Member

Nanomedicine Manufacturing Lab, Duquesne University


NANOMEDICINE MANUFACTURING LABORATORY Nanomedicine Manufacturing Laboratory (NML) is a research and development laboratory specializing in nanomaterials and biomaterials for imaging, oxygen delivery, and drug delivery, with a core emphasis on scalable manufacturing and Quality-by-Design (QbD). More informaiton about NML: https://www.duq.edu/research/faculty-research/nanomedicine-lab/nanomed-lab-research.php Led by Dr. Jelena M. Janjic, the Nanomedicine Manufacturing Laboratory develops colloidal nanosystems and implantable biomaterials that support molecular imaging modalities, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and near-infrared fluorescence; biosensing, drug delivery; oxygen delivery; and theranostic nanomaterials, used for local and parenteral administration or as implantable biomaterials. A major barrier to the advancement of nanotechnology-based therapeutics is not conceptual innovation but manufacturability, cost, and quality control. The Nanomedicine Manufacturing Laboratory addresses these challenges by incorporating manufacturing process design, scalability, and quality control at the earliest stages of material design. Over the past decade, the laboratory has established robust, reproducible, and cost-effective nanomedicine manufacturing methods by applying QbD frameworks, enabling reliable scale-up and controlled performance. The laboratory’s work is supported by the U.S. Air Force, the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs (CDMRP), and ARPA-H through collaborative programs spanning academia, industry, and government. The Nanomedicine Manufacturing Laboratory operates at the intersection of materials science, manufacturing, and translational medicine, with a focus on developing innovative nanomedicines and biomaterials that translate into accessible, cost-effective future treatments for civilian and military medical needs.

Industries

nanotechnology
manufacturing
biomaterials
Quality-by-Design
translational research
preclinical models

Nr. of Employees

small (1-50)

Nanomedicine Manufacturing Lab, Duquesne University


Patents

Pyrazolo[4,3-d]pyrimidines as antitumor agents

2024-02-13 • US-11897886-B2

View Details

Substituted pyrrolo,-furano, and cyclopentylpyrimidines having antimitotic and/or antitumor activity and methods of use thereof

2023-12-12 • US-11840539-B2

View Details

Detection of bacteria using bacteriophage

2023-04-18 • US-11629370-B2

View Details

Bicyclic and tricyclic pyrimidine tyrosine kinase inhibitors with antitubulin activity and methods of treating a patient

2023-04-04 • US-11618758-B2

View Details

Authorship technologies

2023-03-14 • US-11605055-B2

View Details

Substituted bicyclic pyrimidine compounds with tubulin and multiple receptor inhibition

2023-02-07 • US-11572363-B2

View Details
View All Patents

Products

Competency-based general-education curriculum

An institutional common learning experience defining transferable competencies (communication, quantitative reasoning, critical thinking, ethical reasoning, social/historical reasoning, cultural fluency) with writing-enriched courses and capstone requirements.

International campus and short-term programs

Semester- and short-term study programs hosted at international locations with on-site staff and course offerings that fulfill degree requirements and provide immersive cultural experiences.

Academic library services

Campus library services providing scholarly resources, research support and access to collections for students, faculty and researchers.

Office of Research and Innovation services

Centralized services for researchers including proposal development assistance, research-conduct guidance, IP and tech-transfer resources, and connections to sponsored-research infrastructure.

Diversity, Equity & Inclusion certificate program

A structured certificate program for faculty and staff composed of required core workshops, elective workshops, and a capstone project to apply learning to campus practice.

Institutional audio/video broadcast network

An institutional broadcast service providing 24/7 audio streaming and scheduled live video streams of performances and events, supported by a mobile multi-camera streaming system, production staffing, and post-event on-demand publishing.

Expertise Areas

  • Curriculum design and competency-based general education
  • Online and hybrid education delivery and learning-technology support
  • Student information and registration systems administration
  • Admissions counseling, enrollment operations and financial-aid advising
  • Show More (18)

Key Technologies

  • Learning management systems (LMS)
  • Student information and registration systems (SIS)
  • Lecture capture and classroom media systems
  • Audio/video streaming platforms
  • Show More (12)

Key People

Executive Vice President and Provost

LinkedIn

Vice Provost for Strategic Initiatives

Jelena M. Janjic, PhD

Associate Professor of Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy

LinkedIn

Senior Vice Provost for Administration

Vice Provost for Academics

Vice Provost for Research and Innovation; Law School Professor by Courtesy


News & Updates

Duquesne University’s Nanomedicine Manufacturing Laboratory (NML) is taking tiny particles and using them to help remedy major health issues. The lab, led by Duquesne Associate Professor of Pharmaceutics Dr. Jelena Janjic, was the first to create pain nanomedicine for trauma and surgical pain, which could lead to reducing the use of opioids for recovery. The NML also developed the first oxygen carrier with imaging clinical grade agents for real-time tracking during organ/limb preservation, which may reduce organ rejection and lead to improving transplantation success. So it wasn’t much of a surprise when the NML was tapped to participate with other institutions to make whole eye transplants a reality. More than 40 scientists, doctors and industry experts are joining together for the $56 million project from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) Transplantation of Human Eye Allografts (THEA) program. Jeffrey Goldberg, MD, PhD, Blumenkranz Smead professor and chair of ophthalmology at the Byers Eye Institute at Stanford, serves as the principal investigator. José-Alain Sahel, MD, professor and chair of the Department of Ophthalmology at the University of Pittsburgh, co-directs the initiative with Goldberg. “We are uniquely prepared to work in multiple task areas of this project,” Janjic said, adding that Duquesne was the only partner in the project to receive two sub-proposer contracts. “The nanomedicines we create provide imaging of the tissue during rejection, and in response to immunosuppression treatment, image optic nerve neuroinflammation post repair, and importantly aid in organ preservation and offer drug delivery that assists in transplantation.” These horizon-expanding opportunities are part of Duquesne’s DNA, benefiting researchers, students and society by moving scientific discovery forward. A key part of the NML’s success is its quality-by-design process, which allows it to produce cost-effective, robust and scalable manufacturing methods for nanomedicines with a high level of quality control. Typical nanotechnology-based therapeutics are often burdened with high costs and challenging quality control issues. NML is unique in its ability to produce multi-liter quantities of complex patent-protected nanomedicine formulations across multiple uses, from pain relief to organ preservation. The six-year eye transplant project, which is led by Stanford University and the University of Pittsburgh, will be incredibly challenging, Janjic said. “This will be an exciting collaboration as the eye presents unique issues,” she said. “The NML has worked with partners across industry, academia and government agencies, and we look forward to joining in this innovative project.” The ARPA-H funding, which includes $1.2 million to Duquesne, is just the latest example of NML’s success. Last year, the lab received a $1.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Defense to expand research into using nanoparticle technology to preserve human limbs for transplantation surgeries. NML has received more than $7 million in total grants.

Duquesne University has been named one of the best colleges for veterans by the Military Times Best for Vets, Colleges ranking.

Duquesne University has been recognized by U.S. News & World Report in its Best Value-National Universities 2024 rankings.


Similar organizations

Browse all ORGANIZATIONS

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST

Stay Connected with MTEC

Keep up with active and upcoming solicitations, MTEC news and other valuable information.