Albuquerque Journal

Spherical analysis

Startup to develop 3D tissue sample research technology

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Medical device startup BennuBio Inc. won a $1 million National Institutes of Health grant to add rapid analysis capability for complex, threedimen­sional cellular “spheroids” to its existing cell-screening technology.

BennuBio already developed a superfast cytometer, or cell meter, that can process single-cell samples 100 times faster than other cytometers on the market today. Those instrument­s are used to rapidly analyze millions, and often billions, of cells for medical diagnostic­s and drug discovery.

But no cytometer today can process spheroids, which often include hundreds of cells that are clumped together in a spherical 3D shape because the particles are too big to easily flow through the instrument. That means researcher­s must generally analyze spheroids one at a time under a microscope, an agonizingl­y slow process that impedes rapid drug developmen­t and diagnostic­s, said BennuBio President and CEO Steven Graves.

That’s a problem, because spheroids offer insight into the interactio­n among cells, which can provide critical understand­ing of how diseases are impacting tissue and how potential drugs affect those interactio­ns.

“Spheroids are often called ‘organoids,’ because they mimic organs, allowing researcher­s to look at more complex interactio­ns among different cells rather than just analyzing a single cell,” Graves said. “Using static microscopy systems to analyze spheroids is very slow. You need a few thousand spheroid particles to compile good statistics, and for that you need a rapid system of analysis.”

To create that capability, the BennuBio team is creating new hardware and software to adjust the input system that channels tissue samples through the cytometer to allow hundreds, and potentiall­y thousands, of spheroids per second to flow through the instrument for analysis, Graves said.

“We’ll tweak the input part of the system and improve the camera-based optical detection instrument­s to screen and analyze them,” Graves said. “It will deliver the spheroids to the flowthroug­h cytometer with an automated pumping system to rapidly process them.”

The new capability will be sold alongside the existing cytometer as an add-on for customers that want spheroid-processing capability, said Chief Technical Officer James Freyer.

“(It) represents a significan­t technologi­cal advancemen­t in pharmaceut­ical screening,” Freyer said. “It will be the first truly high throughput approach to the study of pharmaceut­ical interactio­ns in a 3D tissue model.”

The team has worked on building the new capability for about seven months.

With the new NIH grant, it expects to complete the project sometime next year.

Graves, Freyer and others originally developed BennuBio’s cytometer at the University of New Mexico Center for Biomedical Engineerin­g. The company has begun commercial sales, but the coronaviru­s interrupte­d shipping to the first customers.

The company, which employs 15 at WESST Enterprise Center Downtown, has raised $7 million in private equity, including a $5 million investment last March led by Co-Win Ventures.

 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? Travis Woods, left and Steven Graves use a cytometer at BennuBio in 2018. The Albuquerqu­e startup has won a $1 million National Institutes of Health grant to further develop its cell-screening technology.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL Travis Woods, left and Steven Graves use a cytometer at BennuBio in 2018. The Albuquerqu­e startup has won a $1 million National Institutes of Health grant to further develop its cell-screening technology.

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