C-scores were precomputed for all 8.6 billion possible human single-nucleotide variants and allow scoring of short insertions-deletions. C-scores correlate with allelic diversity, annotations of functionality, pathogenicity, disease severity, experimentally measured regulatory effects and complex trait associations, and they highly rank known pathogenic variants within individual genomes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 20, 2014
    Publication date: December 8, 2016
    Applicants: University of Washington through its Center for Commercialization, Hudsonsalpha Institute for Biotechnology
    Inventors: Jay Shendure, Gregory M Cooper, Martin Kircher, Daniela Witten
  • Patent number: 9422342
    Abstract: The invention relates to inhibitory nucleotide signal sequences or “INS” sequences in the genomes of lentiviruses. In particular the invention relates to the AGG motif present in all viral genomes. The AGG motif may have an inhibitory effect on a virus, for example by reducing the levels of, or maintaining low steady-state levels of, viral RNAs in host cells, and inducing and/or maintaining in viral latency. In one aspect, the invention provides vaccines that contain, or are produced from, viral nucleic acids in which the AGG sequences have been mutated. In another aspect, the invention provides methods and compositions for affecting the function of the AGG motif, and methods for identifying other INS sequences in viral genomes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 12, 2007
    Date of Patent: August 23, 2016
    Assignee: Institute of Advanced Study
    Inventors: Raul Rabadan, Michael Krasnitz, Harlan Robins, Daniela Witten, Arnold Levine
  • Publication number: 20100203081
    Abstract: The invention relates to inhibitory nucleotide signal sequences or “INS” sequences in the genomes of lentiviruses. In particular the invention relates to the AGG motif present in all viral genomes. The AGG motif may have an inhibitory effect on a virus, for example by reducing the levels of, or maintaining low steady-state levels of, viral RNAs in host cells, and inducing and/or maintaining in viral latency. In one aspect, the invention provides vaccines that contain, or are produced from, viral nucleic acids in which the AGG sequences have been mutated. In another aspect, the invention provides methods and compositions for affecting the function of the AGG motif, and methods for identifying other INS sequences in viral genomes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 12, 2007
    Publication date: August 12, 2010
    Applicant: INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY
    Inventors: Raul Rabadan, Michael Krasnitz, Harlan Robins, Daniela Witten, Arnold Levine