Atum issued patents for genome engineering

By The Science Advisory Board staff writers

August 11, 2021 -- The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has issued three patents to bioengineering solutions provider Atum. The newly issued patents cover three novel transposase/transposon pairs, adding to Atum's existing two patents within the company's Leap-In Transposase toolbox.

The three patents -- 11,060,098, 11,060,109, and 11,060,086 -- are for three additional orthogonal enzymes and expand the scope of the company's Leap-In Transposase platform. The pairs were engineered using Atum's ProteinGPS platform, which enables the rapid generation of stable transposon integrations and the controlled excision of genetic elements.

With the addition of the new genome engineering technology, the company believes it can apply its bioengineering tools to a spectrum of complex, multidimensional bioengineering applications on the genome level.

Atum's transposon- and transposase-based platform addresses some of the limitations of CRISPR-Cas9 editing technology and has direct applications for efficient recombinant protein expression, cell line development, cell and gene therapy, and other genomic engineering applications, according to the company.


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