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Life Technologies Presents Revolutionary DNA Sequencing Technology

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Announcement Corporate
Last Updated : Jan 20 2013 | 2:39 AM IST

Life Technologies, a global biotechnology company operating in India as Invitrogen BioServices India Pvt. Ltd., presented its unprecedented next-generation sequencing product – Ion Torrent Personal Genome MachineTM (PGM) to its customers in India at the Innovation Update Forum, a regular platform the company setup to exchange insights and opinions on innovation with its key constituents.

To date, most sequencing technologies have primarily addressed the needs of researchers in the highest throughput laboratories, which limit widespread accessibility of sequencing technologies. Ion PGM improves the existing decoding equipment by replacing the complex optical modules with a simple semiconductor chip. The result is a sequencing system that is simpler, faster, less expensive and more scalable than other sequencing technologies in current market.

The semiconductor based PGM enabled scientists to discover within days a hybrid E. coli bacterium that caused the outbreak in Germany and other European countries in June 2011, which would take weeks for the older generation sequencers to produce the same information. It was also used to sequence the recent Klebsiella bug in the Netherlands that caused 20 deaths.

“Given the low cost and speed of analysis of the Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine, Life Technologies is hoping to ‘democratize’ DNA sequencing, which has been so far a fairly expensive, time-consuming technique and restricted mainly to basic research labs.” said Devashish Ohri, Managing Director, Life Technologies, South Asia. “Now with the PGM being well within reach and given its ability to produce large amounts of DNA sequence data in a short period of time, we are hoping that it leads to mass adoption of this technology by scientists of every stripe and persuasion.”

PGM is featured with value, speed and accuracy. The single-day workflow -- from library preparation to data analysis -- is now the fastest in the next-generation sequencing industry, at eight to nine hours depending on the read length required. The PGM™ system's accuracy has improved by an order of magnitude since it was launched six months ago.

“Life Technologies’ PGM to me looks like a very exciting and viable technology, where you can generate gigabytes of sequencing in one go”, said Prof. N.K. Mehra, Head of the Department of Transplant Immunology and Immunogenetics, AIIMS, New Delhi. “I believe that it would really be a wonderful tool to understand genomic diversity of the pathogen. So from that point of view, I am sure it will be of great interest to researchers who are very keen to understand the immunogenic components of an organism.”

“What impresses me more about this semiconductor sequencing technology is the scalability and speed. For those working with the patients samples, speed and accuracy are very important factors. The PGM is projected to have such great abilities.” said Dr. Vijayalaxmi Ramshankar, Asst. Professor, Cancer Institute, Chennai. “In addition, PGM projects results much better than microarray platforms, and hence can be used in hospitals to sequence smaller amplicons to generate fast results. It has tremendous use in cancer research.”

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Scientists have responded to these advances in sequencing speed, scalability and simplicity by making the Ion PGM system the fastest selling next-generation sequencer with placements in more than 40 countries.

 

 

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First Published: Oct 21 2011 | 2:33 PM IST

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