| WARF: P98004US | ![]() |
| Microbial Systems for Formaldehyde Sensing and Remediation |
| INVENTORS | • | Timothy Donohue, Robert Barber, Vernon Witthuhn |
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) is seeking commercial partners interested in developing a system for detecting formaldehyde.
OVERVIEW
Formaldehyde is a probable human carcinogen. It is present in the environment and produced by several industrial processes. Currently, the only methods of detection are chemical monitors, which are time-consuming, exhibit variable sensitivity and are prone to cross-reactivity with other aldehydes.
THE INVENTION
UW-Madison researchers have developed a gene regulation system that responds to the presence of formaldehyde. This system can be induced at the transcriptional level when a cell is exposed to formaldehyde. It provides a method to reduce or eliminate formaldehyde as an environmental contaminant.
APPLICATIONS
- Detecting formaldehyde
- Bioremediation of formaldehyde
KEY BENEFITS
- The invention can be used for the detection of formaldehyde.
- The invention is useful in a bioremediation assay capable of metabolizing formaldehyde into single-carbon skeletons.
- The invention can be used to decrease the formaldehyde level in the environment by replacing the indicator gene with a gene that can oxidize formaldehyde.
- The formaldehyde that induces the expression system can derive from industrial or commercial waste, or a biological or chemical degradation product of such waste.
- There is virtually no transcription of the gene in the absence of formaldehyde.
- The system is responsive to formaldehyde even at very low levels.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
For More Information About the Inventors
Related Technologies
Intellectual Property Status
Tech Fields
Cleantech - Remediation & waste reduction
Cleantech - Environmental monitoring
Research Tools - Detection
CONTACT INFORMATION
For current licensing status, please contact our team at
licensing@warf.org
or phone 608.262.4924. (Clicking this link will open a contact form in a popup window. If you have problems viewing the form, try disabling your popup blocker software.)
Since its founding in 1925 as the patenting and licensing organization for the University of Wisconsin-Madison, WARF has been working with business and industry to transform university research into products that benefit society. WARF intellectual property managers and licensing staff members are leaders in the field of university-based technology transfer. They are familiar with the intricacies of patenting, have worked with researchers in relevant disciplines, understand industries and markets, and have negotiated innovative licensing strategies to meet the individual needs of business clients.

