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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SDSU Technology to Help Develop New
Antibiotics
SDSU Licenses Two Gene-Targeting
Patents to Merck Pharmaceuticals
CONTACT: Aaron Hoskins
SDSU College of Extended Studies
(619) 594-1119
ahoskins@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Monday, November 8, 2004 -- Two new
and improved methods of developing antibiotics discovered at San
Diego State University have been licensed to Merck Pharmaceuticals
for $300,000, the largest technology transfer agreement so far for
SDSU.
The technology, which uncovered hundreds of new
essential genes and greatly enhances the ability to target those
genes for new antibiotics, was developed by SDSU researchers Judith
Zyskind and R. Allyn Forsyth. Zyskind, a professor at the time of
the discoveries, is the director of the SDSU BioScience Center.
Forsyth was a graduate student at the time of the discoveries and
is now a Merck employee.
The license agreement gives Merck exclusive use
of the technology for four years with a renewable option. SDSU still
holds the two patents for the technology, and SDSU faculty and students
also can use the technology for their projects.
The emergence and global dissemination of
antibiotic resistant pathogens has led to people dying from infectious
diseases, Zyskind said. These discoveries strengthen
the arsenal against infectious diseases by hastening the arrival
of the next generation of antibiotics.
Merck negotiated the license agreement through
SDSUs Technology Transfer Service Office. The SDSU Foundation
established it in 1998 to facilitate and enhance the transfer of
intellectual property, resources and information between the university
and the private sector.
The agreement with Merck is a perfect example
of how sharing new, university-based technologies with forward-thinking
businesses leads to advances that improve our lives in this
case in health care, said Barry Janov, director of the SDSU
technology transfer program.
Zyskind said BioScience Center researchers will
use the technology to further investigate the emerging link between
infectious diseases and the nations No. 1 killer heart
disease.
Diseases such as athlerosclerosis and diabetes
have been thought to result from lifestyle and genetic factors,
but the latest information shows infectious diseases may be a significant
risk factor, Zyskind said. That means developing new
antibiotics could become more important for preventing disease in
the future.
San Diego State University is the oldest and largest
higher education institution in the San Diego region. Since it was
founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer bachelors
degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees in 72 areas and doctorates
in 16 areas. SDSUs more than 33,000 students participate in
academic curriculum distinguished by direct contact with faculty
and an increasing international emphasis that prepares them for
a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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