Patents by Inventor Steven W. Short

Steven W. Short 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).

  • Publication number: 20170021366
    Abstract: Individual biological cells can be selected in a micro-fluidic device and moved into isolation pens in the device. The cells can then be lysed in the pens, releasing nucleic acid material, which can be captured by one or more capture objects in the pens. The capture objects with the captured nucleic acid material can then be removed from the pens. The capture objects can include unique identifiers, allowing each capture object to be correlated to the individual cell from which the nucleic acid material captured by the object originated.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 18, 2014
    Publication date: January 26, 2017
    Applicant: Berkeley Lights, Inc.
    Inventors: Kevin T. Chapman, Eric D. Hobbs, Steven W. Short, Mark P. White, Daniele Malleo
  • Publication number: 20160318038
    Abstract: A microfluidic optoelectronic tweezers (OET) device can comprise dielectrophoresis (DEP) electrodes that can be activated and deactivated by controlling a beam of light directed onto photosensitive elements that are disposed in locations that are spaced apart from the DEP electrodes. The photosensitive elements can be photodiodes, which can switch the switch mechanisms that connect the DEP electrodes to a power electrode between an off state and an on state.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 11, 2016
    Publication date: November 3, 2016
    Inventors: Steven W. Short, Ming C. Wu
  • Patent number: 9403172
    Abstract: A microfluidic optoelectronic tweezers (OET) device can comprise dielectrophoresis (DEP) electrodes that can be activated and deactivated by controlling a beam of light directed onto photosensitive elements that are disposed in locations that are spaced apart from the DEP electrodes. The photosensitive elements can be photodiodes, which can switch the switch mechanisms that connect the DEP electrodes to a power electrode between an off state and an on state.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 10, 2013
    Date of Patent: August 2, 2016
    Assignee: Berkeley Lights, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven W. Short, Ming C. Wu
  • Publication number: 20150306598
    Abstract: A microfluidic apparatus can comprise a dielectrophoresis (DEP) configured section for holding a first liquid medium and selectively inducing net DEP forces in the first liquid medium. The microfluidic apparatus can also comprise an electrowetting (EW) configured section for holding a second liquid medium on an electrowetting surface and selectively changing a wetting property of the electrowetting surface. The DEP configured section can be utilized to select and move a micro-object in the first liquid medium. The EW configured section can be utilized to pull a droplet of the first liquid medium into the second liquid medium.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 25, 2014
    Publication date: October 29, 2015
    Applicant: Berkeley Lights, Inc.
    Inventors: Igor Y. Khandros, J. Tanner Nevill, Steven W. Short, Ming C. Wu
  • Publication number: 20150306599
    Abstract: A structure for providing a boundary for a chamber in a microfluidic apparatus can comprise dielectrophoresis (DEP) configurations each having an outer surface and electrowetting (EW) configurations each having an electrowetting surface. The DEP configurations can facilitate generating net DEP forces with respect to the outer surfaces of the DEP configurations to move micro-objects on the outer surfaces, and the EW configurations can facilitate changing wetting properties of the electrowetting surfaces to move droplets of liquid medium on the electrowetting surfaces.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 25, 2014
    Publication date: October 29, 2015
    Applicant: Berkeley Lights, Inc.
    Inventors: Igor Y. Khandros, Daniele Malleo, J. Tanner Nevill, Steven W. Short, Ming C. Wu
  • Publication number: 20150165436
    Abstract: Biological activity in holding pens in a micro-fluidic device can be assayed by placing in the holding pens capture objects that bind a particular material of interest produced by the biological activity. The biological material of interest that binds to each capture object can then be assessed, either in the micro-fluidic device or after exporting the capture object from the micro-fluidic device. The assessment can be utilized to characterize the biological activity in each holding pen. The biological activity can be production of the biological material of interest. Thus, the biological activity can correspond to or arise from one or more biological cells. Biological cells within a holding pen can be clonal cell colonies. The biological activity of each clonal cell colony can be assayed while maintaining the clonal status of each colony.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 22, 2014
    Publication date: June 18, 2015
    Inventors: Kevin T. Chapman, Daniele Malleo, J. Tanner Nevill, Steven W. Short, Mark P. White
  • Publication number: 20150166326
    Abstract: Individual biological cells can be selected in a micro-fluidic device and moved into isolation pens in the device. The cells can then be lysed in the pens, releasing nucleic acid material, which can be captured by one or more capture objects in the pens. The capture objects with the captured nucleic acid material can then be removed from the pens. The capture objects can include unique identifiers, allowing each capture object to be correlated to the individual cell from which the nucleic acid material captured by the object originated.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 18, 2013
    Publication date: June 18, 2015
    Applicant: Berkeley Lights, Inc.
    Inventors: Kevin T. Chapman, Eric D. Hobbs, Steven W. Short, Mark P. White
  • Publication number: 20150151298
    Abstract: A microfluidic device can comprise at least one swept region that is fluidically connected to unswept regions. The fluidic connections between the swept region and the unswept regions can enable diffusion but substantially no flow of media between the swept region and the unswept regions. The capability of biological micro-objects to produce an analyte of interest can be assayed in such a microfluidic device. Biological micro-objects in sample material loaded into a microfluidic device can be selected for particular characteristics and disposed into unswept regions. The sample material can then be flowed out of the swept region and an assay material flowed into the swept region. Flows of medium in the swept region do not substantially affect the biological micro-objects in the unswept regions, but any analyte of interest produced by a biological micro-object can diffuse from an unswept region into the swept region, where the analyte can react with the assay material to produce a localized detectable reaction.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 22, 2014
    Publication date: June 4, 2015
    Inventors: Eric D. Hobbs, Mark P. White, J. Tanner Nevill, Daniele Malleo, Steven W. Short
  • Publication number: 20140124370
    Abstract: A microfluidic optoelectronic tweezers (OET) device can comprise dielectrophoresis (DEP) electrodes that can be activated and deactivated by controlling a beam of light directed onto photosensitive elements that are disposed in locations that are spaced apart from the DEP electrodes. The photosensitive elements can be photodiodes, which can switch the switch mechanisms that connect the DEP electrodes to a power electrode between an off state and an on state.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 10, 2013
    Publication date: May 8, 2014
    Applicant: Berkeley Lights, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven W. Short, Ming C. Wu
  • Publication number: 20140017791
    Abstract: Two or more biological micro-objects can be grouped in a liquid medium in a chamber. Grouping can comprise bringing into and holding in proximity or contact the micro-objects in a group, breaching the membrane of one or more of the micro-objects in a group, subjecting one or more of the micro-objects in a group to electroporation, and/or tethering to each other the micro-objects in a group. The micro-objects in the group can then be combined into a single biological object.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 12, 2013
    Publication date: January 16, 2014
    Inventors: Kevin T. Chapman, Igor Y. Khandros, Gaetan L. Mathieu, Steven W. Short, Ming C. Wu