Applied DNA enhances its IP portfolio
Smart Textiles
ADNAS extends patent protection for DNA tagging of cotton
Newly allowed patent protects methods of tagging cotton fibers during ginning process
13th August 2020
Innovation in Textiles
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Sony Brook, NY
Applied DNA Sciences, a leader in Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)-based DNA manufacturing for product authenticity and traceability solutions, announced today that it has received a Notice of Allowance for its U.S. Patent Application No. 14/572,552 (US 2016/0168781 A1) entitled Method and Device for Marking Fibrous Materials.
The allowed claims cover methods of DNA-tagging cotton fibres while they travel through the forced air systems found at cotton gins, and later authenticating the DNA-tagged cotton fibres to prove their provenance and/or authenticity all the way to finished goods. DTS units have tagged over 300 million pounds of cotton to-date, the company reports.
The allowed patent application, which is expected to be issued as a U.S. patent in the next few months, extends the company’s patent protection for its proprietary DNA Transfer System (DTS), a key component of its CertainT platform for cotton. The company also holds United States Patent 9,963,740 on its DTS and has several related international patent applications pending.
“The extension of our patent protection to cover our method of DNA-tagging cotton demonstrates our commitment to broadly protect our CertainT platform and ensure our ability to deliver supply chain security and authenticity to current and future CertainT customers,” said Dr. James Hayward, president and CEO of Applied DNA. “Despite the downturn in global economic activity that has impacted the global textile supply chains we serve, supply chain certainty and social responsibility remain fundamental to the textile industry’s long-term strategy. We believe the COVID-19 pandemic has increased consumer awareness of the need for authenticity in such textiles as those used in personal protective equipment. When economic activity within the industry ramps, we believe that our CertainT platform is well-positioned to address the critical issues of traceability and authenticity in our traditional home textiles base, as well as new apparel opportunities currently being explored.”
“The key to the CertainT platform for cotton is the ability to cost-effectively tag cotton in very large quantities while concurrently collecting data that informs the supply chain down to each individual bale – the date, time, location of tagging, the type of cotton being tagged, among others – through the use of our DTS to give brand owners the assurance that their cotton, their brand, and their supply chains are secure through to their end-customers,” said MeiLin Wan, vice president of Textile Sales at Applied DNA. “In addition, our DTS can be permanently or temporarily installed in essentially any gin, allowing the company to tag cotton worldwide, with DTS units already installed in the U.S., Egypt and Australia.”
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