Webinar

Research in Motion with ioSkeletal Myocytes™

Introducing human iPSC-derived muscle cells for research and drug discovery.
Research in Motion with ioSkeletal Myocytes™

Dr Luke Flatt

Senior Scientist

Charles River Laboratories

Research in Motion with ioSkeletal Myocytes™

Dr Will Bernard 

Senior Scientist 

bit.bio

 

Research in Motion with ioSkeletal Myocytes™
Introducing human iPSC-derived muscle cells for research and drug discovery.
Research in Motion with ioSkeletal Myocytes™

Dr Luke Flatt

Senior Scientist

Charles River Laboratories

Research in Motion with ioSkeletal Myocytes™

Dr Will Bernard 

Senior Scientist 

bit.bio

 

Dr Will Bernard, Senior Scientist at bit.bio, and Dr Luke Flatt, Senior Scientist at Charles River Laboratories discuss how bit.bio’s iPSC-derived ioSkeletal Myocytes can facilitate high-throughput screening (HTS) workflows and accelerate research into muscle and metabolic disease.

This webinar discusses how bit.bio’s iPSC-derived ioSkeletal Myocytes can facilitate HTS workflows and accelerate research into muscle and metabolic disease. 

Learning outcomes:

  • How highly-defined and characterised muscle cells can provide physiological relevance earlier in your research and drug development pipeline
  • The potential of ioSkeletal Myocytes as a relevant translational model for research of muscle, neuromuscular and associated metabolic disorders
  • How human induced skeletal myocytes have been generated by opti-ox™ cellular reprogramming to offer consistency at scale, easy culture and rapid maturity

Explore ioSkeletal Myocytes

Watch webinar

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