• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

California company claims faster, cheaper gene map

WASHINGTON
Mon Feb 11, 2008 5:55pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A California company predicts it will soon be able to sequence an entire human gene map in four minutes, for just $1,000.

Science  |  Stocks  |  Regulatory News

Pacific Biosciences says its new gene-sequencing machines are far faster than existing equipment, and will be able to do in minutes what it took the federally funded academic effort five years and $300 million to do, and genome pioneer Craig Venter nine months to do in 2000.

"It will change health care forever if it works," Hugh Martin, the chief executive officer of the company, said in a telephone interview on Monday.

The company presented its findings to a meeting in Florida on Saturday.

Last month Knome, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based personal genomics company, said it was offering people their own personal genome sequences at a cost of $350,000. Martin said he saw no reason for individuals to get their gene maps sequenced yet, and said his company's market was research labs.

"The real idea is to be able to sequence people fast enough and cheaply enough so we can turn some really interesting discovery problems in genetics and genetic diseases into software problems," Martin said.

"You can sequence 1,000 people who exhibit addictive behavior and 1,000 who don't and see if there any differences between them," Martin said.

Government backers of the project are equally enthusiastic.

"In complex diseases like heart disease, there are many different genes that contribute to the disease and each of those genes has a small effect," said Jeff Schloss, who heads the sequencing-technologies grant program at the National Human Genome Research Institute.

NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK

Researchers still often do not even know where to begin looking for genes involved in some diseases, and so benefit from so-called genome-wide association studies, which are in effect a treasure hunt through the entire genome.

"The tools we have for understanding the relationship between changes in the genome and disease require now that we look at lots of people, that we study a lot of people who have a disease and look at changes in their genome," said Schloss, whose institute gave Pacific Biosciences $6.7 million for its work.

Martin said the company had raised another $72 million from private investors.

The money is out there for companies that want to find cheaper and quicker ways to sequence the human gene map. In 2004, the National Institutes of Health launched a $70 million grant program to encourage such work, and the Santa Monica, California-based X Prize Foundation is offering $10 million to the first team to sequence 100 human genomes in 10 days.

Martin thinks Pacific Biosciences' new technology will be able to get a human genome done in about 4 minutes.

"You could be on the operating table and having a biopsy while under anesthesia," he said. Doctors could compare the sequence in a tumor to the DNA in a patient's healthy cells and perhaps tailor chemotherapy, he said.

The company will sell the instruments at a cost of somewhere between $400,000 and $600,000, plus kits with the chemicals and other components needed to operate them.

Competitors also racing to make a faster, cheaper DNA map include Solexa, now a division of Illumina Inc, Applied Biosystems, 454 Life Sciences Corp, a Roche company, and Helicos Biosciences Corp.

(Editing by Will Dunham and Sandra Maler)



More from Reuters

Afghan insurgents kill CIA agents, Canadians

KABUL (Reuters) - Insurgents intensified their campaign against military targets and U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan, killing eight U.S. CIA agents at a base and four Canadian servicemen on patrol and a journalist accompanying them.

A security camera sits on a building in New York City March 6, 2008. REUTERS/Joshua Lott

Trial run in Times Square

Critics say the Sept. 11 trials will endanger America's most populated city. Will a New Year's Eve plan hold up as New York's security template?  Full Article 

People walk past a branch of Bank of America in New York's financial district April 28, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Move your money

Boycotting "too big to fail" banks is a great idea -- so long as investors remember that banks aren't the only ones responsible for the crisis.  Full Article