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  <title><![CDATA[PatcherBot Going to Market]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>For decades, a laboratory technique called patch clamping has been the gold standard for measuring the electrical properties of individual cells.</p>

<p>The process, which has been particularly useful in neuroscience, involves bringing a pipette filled with electrolyte solution and a recording electrode connected to an amplifier, into contact with the membrane of a single cell. So basically, researchers can eavesdrop on the furtive chattering of neurons in the ongoing effort to unlock the brain&rsquo;s secrets.</p>

<p>&ldquo;Thousands of people practice this technique every day around the world,&rdquo; says Craig Forest, a researcher in the Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience at Georgia Tech. &ldquo;But it is painfully tedious and time consuming.&rdquo;</p>

<p>So <a href="http://pbl.gatech.edu/">Forest and his colleagues</a> decided to speed things up a bit. And now, their automated patch clamping robot &ndash; the &lsquo;patcherBot&rsquo; &ndash; is being commercialized and will be made available to researchers worldwide with the signed licensing agreement between Georgia Tech Research Corporation (GTRC) and Sensapex, an electrophysiology device company based in Finland.</p>

<p>&ldquo;This is exciting, because this technology is going from the lab, from some research journal articles, into the real world,&rdquo; says Forest, associate professor in Tech&rsquo;s Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and in the Coulter Department for Biomedical Engineering at Tech and Emory University.</p>

<p>&ldquo;Our mission is to develop tools that make new science possible,&rdquo; he adds.</p>

<p>Forest&rsquo;s lab has been working on iterations of the patcherBot for at least six years, developing an image guidance version to target cells and automation technology to create a tight seal between the glass pipette (one micron in diameter) and the cell membrane, which provides a direct electrical connection to the inside of the cell.</p>

<p>In 2016 the research team overturned decades of dogma in the field, developing a <a href="http://www.rh.gatech.edu/news/583105/robotic-cleaning-technique-could-automate-neuroscience-research">robotic technique for reusing the pipettes</a> &ndash; for years, went the assumption, these tiny glass tubes could only be used once and were then thrown away. Ilya Kolb, a former graduate student in Forest&rsquo;s lab, questioned this and set out to find a cleaning method, now patent pending, that could adequately sterilize the pipettes.</p>

<p>&ldquo;Traditionally, a researcher could do five to 10 recordings a day, and that&rsquo;s if they&rsquo;re really good,&rdquo; Forest says. &ldquo;Our idea was to clean the pipette automatically after each recording, so we could tell the robot to go back to cells over and over. You don&rsquo;t even have to be in the room, just set it up and leave, and when you come back to the lab, you&rsquo;ve recorded about 100 cells.&rdquo;</p>

<p>Now, a researcher in a biology lab doesn&rsquo;t have to be an expert in pipette pulling or patch clamping, says Forest, who has talked about the technology &ldquo;democratizing this area of research,&rdquo; and sees the potential of patch clamping becoming as commonplace as PCR (polymerase chain reaction), a common biology technique to make many copies of DNA.</p>

<p>Sensapex already has a customer &ndash; the first patcherBot will be delivered in April 2019 to Janelia Research Campus, one of the world&rsquo;s leading neuroscience research centers, part of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. And Forest&rsquo;s former grad student, Kolb, is now a researcher at Janelia, which has been on a 10-year optogenetic mission to develop fluorescent molecules &ndash; optogenetics uses light to control neurons that have been genetically modified to express light-sensitive ion channels.</p>

<p>At the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in October, where 30,000 neuro-researchers will gather in Chicago, Sensapex will have the patcherBot on display.</p>

<p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&amp;v=OfhXAxIpsuA"><em><strong>See the patcherBot in action</strong></em></a></p>
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      <value><![CDATA[Automation technology developed in lab of Georgia Tech researcher Craig Forest being commercialized]]></value>
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      <value>2019-02-01T00:00:00-05:00</value>
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      <value><![CDATA[Automation technology developed in lab of Georgia Tech researcher Craig Forest being commercialized]]></value>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p>Automation technology developed in lab of Georgia Tech researcher Craig Forest being commercialized</p>
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            <title><![CDATA[Craig Forest and Ilya Kolb]]></title>
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      <email><![CDATA[Jerry.grillo@ibb.gatech.edu]]></email>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p><a href="mailto:jerry.grillo@ibb.gatech.edu">Jerry Grillo</a><br />
Communications Officer II<br />
Parker H. Petit Institute for<br />
Bioengineering and Bioscience</p>
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