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Posts by Nanbiosis

U26-S03. Metabolomic Studies

Metabolomic Studies

The service is intended for undergoing metabolic studies. Thanks to a 14 T NMR equipment equipped with thermostatic automatic sampler.

Customer benefits

The service is integrated in the University of Valencia core facility that ensures the correct maintenance and the offsite service runed by technicians under ISO 9001.

Target customer

The primary audience are clinic groups that require massive metabolic studies for research either in plasma or urine or other biofluids.

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U26-S02. NMR experiments in solid state

NMR experiments in solid state

The service is intended for the determination of the structure of insoluble organic compounds, inorganic materials, nanomaterials, Studies of their modifications. Thanks to a 9.4 T solid NMR equipment.

Customer benefits

The service is integrated in the University of Valencia core facility that ensures the correct maintenance and the offsite service runed by two technicians under ISO 9001.

Target customer

The primary audience are groups working on materials or nanomaterials, enterprises that require solid nmr to performe quality control.

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U26-S01. Acquisition of mono and bidimensional spectra

Acquisition of mono and bidimensional spectra

The service is intended for the determination of the structure of organic compounds, metabolomics, diffusion studies. Thanks to a 11.7 T NMR equipment.

Customer benefits

The service is integrated in the University of Valencia core facility that ensures the correct maintenance and the option of offsite service runed by two technicians under ISO 9001.

Target customer

The primary audience is synthetic organic chemistry, enterprises that require nmr to performe quality control, other unknown materials that require elucidation such as synthetic abuse drugs.

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U24-S01 Evaluation of therapies for cardiovascular disease

Evaluation of therapies for cardiovascular disease

With cardiovascular disease consistently representing a major cause of death worldwide, a platform to perform experimental studies testing the efficacy of candidate therapies for CVD is necessary.
The methodology implemented in NANBIOSIS Unit 24 for this purpose has been tested and validated in several papers (Refs below). In brief, CVD is induced in a relevant large animal model (i.e. myocardial infarction and swine) using image guided surgical techniques (i.e. percutaneous balloon occlusion of a coronary artery for a pre-determined amount of time). Once the model is established, the therapy under study is applied and the experimental subjects followed up for a fixed length of time. Clinical grade imaging (i.e. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance including delayed enhancement) and laboratory techniques are used to follow up and document the evolution of the induced CVD. Generally, image acquisition is performed at baseline and serially during the predetermined duration of the study in order to study the effect of the therapy on measurable endpoints (i.e. left ventricular ejection fraction) to document improvement.

Customer benefits

The studies are tailored to the needs of each specific candidate intervention, can be implemented with different follow-up times and can be performed under regulatory requirements, since the performing institution is Certified for Good Laboratory Practices.
Thus the Service can be provided as proof-of-concept studies, full safety and efficacy or under GLPs to meet regulatory agencies’ guidelines and assure clinical translation, so that the customers can take their therapy to a clinical trial faster and more efficiently, thanks to the full range of capabilities offered in this service.

Target customer

The offered service can be of interest to scientists from academia willing to test a possible CVD therapy, including biologicals, small companies that have a candidate molecule which is promising enough to warrant large animal trials or big pharma willing to undergo GLP studies to commercialize their product.

References

  • Aimo A et al. Colchicine added to standard therapy further reduces fibrosis in pigs with myocardial infarction. J Cardiovasc Med (Hagerstown). 2023 Nov 1;24(11):840-846. doi: 10.2459/JCM.0000000000001554. Epub 2023 Sep 29. PMID: 37773884.
  • Österberg K et al. Personalized tissue-engineered veins – long term safety, functionality and cellular transcriptome analysis in large animals. Biomater Sci. 2023 May 30;11(11):3860-3877. doi: 10.1039/d2bm02011d. PMID: 37078624.
  • Pulido M et al. Transcriptome Profile Reveals Differences between Remote and Ischemic Myocardium after Acute Myocardial Infarction in a Swine Model. Biology (Basel). 2023 Feb 21;12(3):340. doi: 10.3390/biology12030340. PMID: 36979032; PMCID: PMC10045039.
  • Blanco-Blázquez V et al Intracoronary Administration of Microencapsulated HGF in a Reperfused Myocardial Infarction Swine Model. J Cardiovasc Dev Dis. 2023 Feb 17;10(2):86. doi: 10.3390/jcdd10020086. PMID: 36826582; PMCID: PMC9960949.
  • Arenal Á et al. Effects of Cardiac Stem Cell on Postinfarction Arrhythmogenic Substrate. Int J Mol Sci. 2022 Dec 19;23(24):16211. doi: 10.3390/ijms232416211. PMID: 36555857; PMCID: PMC9781106.
  • Báez-Díaz C et al. Intrapericardial Delivery of APA-Microcapsules as Promising Stem Cell Therapy Carriers in an Experimental Acute Myocardial Infarction Model. Pharmaceutics. 2021 Nov 1;13(11):1824. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13111824. PMID: 34834235; PMCID: PMC8626005.
  • Crisóstomo V et al. The epicardial delivery of cardiosphere derived cells or their extracellular vesicles is safe but of limited value in experimental infarction. Sci Rep. 2021 Nov 12;11(1):22155. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-01728-y. PMID: 34772964; PMCID: PMC8590017.
  • Prat-Vidal C et al. Intracoronary Delivery of Porcine Cardiac Progenitor Cells Overexpressing IGF-1 and HGF in a Pig Model of Sub-Acute Myocardial Infarction. Cells. 2021 Sep 28;10(10):2571. doi: 10.3390/cells10102571. PMID: 34685551; PMCID: PMC8534140.
  • Ziani K et al. Characterization of encapsulated porcine cardiosphere-derived cells embedded in 3D alginate matrices. Int J Pharm. 2021 Apr 15;599:120454. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpharm.2021.120454. Epub 2021 Mar 5. PMID: 33676988.
  • Rossello X et al. CIBER-CLAP (CIBERCV Cardioprotection Large Animal Platform): A multicenter preclinical network for testing reproducibility in cardiovascular interventions. Sci Rep. 2019 Dec 30;9(1):20290. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-56613-6. PMID: 31889088; PMCID: PMC6937304.
  • Crisostomo V et al. Dose-dependent improvement of cardiac function in a swine model of acute myocardial infarction after intracoronary administration of allogeneic heart-derived cells. Stem Cell Res Ther. 2019 May 31;10(1):152. doi: 10.1186/s13287-019-1237-6. PMID: 31151405; PMCID: PMC6544975.
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U20-S08. Immunotoxicity assays (On-site&Remote) OUTSTANDING

Immunotoxicity assays

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U20-S07. In vivo PK/PD assays (Remote) OUTSTANDING

In vivo PK/PD assays

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U20-S06. In vivo ADME and biodistribution assays (Remote) OUTSTANDING

In vivo ADME and biodistribution assays

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U20-E04. General laboratory equipment

General laboratory equipment

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U26-E06. Gilson 215 liquid handler for automated sample preparation of liquid samples

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U26-E04. Bruker DPX300 spectrometer(7 T) with standard entrance, and two RF channels.

Accessories:

  • 5mm QNP (1H, 13C, 31P and 19F), with pneumatic accessory for automatic nucleus change and field gradients along the z axis.
  • BACS autosampler for 60 samples.
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