The world’s first complete chromosome sequence at #AGBT19

The full x-chromosome map

NGHRI’s Dr. Adam Phillippy presents a remarkable dataset – the telomere-to-telomere assembly of a complete human X chromosome When the completion of the Human Genome Project was announced on June 6, 2002, President Bill Clinton said the following: We are here to celebrate the completion of the first survey of the entire human genome. Without … Read more

Oxford Nanopore at AGBT 2014

Borrowed from a Oxford Nanopore Video (without permission)
Borrowed from a Oxford Nanopore Video

A few attending the Advances in Genome Biology and Technology meeting in Marco Island Florida (February 12 – 15 2014) have blogged about a presentation from David Jaffe (Broad Institute), presenting the first data the next-generation sequencing community has publicly seen from Oxford Nanopore Technologies. For those not familiar with Oxford Nanopore (or ONT as I’ll refer to them), it was AGBT12 that they absolutely stunned the crowd in attendance with their announcements of both a GridION™ nanopore sequencing ‘module’, and a MinION™ USB-stick portable DNA sequencer that got a lot of press. They planned to commercialize ‘by the end of the year’ (that is, 2012), and since I was not there ‘in’ the meeting first-hand (I was supporting the meeting on-site at Marco Island for Life Technologies, just not as a conference attendee), I heard first-hand from several that year with interest.

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Oxford Nanopore and commercialization at ASHG 2012

Clive Brown (left) showing the minION at their ASHG 2012 booth. Matthew Hickenbotham, colleague at Life Technologies, at right.

Here at ASHG 2012 in San Francisco this week, a ton of activity around the exhibitors, and Life Technologies does not disappoint with the Ion Bus on the show floor, an open 20 foot x 30 foot booth, a new digital PCR instrument (the QuantStudio 3D) introduced, two luncheon workshops, an Ion Torrent User Group meeting, a special SF Museum of Modern Art event on one evening, and an Ion Lounge evening event on the other. (These last two events were described internally as ‘networking only’, which is a code-word for a great social event.)

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Oxford Nanopore, the first nanopore-based sequencing technology

Oxford Nanopore illustration
Image from {a href=”http://www.nanoporetech.com”}Oxford Nanopore{/a}

Oxford Nanopore, based in Oxford U.K., made a remarkable announcement that surprised many in February’s AGBT meeting in Marco Island. A GridION and MiniION single-molecule sequencers were announced, promising 15 minute runtimes, no sample preparation, and a disposable USB-stick sequencer for $900 (in the case of the MiniION), with 50kb long readlengths (and 100kb promised) at only a 4% error rate it appears to be a dream come true for many research challenges that await.

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