- Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation is the
nonprofit technology transfer office of theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison . It is a significant source ofresearch support, independent offederal grant s. It currently contributes about $45 million per year, giving the university's research programs a "margin of excellence."History
WARF was founded in 1925 by
Harry Steenbock , who invented the process for usingultraviolet radiation to addvitamin D tomilk and other foods. Rather than leaving the invention unpatent ed—then the standard practice for university inventions—he patented it, worked withQuaker Oats andpharmaceutical companies to commercialize it, and used the proceeds to fund research.WARF was established with the donations of $100 from nine alumni of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and verbal pledges from others. "The UW
Board of Regents officially sanctioned the plan onJune 22 ,1925 , and the organization'scharter was filed with Wisconsin's Secretary of State onNovember 14 th that same year. The new agency was named the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation to reflect both its governing body of UW-Madison alumni and its mission to support UW-Madison research. Funded by $900 in capital from the nine contributing alumni and with a governing body of five volunteer trustees, WARF officially opened for business." (quoted directly from WARF'swebsite ).Since its founding, WARF has served the University of Wisconsin-Madison scientific community by patenting the discoveries of UW-Madison researchers and licensing these technologies to leading companies in Wisconsin, the United States and worldwide. In this way, WARF also facilitates the use of UW-Madison research for the maximum benefit of society. WARF distributes the income from commercial licenses to the UW-Madison, the inventors and their departments. Each year, WARF contributes over $45 million to fund additional UW-Madison research. The university refers to WARF's annual gifts as its "margin of excellence" funding. WARF currently licenses nearly 100 UW-Madison technologies each year.
As of 2008, WARF had an endowment of nearly $2.0 billion. A majority of WARF's income, around 70%, comes from
Vitamin D .While historically, WARF was only the technology transfer office for the University of Wisconsin-Madison, WARF has recently established [http://www.wisys.org/ WiSys] to cater to the entire
University of Wisconsin System .Vitamin D
In 1923, Harry Steenbock and
James Cockwell discovered exposure toultraviolet light increased the Vitamin D concentration in food. After discovering that irradiatedrat food cured the rats ofrickets , Steenbock sought a patent. Steenbock then assigned the patent to the newly established Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation. WARF then licensed the technology to Quaker Oats for use in theirbreakfast cereal s. In addition, WARF licensed the technology for use as a pharmaceutical,Viosterol . WARF's commercialization of Vitamin D culminated in its enrichment of milk."Enriching milk with vitamin D posed a significant challenge to WARF and its industry partners. Cereals and pharmaceuticals could be easily fortified by adding irradiated
yeast or activatedlipid s (ergosterol ) to them as sources of vitamin D. But strict pure foods laws at the time prohibited the addition of anything to milk, evenchocolate . In order to produce vitamin D in milk, the milk itself would have to be irradiated. " (quote from site)By the time the patent expired in 1945, rickets was all but nonexistent.
Through innovations from
Hector DeLuca , Vitamin D continues to be a large percentage of WARF's income, around 70%.Warfarin
Warfarin (Coumadin) is named for WARF, and the story of its discovery is emblematic of the "Wisconsin Idea " and the relationship of the university to the Wisconsin public. In 1933 a farmer from Deer Park showed up unannounced at the School of Agriculture and walked into a professor's laboratory with a milk can full of blood which would not coagulate. In his truck, he had also brought a dead heifer and some spoiled clover hay. He wanted to know what had killed his cow. In 1941,Karl Paul Link successfully isolated the anticoagulant factor, which found commercial application as arodent -killer and is used in medicine for treatingthrombosis .tem cells and WiCellTM
More recently, WARF was assigned the patents for non-human primate and human embryonic
stem cells . The stem cells were first isolated and purified by James Thomson. In October 1999, WARF established the non-profit subsidiaryWiCell TM in order to license its stem cell lines. Thomson was appointed as WiCell's scientific director. In September 2005, WiCellTM was awarded the NIH contract to develop the first National Stem Cell Bank (NSCB). The NSCB works to distribute characterized human embryonic stem cells eligible for US federal funding to non-profit researchers world wide.tartup companies
WARF has also helped establish more than a thirty startup companies including [http://www.nimblegen.com/ Nimblegen] , [http://www.tomotherapy.com/ Tomotherapy] , [http://www.deltanoid.com/ Deltanoid Pharmaceuticals] , [http://www.quintbio.com/ Quinntessence] , [http://www.neoclone.com/ Neoclone] , [http://www.twt.com Third Wave Technologies] , [http://www.cambriabio.com/ Cambria Biosciences] , and [http://www.opgen.com OpGen, Inc.] .
External links
* [http://www.warf.ws WARF - Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation]
* [http://www.wicell.org WiCell Research Institute]
* [http://www.nationalstemcellbank.org National Stem Cell Bank]
* [http://www.warf.ws/about/index.jsp?cid=26 WARF's History]
* [http://www.forbes.com/home/free_forbes/2004/0524/120.html Miracle In the Midwest] - How Madison, Wis. Became A Hotebed Of Biocapitalism, Forbes Magazine, 05.24.04.
* [http://www.warf.ws/technologies.jsp?techfield=Pharmaceuticals&msnum=890 WARF's Vitamin D patents]
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