Our Sponsors
We are grateful to our sponsors who provided financial support and resources that made our project possible.
Stanford Bioengineering Department
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team. Also provided laboratory facilities, equipment, and institutional support for our research activities.
Stanford BIOME
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team.
Integrated DNA Technologies
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team.
Zymo
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team.
The Stanford Fund
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team.
Making @ Stanford
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team.
Cortical Labs
Sponsor & Collaborator
Our primary sponsor and collaborator for TurBiohacks 2025, providing access to the world's first organic computer (CL1) running on cultured human neurons. They created the "Cortical Labs" problem statement for high schoolers to teach the organic computer to play Doom, and provided prizes for winners.
Twist Bioscience
Sponsor
This entity provided support of finances and/or in-kind donations to the team.
Our Partners
We are proud to collaborate with organizations that share our vision for advancing synthetic biology and biotechnology.
RADAR Therapeutics
Industry Partner
Provided industry insights on RADAR technology applications and therapeutic development pathways. Their expertise in RNA-based therapeutic approaches and regulatory considerations for clinical translation was invaluable for our project development.
PHEAST Therapeutics
Industry Partner
Offered guidance on therapeutic development strategies and provided insights on translating research innovations into clinical applications. Their expertise on regulatory pathways and commercialization considerations helped shape our project's real-world applications.
Taiwan Hepatitis Information Care Association (THICA)
Community Partner
Connected us with hepatitis B patients for our integrated human practices interviews. Dr. Jacki Chen and the THICA team provided essential patient perspectives that shaped our project design and ensured our technology addresses real-world healthcare needs.
Brandon Low
Research Collaborator
Brandon was an integral part of our dry lab efforts despite being a busy medical student. We're very grateful to him for help with modeling RNA folding and applying kinetics filters to our viral trigger ranking algorithm. We're still working together to improve these folding and binding predictions for future use in viral-induced cancers.