Two Citizen Scientists Win First Bay Area Open Science Challenge

Assay Depot and BioCurious Provide Research Funding, Lab Space and Online Research Exchange

SAN DIEGO & SUNNYVALE, Calif.--()--Assay Depot Inc. and BioCurious selected two Bay Area-based citizen scientists, Ryan Bethencourt and Derek Jacoby, as winners of their first Open Science Challenge. Bethencourt aims to develop new ALS therapeutics, and Jacoby is seeking to find a probiotic method of improving uric acid clearance to combat gout. Both received one-year memberships to the BioCurious community lab space in Sunnyvale as well as $5,000 to fund further research, $4,500 of which will be used for services through the Assay Depot online Research Exchange.

"Having access to a community lab and research services to address a study that is close to my own experience with gout is exciting," said Derek Jacoby, a Ph.D. student at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. "I've tried informal tests on myself using a probiotic method of improving uric acid clearance, and now I'm ready to deepen the research and hopefully bring a new solution to others suffering from this condition."

The Open Science Challenge was open to all Bay Area residents ages 10 to 110 who wanted to take their research ideas to the next level. Research proposals were reviewed by a committee of BioCurious and Assay Depot employees, and selections were based on scientific significance, proposal quality, a demonstrated need for lab space and services, and location.

"ALS is a terminal disease with very few therapeutic options, so colleagues and I are working on tackling solutions from the outside in," said Ryan Bethencourt, geneticist, biohacker and a founder of Halpin Neurosciences. "In collaboration with Eric Valor, an ALS patient who has driven the at-home version of an investigational therapy called NP001, along with the broader ALS community and pioneers in the area, we're determined to advance new treatment options for patients. The BioCurious lab will allow us to do some of the prep work before outsourcing through Assay Depot - together an opportunity for accelerated research that just wasn't possible until now."

Assay Depot will be holding additional Open Science Challenges throughout the U.S. in partnership with other community lab spaces in the near future.

About Assay Depot

Assay Depot owns and operates a web-based network of Research Exchanges that help professional scientists and citizen scientists make breakthrough discoveries. The company is headquartered in San Diego with offices in Northern California and Pennsylvania.

To learn more, visit Assay Depot’s public Research Exchange at www.assaydepot.com.

About BioCurious

BioCurious is a hackerspace for biotech, committed to making biology accessible and affordable for amateurs, inventors, entrepreneurs, and anyone who wants to “experiment with friends.” The BioCurious community lab is not-for-profit, volunteer-staffed, and located in Sunnyvale, California.

To learn more, visit BioCurious’ website at www.biocurious.org.

Contacts

Assay Depot Inc.
Kim Richards, 619-708-4430
krichards@assaydepot.com
or
BioCurious
Raymond McCauley, 408-475-2246
raymond@biocurious.org

Release Summary

Assay Depot and BioCurious awarded Bay Area-based scientists Ryan Bethencourt and Derek Jacoby $5,000 to fund research using memberships to BioCurious and access to Assay Depot's Research Exchange.

Contacts

Assay Depot Inc.
Kim Richards, 619-708-4430
krichards@assaydepot.com
or
BioCurious
Raymond McCauley, 408-475-2246
raymond@biocurious.org