Japanese multinational imaging and electronics company Ricoh has shown its commitment to developing a presence within the biomedical industry in a new agreement combining 3D bioprinting with cell differentiation technology.
Acquiring a 34.5% stake in Maryland biotechnology company Elixirgen Scientific, Ricoh has created a strategic business partnership that will also see the launch of a North American biomedical business this year.
Nobuhiro Gemma, Fellow, General Manager of HealthCare Business Group at Ricoh Company, Ltd., stated, “We are thrilled to partner with Elixirgen Scientific on this new biomedical development initiative.”
“By combining the technologies from our two companies, it will be possible to produce disease-specific cell chips derived from multiple iPS cell lines.”
The goal of the partnership is to support efforts in drug discovery. Gemma adds, “These cell chips can evaluate the diversity of human responses of chemicals at one time in terms of efficacy and toxicity before moving to the clinical trial stage.”
“In the process of drug discovery, this method using the cell chips will greatly improve the entire drug development process because human diversity is considered in the earliest stage.”
Developing products for drug discovery
Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells are capable of differentiating into many different types of cells depending on the introduction of different genes. They are at the core of current efforts in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine as they can be used to create copies of diseased tissue. These “copies” can then be tested using different drugs to understand how the body may react to new treatments.
Elixirgen Scientific, which was founded in 2016, has developed its own Quick-Tissue technology which is capable of producing iPS cells. With Quick-Tissue, homogeneous cell samples can be produced within 10 days.
According to Ricoh, it has been developing 3D bioprinting technology capable of working with iPS cells for the past 40 years. Inkjet based, the technology in question has four functions as described by the company:
1. Cell ink preparation
2. Precision 3D printing (using inkjet printheads)
3. Cell cultivation and,
4. The inspection of cellular constructs
In this new partnership, Elixirgen and Ricoh will combine their expertise to develop biomedical products and service to support further drug discovery.
A “$1.86 billion business by 2025”
According to the partners, over the next five to six years (by 2025) Ricoh and Elixirgen’s new biomedical initiative is targeted to grow into a ¥20 billion ($1.86 billion) business. For Ricoh’s part, it has been in the healthcare business for over a decade and it is making great efforts to increase its impact in the market.
“Ricoh has an established healthcare business with solutions such as its RICOH Regional Health Net; and in the medical imaging area, with its magnetoencephalography solution,” comments Gemma.
“We have also been developing technologies such as 3D Bioprinter and reference DNA plates, and with today’s announcement, this agreement establishes Ricoh firmly as a player in the biomedical field.”
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Featured image shows illustrative demonstration of Ricoh’s inkjet 3D bioprinting method. Image via Ricoh
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