Patents by Inventor James DeBartolomeis

James DeBartolomeis 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: 6224882
    Abstract: Disclosed and claimed is an adjuvant for immunogenic, immunological, antigenic or vaccine compositions. The adjuvant is composed of insect cells or fractions thereof. Disclosed and claimed are also methods for preparing and using the adjuvant and compositions containing the adjuvant. Advantageously, a recombinant baculovirus containing DNA encoding and expressing an epitope of interest or antigen can be infected into insect cells such as insect cells derived from a Lepidopteran species such as S. frugiperda for expression, and the infected insect cells or a fraction thereof can be used with the expressed epitope of interest or antigen as an inventive antigen or in an inventive immunological, antigen or vaccine composition.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 7, 1997
    Date of Patent: May 1, 2001
    Assignee: Protein Science Corp.
    Inventors: Gale Eugene Smith, James DeBartolomeis, Andrei Igorevitch Voznesenski
  • Patent number: 6103526
    Abstract: Disclosed and claimed is a new insect cell line, Sf900+, ATCC CRL-12579. The insect cell line was established from Lepidoptera, Noctuidae, Spodoptera frugiperda Sf-9 (ATCC CRL-1771) through multiple rounds of limiting dilution and selection in a serum-free insect medium supplemented with added human insulin. The insect cell line is useful in BEVS or as an adjuvant and has many characteristics and advantages. Also disclosed and claimed are recombinant proteins from recombinant baculovirus expression in insect cells such as Sf900+ cells, for instance, HA, NA, EPO, CD4, CEA, and thrombospondin.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 8, 1998
    Date of Patent: August 15, 2000
    Assignee: Protein Sciences Corporation
    Inventors: Gale E. Smith, Harald G. Foellmer, John Knell, James DeBartolomeis, Andrei I. Voznesensky