Methods and Compositions for Generating Bioactive Assemblies of Increased Complexity and Uses
US-2015374846-A1 · Dec 31, 2015 · US
USRE50754E · US · E1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-RE50754-E |
| Application number | US-202217861032-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | E1 |
| Filing date | Jul 8, 2022 |
| Priority date | Apr 25, 2011 |
| Publication date | Jan 20, 2026 |
| Grant date | Jan 20, 2026 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
Provided herein are compositions and methods for identifying or quantitating one or more analytes in sample. The composition can comprise an affinity molecule reversibly conjugated to a label moiety via a double-stranded nucleic acid linker or via an adaptor molecule. The affinity molecule and the label moiety can be linked to different strands of the double-stranded nucleic acid linker. Compositions can be used in any biological assays for detection, identification and/or quantification of target molecules or analytes, including multiplex staining for molecular profiling of individual cells or cellular populations. For example, the compositions can be adapted for use in immunofluorescence, fluorescence in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry, western blot, and the like.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1 . A composition comprising a plurality of affinity molecules, wherein: (i) each member of the plurality binds a target, wherein each affinity molecule is conjugated via hybridized first and second nucleic acid strands to a label moiety, wherein detectable properties of the label moieties are distinguishable from one another, wherein the targets are distinguishable from one another, wherein the hybridized first nucleic acid strands are distinguishable from o…
Chemistry & Metallurgy · mapped topic
Physics · mapped topic
Physics · mapped topic
Physics · mapped topic
Chemistry & Metallurgy · mapped topic
Related publications grouped by family.
Free tools are coming soon. Tell us what you want to track and we'll notify you.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.