It seems like every week there’s some amazing new development involving ‘lab on a chip’ devices: in the May 9th issue of PNAS, Blazej et al. reported a nanoliter-scale microfabricated bioprocessor that was able to perform all three Sanger sequencing steps.
The device “”http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/0602476103v1">incorporates a range of advanced lab-on-a-chip technologies, including miniaturized temperature sensing, nanoliter-scale Sanger extension reactions, microvalves/pumps, DNA affinity-capture, and high-performance CE." Like many other lab-on-a-chip devices, it’s remarkably small (100 mm diameter) and the authors were able to sequence 556 continuous bases from 1 femtomole of a DNA template (with 99% accuracy).
Only 10e-15 moles of template? That’s amazing! (And the raw sequencing data in Figure 4 looks fantastic…)
Since a “”http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/0602476103v1">reaction containing 1 fmol of template generates [approximately] 26 times more product than is needed for detection,” the authors believe that they could run the reaction with only 100 attomoles of the DNA template. If this was done, “a sequencing reaction performed at standard concentrations in an easily fabricated 25-nl reactor [would represent] a 400-fold reduction in current sequencing reagent consumption.”
This is bound to make the NIH happy: “”http://www.genome.gov/15015208">it still costs about $10 million to sequence 3 billion base pairs" and “”http://www.genome.gov/15015208">NHGRI’s near-term goal is to lower the cost of sequencing a mammalian-sized genome to $100,000, which would enable researchers to sequence the genomes of hundreds or even thousands of people as part of studies to identify genes that contribute to common, complex diseases." One of their long-term goals is to find a way to sequence a human-sized genome for $1,000 or less.
But the $1,000 genome would come with potential ethical concerns – I don’t know about you, but I don’t think I’d want my genome sequenced… I guess it would be good to know if I was genetically predisposed to get cancer or heart disease so I could take steps to prevent it, but part of me thinks that I’ll enjoy life a bit more being blissfully ignorant… And what if the markers they discover are only right 90% of the time? Then I’d worry away my adulthood only to die of something else…
If you could get your genome sequenced during your next check-up, would you do it?
Joshua
Joshua Finkelstein (Associate Editor, Nature)
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