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Angeline-Rose Babel, Ph.D.
Patent Agent
Email. ababel@mcandrews-ip.com
Tel. (312) 775-8156
Education
Northwestern University, B.A., Biomedical Engineering (1998) University of Wisconsin-Madison, Ph.D., Cancer Biology (2004) McArdle Laboratories for Cancer Research, Post-doctoral Fellow
Bar Admissions
Registered to Practice before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Professional Experience
Angeline-Rose Babel has joined McAndrews, Held and Malloy as a Patent Agent. Dr. Babel has extensive knowledge in the fields of biological science and biotechnology, including molecular biology, virology, microbiology, immunology and biochemistry. Her practice primarily focuses on the acquisition of United States and foreign patent rights, with a focus on biotechnological and chemical technologies. Dr. Babel has assisted a wide range of clients, from Fortune 500 companies, start-up companies, and transfer offices associated with major universities. She also has experience in patent portfolio management, patent prosecution in software and mechanical technologies, and litigation support.
Dr. Babel worked as a post-doctoral research fellow at the McArdle Laboratory for Cancer Research at University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her research focused on molecular and cellular pathways activated during the early events of virus entry, the progression of viral infection and the development of cancer. She developed a quantitative fluorescent assay to measure the activation of cellular pathways during early events in virus entry.
Angeline received her Ph.D. from University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2004 focused in the microbiology and biotechnology. She worked in a laboratory that used viruses as delivery systems to target drugs and chemotherapeutic agents to cancer cells. Her thesis work focused on understanding the mechanism by which a retrovirus similar to HIV enters cells. She developed an in vitro genetic screen to isolate mutations in a retroviral envelope protein that altered the ability of the virus to enter cells, and used molecular and cell biology techniques including molecular cloning, in vitro cell culture, flow cytometry, real time PCR, and protein purification to characterize these mutations. Angeline also worked as a teaching instructor for an undergraduate Immunology class and both taught and supervised a medical school microbiology laboratory course.
While working toward her undergraduate degree in biomedical engineering at Northwestern University, Angeline worked in a neuroanatomy laboratory studying the role of acetylcholinesterase in Alzheimer’s disease, a developmental biology laboratory studying the regulation of cubitus interruptus in Drosophila and in a biomedical engineering laboratory studying the formation of atherosclerotic plaques within blood vessels during vessel grafting in tissue engineering.
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