Inventor · Shaker Heights, OH, US

Robert H. Silverman

16Patents
7h-index
20Co-inventors
62Inventor score

Filing activity: Sep 17, 1993 → Sep 24, 2007

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6214805A RNase L activators and antisense oligonucleotides effective to treat RSV infections Chemistry; Metallurgy 69 Expired
US5998602A RNase L activators and antisense oligonucleotides effective to treat RSV infections Chemistry; Metallurgy 51 Expired
US6331396A Arrays for identifying agents which mimic or inhibit the activity of interferons Chemistry; Metallurgy 46 Expired
US5583032A Method of cleaving specific strands of RNA Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 27 Expired
US6468983B2 RNase L activators and antisense oligonucleotides effective to treat telomerase-expressing malignancies Chemistry; Metallurgy 26 Expired
US5677289A Method of cleaving specific strands of RNA and medical treatments thereby Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 13 Expired
US6271369A Chimeric molecules targeted to viral RNAs Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 12 Expired
US5866787A Transgenic plants co-expressing a functional human 2-5A system Chemistry; Metallurgy 7 Expired
US5861300A Antiviral transgenic plants, vectors, cells and methods Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US5866781A Antiviral transgenic plants, vectors, cells and methods Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US5972678A Animal 2-5A dependent RNases Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US6028243A Mice and cells with a homozygous disruption in the RNase L gene and methods therefore Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired
US8263085B2 Gammaretrovirus associated with cancer Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US5877019A Animal 2-5A-dependent RNases and encoding sequences therefor Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired
US6762038B1 Mutant cell lines and methods for producing enhanced levels of recombinant proteins Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired
US5840577A Animal 2-5A-dependent RNases and encoding sequences therefor Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.