Skip over navigation
Banner
Industry
Directory Facilities Technology Transfer Economic Develop. AK BioHistory (TM)
Career
Job Search Post a Job Submit Resume Destination AK
News/Events
Local AK News Submit News Release Calendar Submit Event CEO Reading
Patient
Clinical Trials Local Support National Resources
Education
K-12 Higher Ed BioEd Reading
About
Advertising Feedback Home
 
About
 Advertising
 Feedback
 Home
Quick Links
 Directory
 Job Search
 Facilities
 Calendar
 Advertising
Community Service Ad: The Norway Foundation
Events
 
Jobs
 

NEW University of Washington Basic Bioscience Certificate starts Jan 2009

UW M.S. in Biomedical Regulatory Affairs with evening classes for working professionals


Industry Snapshot

Economy/Cost of Living | Education
Recreation & Entertainment | Transportation | Geography & Climate
History | Suggested Reading List

Denali National Park Alaska truly represents a frontier for biotechnology and life sciences research. While few biotechnology companies exist within Alaska, research already present or in development promises to advance the Last Frontier’s life sciences industry.

Currently, Alaska benefits from resources such as the Alaska Frozen Tissue Collection at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Museum of the North. Tissue samples representing over 200 species of mammals and 900 species of birds are stored here, providing a repository from which DNA can be obtained for the purposes of research.

The Alaska SeaLife Center, in Seward, is a non-profit facility geared toward protecting the unique marine ecosystem of the state via research projects. Scientists can compete to use the Center’s advanced laboratories for conducting research.

DENALI BioTechnologies, in Soldotna, represents the frontier biotechnology research company in Alaska. DENALI develops nutraceutical and pharmaceutical products using Alaskan plants and other resources from the Arctic.

Nearing completion, the BICS-BIRD (Biological and Computational Sciences-Biological Research and Diagnostics) facility at the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) promises great opportunities for life sciences research in the Last Frontier. This new facility will offer 42,000 square feet (3,901.9 square meters or 0.390 hectares) of space which will house UAF’s science and research activities. The facility will include laboratory animal holding and care, diagnostic laboratories, and procedure rooms, among other benefits.

An additional research facility currently under development is the new $87 million Integrated Science Building at the University of Alaska Anchorage. This facility promises instructional laboratories and classrooms for health sciences, nursing, engineering, and other lab-based sciences, to be housed in 120,000 square feet (11,148.4 square meters or 1.1 hectares) of space.

Because of such collaborative new research efforts, Alaska’s budding life sciences industry appears on the cusp of expansion.

 
Email thie page to a friend. Email This Page
to a Friend
Print this page. Print This
Page

© 2009 Info.Resource, Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy . Terms of Use . Advisory Board . Advertising

AlaskaLifeScience.com, owned and published by Info.Resource, Inc., is a resource
for the life science industry in the state of Alaska.