Awards

Syncell named most innovative spatial proteomics technology company 2024 by Global Health & Pharma

2024 / 12 / 18

Global Health & Pharma Magazine (GHP) named Syncell, Inc., 2024’s “Most Innovative Spatial Proteomics Technology Company.” GHP is a quarterly digital publication covering biotechnology, health and pharmaceutical advances.

Every year, GHP announces its awards to innovative companies in a wide range of categories in the industry:

“The Global Excellence Awards stand as a testament to the remarkable contributions made by professionals, organisations, and initiatives that are shaping the future of the wider healthcare, pharmaceutical and life sciences industries.

Handpicked by our very own in-house research team here at Global Health and Pharma Magazine, we celebrate those who have pushed the boundaries of possibility, redefined industry standards, and made significant strides in addressing the pressing challenges that impact the global landscape.”

Syncell’s Microscoop® platform has been recognized by several industry groups and publications in 2024 for its advances in spatial proteomics. It is the first of its kind to combine photochemistry, microscopy, artificial intelligence-driven image processing, mechatronics, and biochemistry into a streamlined and user-friendly system. This enables precise, high-throughput, image-guided protein labeling at submicron resolution, allowing scientists to spatially label and analyze proteins in individual cells or subcellular regions. Photolabeled proteins are extracted and analyzed with mass spectrometry to reveal thousands of known and novel proteins players in disease-relevant or biologically significant ROIs.

“We are honored and delighted for Microscoop technology to be recognized for its groundbreaking approach to proteomics, opening the door for new insights into biological processes,” said Jung-Chi Liao, founder and CEO of Syncell. “As more scientists learn about Microscoop’s capabilities, spatial proteomics will empower an ever-wider scale of biological research.”

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