UNMC to lease space at Scott Technology Transfer and Incubator Center

Cutting-edge research that the University of Nebraska Medical Center

will conduct at a business incubator in Omaha has the potential to lead

to promising product developments. Under an agreement approved Friday by

the NU Board of Regents on Friday, UNMC will lease 8,309 square feet of

space at the Scott Technology Transfer and Incubator Center.

Being at the Scott center will allow for our scientists to work closely

with established and start-up businesses, as well as faculty from Peter

Kiewit Institute of Information Science, Technology and Engineering and

other campuses, said Don Leuenberger, UNMC vice chancellor for business

and finance. We expect that the synergy resulting from this collocation

will spawn many new ideas and, eventually, new products.

UNMC will use the Scott center in two basic areas: bioinformatics and

orthopaedic joint replacement implants. Two laboratories from the department

of orthopaedic surgery will be housed at the center: the Biomechanics and

the Nano-biotechnology Research laboratories. UNMC faculty are involved

in the designing of the next generation of knee simulators and developing

new implant test methods for the International Standards Organization and

the American Society of Testing and Materials, said Hani Haider, Ph.D.,

associate professor of orthopaedic surgery and director of the Biomechanics

Laboratory.

Dr. Haider will work closely with Fereydoon Namavar, Sc.D., professor

and director of the Nano-biotechnology Research Laboratory. Dr. Namavar

is an expert in nanotechnology research, which is an emerging field with

novel applications in medicine and the engineering industry. Here, the

scientists will manipulate extremely small particles to fabricate materials

or coat surfaces of implants with super-hard protective layers using crystals

or grains less than one-millionth of an inch in size.

Dr. Namavars work advances technologies to enhance the durability and

to increase the lifetime of orthopedic implants.

Together with the advanced implant simulation and testing facilities,

the combination offers the industry a strong haven for developing and testing

innovative joint replacement implants, Dr. Haider said.

Also housed at the Scott center will be the intercampus research and

training laboratory of the Nebraska Informatics Center for the Life Sciences

(NICLS). NICLS was established last year to facilitate the integration

of information, computer and life sciences to understand the organization

and function of complex biological systems.

Simon Sherman, Ph.D., director of the center, said the site will provide

expertise, service and computing resources for inter-campus research projects.

It will be also the place where graduate and undergraduate students from

all of the University of Nebraska campuses, as well as high-school students

and students from other colleges who are involved in summer research programs,

will be trained in the use of bioinformatics methods and tools.

Location at the Scott Technology Center will help the NICLS faculty

members to build close relationships with industrial partners said Dr.

Sherman, who also is a professor in the UNMC Eppley Research Institute.