Eric Trinquet
14Patents
3h-index
28Co-inventors
60Inventor score
Filing activity: Mar 6, 2000 → Jan 30, 2020
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US6753156B1 | Homogeneous method for detecting and/or determining phosphorylating activity in a biological material | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 6 | Expired |
| US7998694B2 | Method of revealing a biological process using a FRET measurement | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 5 | Active |
| US7309567B1 | Method for reducing fluorescence quenching in bioassays | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 4 | Expired |
| US8178704B2 | Inositol-phosphate derivatives and method of detecting inositol-1-phosphate | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 3 | Active |
| US8697380B2 | Method for detecting compounds modulating dimers of VFT domain membrane proteins | Physics | 2 | Active |
| US7872243B2 | Method for improving the detection of fluorescence signals during a resonance energy transfer | Physics | 1 | Active |
| US8697372B2 | Method for determining the binding of a given compound to a membrane receptor | Physics | 1 | Active |
| US8470523B2 | Method for detecting intracellular interaction between biomolecules | Physics | 1 | Active |
| US8999653B2 | Method for detecting membrane protein internalization | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 1 | Active |
| US9024022B2 | Substrates of O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase and mutants thereof | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 1 | Active |
| US8663928B2 | Method for the detection of post-translational modifications | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 0 | Active |
| US12187793B2 | Single-domain antibody binding to the G protein alpha | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 0 | Active |
| US8361715B2 | Method for suppressing a FRET signal, FRET signal suppressor agents and use in a method for multiplexing biological events | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US12398158B2 | Fluorescent GTP analogues and use | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.