Select your localized edition:

Close ×

More Ways to Connect

Discover one of our 28 local entrepreneurial communities »

Be the first to know as we launch in new countries and markets around the globe.

Interested in bringing MIT Technology Review to your local market?

MIT Technology ReviewMIT Technology Review - logo

 

Unsupported browser: Your browser does not meet modern web standards. See how it scores »

A new benchtop DNA sequencer will allow medical clinics to sequence a patient’s entire genome in a day. The system uses this disposable semiconductor chip, which has an array of microscopic wells containing known DNA templates on its upper surface. Fragments of a patient’s genome are washed over these wells, and matches between a template and the patient’s DNA trigger electronic sensors attached to the well. The chip and required reagents together cost $1,000 per genome. The sequencer will allow doctors, as part of a patient’s normal care, to test for genetic conditions or assess whether the patient is likely to respond to a particular drug.

Product: Ion Proton Sequencer
Cost: $149,000
Availability: Mid-2012
Source: www.lifetechnologies.com
Company: Life Technologies

Image by Life Technologies

Tagged: Biomedicine, Life Technologies

Reprints and Permissions | Send feedback to the editor

From the Archives