Genetics Archives

Super-SILAC Technology for Quantitative Proteomics in Neoplasms

3253aytrr Super SILAC Technology for Quantitative Proteomics in NeoplasmsA group of investigators under Dr. Matthias Mann at Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Germany is working on an interesting quantitative proteomics technology that might offer a new way to analyze cell proteins in a range of disorders, such as cancer and autoimmune diseases. Called super-SILAC (stable-isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture), the method generates thousands of isotopically labeled peptides in unique amounts to serve as “internal standards for mass spectrometry-based analysis.”

The Max Planck researchers break down proteins into smaller pieces called peptides and use a so-called mass spectrometer to ionise them and sort them according to their masses in an electrical field. Based on the distribution and strength of the peptide signals and their fragments in the measuring instruments, the researchers can reconstruct the proteins and even their quantities.
To be able to do this, however, the scientists must first know what they are looking for. To date, only relatively few proteins are known that are indicative of various cancer types. This is where Tami Geiger comes in: over the past three years, the young Israeli scientist has been setting up a protein database of key cancer cell lines. She uses this library as a reference in comparing human tissue samples from patients. To compare the samples of a healthy person with those of a cancer patient, for example, she labels proteins with specific carbon or nitrogen isotopes which are heavier than naturally occurring atoms. On the basis of the signal strength of the marked and unmarked peptides in the mass spectrometer, Tami Geiger can recognise whether a protein is formed more strongly or more weakly within cancer cells.

Full story: Proteomics – towards developing a library of cancer proteins …

Plasmonic-Based Electrochemical Impedance Microscopy

Plasmonic-Based Electrochemical Impedance Microscopy

Researchers at Arizona State University have developed a new microscopy technique for looking at cells and intracellular machinery. Based on electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, the new method doesn’t require fluorescent tagging, making it non-invasive, while producing high spatial resolution.

a) Schematic of the experimental setup. Laser light is directed onto a gold- coated slide through a layer of immersion oil, creating an SPR wave on the slide’s surface. When an electrical potential is induced in the culture medium, an EIM image of cell activity is created through signal changes in the SPR wave. b) Silica particles measuring 200 nanometers across are imaged with EIM. The optical image lacks adequate spatial resolution to resolve the particles, while SPR and impedance images reveal them as bright spots.

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Psychological and Behavioral Effects of Personal Genetic Testing

Psychological and Behavioral Effects of Personal Genetic Testing

Genome-wide profiling is increasingly being marketed towards consumers to assess their risk of developing certain diseases. However, there has been little research into the psychological effects of these tests. Researchers from Scripps Translational Science Institute have now looked into these effects in a large group of patients. They followed 2037 participants who took the Navigenics Health Compass, a test that assesses the risk for about 20 common diseases, for a period of three months. Taking the test did not increase anxiety symptoms, dietary fat intake or exercise behavior. There was some test-related distress correlated with the average estimated lifetime risk of getting the diseases tested for, but at the same time 90.3% of all subjects had no test-related distress at all. The use of screening tests did not change among the group and notably health effects of the test were not studied. In conclusion, personal genetic testing does not seem to generate a lot of distress, although the study was clearly limited by a high dropout percentage of 44% and the self-selection of participants who opted to do the test.
Article in NEJM: Effect of Direct-to-Consumer Genomewide Profiling to Assess Disease Risk

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Adult-Derived Stem Cell Therapy Helps Save Diabetic’s Foot

Adult-Derived Stem Cell Therapy Helps Save Diabetic's Foot

The typical course for a patient with a “diabetic foot” generally ends with a trip to the operating room to have it removed. However, at last month’s meeting of the International Cellular Medicine Society, it was announced that a patient with gangrene of the foot related to diabetes was able to avoid amputation through the use of adult-derived stem cells.
The patient, a 72-year old man from South Korea, had the classic podiatric complications of diabetes, including change of color, necrotic tissue, and deep wounds. Apparently, he was about to undergo an amputation of the affected extremity when he was referred to a South Korean company, RNL Bio, that took stem cells from the patient himself and infused about 300 million of them into each foot.

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Nanopore DNA Tunneling Detector to Speed Up Genome Sequencing

Nanopore DNA Tunneling Detector to Speed Up Genome Sequencing

Researchers at the Imperial College London are developing a new genome sequencing technique that could potentially reduce whole genome sequencing time to just a few minutes and do it at a fraction of the current cost. They use electrical charges to propel DNA strands at high speed through a 50 nanometre nanopore in a silicon chip. Two platinum electrodes 2nm apart then read the base sequence from the DNA by detecting distinct electrical signals from each base code (C, T, A and G). The researchers have not yet sequenced a complete human genome, but they expect to be able to sequence it within minutes with sequencing speeds up to 10 million bases per second, versus the typical 10 bases per second of current technologies. There is still some work ahead though, as the current paper is only a start, describing device fabrication and characterization. The work is published in this month’s issue of the journal Nano Letters.
Press release: Your genome in minutes: New technology could slash sequencing time…

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CELL-FREEZE Stem Cell Cryogenic Storage Containers

CELL-FREEZE Stem Cell Cryogenic Storage Containers

Charter Medical, a unit of Lydall Inc. (Manchester, Connecticut), won FDA 510(k) clearance for the company’s Cell-Freeze cryogenic storage containers. The bags, specifically designed for stem cells transfer and storage, stay flexible to nearly -200° C and can handle the types of temperature changes common in stem cell applications.

Polyolefin Film – Specifically selected for its low temperature properties while maintaining flexibility and clarity when filled with liquid.

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Almost Ready: Lab-on-Chip for Detection of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms

Almost Ready: Lab-on-Chip for Detection of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms

Ivec, a major Belgian research center, and Pansonic have unveiled a set of new technologies to make lab-on-chip sensors that can detect Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) in DNA. Though an actual sensor is not finalized yet, components needed to make one, like a high pressure pump, a micropillar filter, and on-chip SNP detector, have already been created.
From a joint press release:

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Life Technologies Launches Ion Personal Genome Machine Sequencer

Life Technologies Launches Ion Personal Genome Machine Sequencer

Recently we reported from TEDMED about Life Technologies‘ personal genome sequencer, and now it has been officially launched. It is a desktop printer-sized personal genome machine that can sequence your complete genome in an hour or two. Ion Torrent, a recently acquired business unit of Life Technologies, has developed this little device based on its semiconductor sequencing technology. The company itself compares what the device will do for DNA sequencing to what point-and-shoot digital cameras have done for photography. The machine is faster and smaller than other sequencers on the market and, according to the company, is one tenth the price of other sequencers to buy and to run.
Now have a look at the image again: this thing even features an iPhone dock! No words about this in the press release or on the product site (the website looks like a work-in-progress), but the CEO of Life Technologies told us at TEDMED that it is for an iPod Touch that can be used by a lab tech to check on the status of a given sequencing run. Put in a DNA sample, connect your iPhone, wait one hour, and have your complete genome ready for exploration at your fingertips. Sounds like the future of medicine has arrived right now.

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BioCardia’s Intramyocardial Stem Cell Delivery Catheter System Gets European Approval

BioCardia's Intramyocardial Stem Cell Delivery Catheter System Gets European Approval

BioCardia out of San Carlos, California has received European CE Mark approval for its Helical Infusion System for “non-surgical intramyocardial cell, gene, and protein therapy options for patients suffering from the effects of heart failure and chronic myocardial ischemia.” The package consists of a Morph Universal Deflectable Guide catheter and the Helical Infusion Catheter that can be used in any standard cath lab.
Advantages of the system from the product page:

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