Product category:
Nucleic acid sequencing and synthesis
News Release from: Sigma-Aldrich | Subject: GenomePlex
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial
Team on 12 October 2004
Whole genome amplification deal
Covers development of a whole genome amplification technology said to give a highly sensitive, accurate, and proprietary method of amplifying total DNA from any organism
Sigma-Aldrich announces an agreement with Rubicon Genomics for development of the GenomePlex whole genome amplification (WGA) technology, a highly sensitive, accurate, and proprietary method of amplifying total DNA from any organism The agreement grants Sigma-Aldrich exclusive worldwide rights to GenomePlex for the production and sale of kits to the research market
This article was originally published on Laboratorytalk on 7 Jan 2005 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
High yield from minute quantities of genomic DNA
Whole genome amplification kit amplifies nanogram amounts of starting DNA into microgram yields in less than three hours, regardless of source
Further whole genome amplification offerings
Complete whole genome amplification and reamplification kits are derived from proprietary amplification method based on random fragmentation of the genome into a series of overlapping short templates
Rubicon retains all rights to the technology for its core market, molecular diagnostics, as well as for service.
GenomePlex WGA produces accurate and robust amplification of total human DNA at the sub-nanogram level.
The process is a random, non-enzymatic fragmentation of genomic DNA followed by the addition of specific adaptor sequences to both ends, forming an in vitro molecular library that can be amplified using conventional techniques.
Further reading
Single cell whole genome amplification
The new GenomePlex Single Cell WGA Kit supports whole genome amplification from a single cell, resulting in a million-fold amplification yielding microgram quantities of genomic DNA
Expanding position in whole genome amplification
Sigma-Aldrich announces a new licensing agreement with Rubicon Genomics that allows Sigma to offer GenomePlex whole genome amplification (WGA) kits to service providers
Service provider for whole genome amplification
Sigma-Aldrich announces Mogene as its first service provider of the Genomeplex whole genome amplification (WGA) technology
Library preparation and amplification can be accomplished in less than three hours and results in microgram or milligram yields of DNA.
GenomePlex WGA gives excellent results for a wide variety of DNA samples including whole blood, blood spots, buccal swabs, serum, fixed tissue, hair follicles, immunoprecipitates, and single cells.
GenomePlex WGA has been extensively used in academic, government, and commercial projects for SNP and STR genotyping, mutation discovery by sequencing and heteroduplex analysis, and comparative genome hybridisation.
"The GenomePlex technology offers a robust, efficient and economical approach to whole genome amplification", commented Keith Jolliff, global marketing manager of molecular biology at Sigma-Aldrich.
"We feel the PCR based system is an excellent complement to our existing nucleic acid amplification product line as well as our oligonucleotide offering through Sigma-Genosys.
"Our existing technologies coupled with the performance and application advantages of the GenomePlex system provide a winning combination to the genomics research community".
"Rubicon has successfully provided GenomePlex WGA services and kits to the academic and pharmaceutical markets for more than two years," said John Langmore, VP of commercial development at Rubicon.
"Our customers are convinced that it is the most accurate and robust method to preserve and expand very small amounts of precious DNA or degraded DNA into a renewable resource for current and future studies.
"We consider Sigma-Aldrich the ideal partner to promote and globally distribute the technology in kit format and greatly expand the franchise that we have been building.
"We look forward to working with them on their product launch".
Key claimed advantages of GenomePlex WGA include flexibility to study DNA from any source, no detectable locus or allele bias, compatible with a variety of microarray, capillary, and homogenous platforms for sequencing, genotyping, CGH, Fish, Chip, forensics, and biosurveillance, low background amplification of DNA from single chromosomes and cells, increased sensitivity and accuracy for population studies, mutation discovery, and pharmacogenomics, substantially faster and more robust than other WGA methods, and robust amplification of problematic and highly degraded DNA from formalin-fixed, serum, buccal swab, archived, forensic and environmental samples.
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