A formal collaboration was announced today between the Wellcome Trust
Sanger Institute, the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) and
Fluidigm Corporation (NASDAQ:FLDM) to accelerate the development of new
methods for the analysis of single-cell genomics data.
The Single Cell Genomics Centre (SCGC) on the Wellcome Trust Genome
Campus will work with onsite Fluidigm senior staff to ensure that the
centre has early access to the latest equipment, workflows and methods
for genomics and proteomics research.
“Because we have early access to the most advanced technology, we can
develop new experimental and computational methods that help us
understand what is happening in each of our cells, at different points
in the cell cycle,” says Dr. Sarah Teichmann of EMBL-EBI and the Sanger
Institute. “This is really a new frontier – we hope the work we do will
help the technology mature more quickly, so that it can help more people
find answers to complex biological questions.”
In addition to technology advancements, the collaboration will make
single-cell research more accessible to the greater research community
by developing and disseminating new workflows, bioinformatics tools, and
data sets.
The collaboration builds on previous work between Fluidigm and founding
members of the SCGC. For example, the Teichmann group discovered that
immune cells produce steroids to regulate themselves – knowledge based
on mRNA-seq data from single cells prepared by Fluidigm technology.
Using single-cell gene expression data from Fluidigm’s C1TM
Single-Cell Auto Prep system and sequencing technology, John Marioni’s
group at EMBL-EBI developed a novel statistical method that shows how
single-cell mRNA sequencing can be used to pinpoint true differences
between cells in apparently homogeneous samples. Thierry Voet, based at
KU Leuven and an associate member of Faculty at the Sanger Institute,
uses DNA sequencing at the single-cell level to understand how
spontaneous variations in DNA can arise as cells divide.
“Our work with the SCGC is about co-creating a solid foundation for a
revolution in biological understanding that will come from single-cell
analysis,” said Robert C. Jones, Fluidigm Executive Vice President of
Research and Development. “Together, we can build better informatics
tools to extract relevant biology from the massive amounts of
single-cell RNA expression data that our systems generate. We’ll also
find innovative ways to determine the DNA, protein, RNA, and epigenetic
state of each cell and to scale the process up to perform across
thousands and millions of cells.”
These high-throughput techniques allow researchers to explore cellular
heterogeneity in normal development and in disease at the single-cell
level, offering a vast improvement over the current practice of
investigating millions of cells in bulk. Until now, scientists have been
limited in their ability to identify functionally distinct
subpopulations of cells and understand their contribution into the
development of diseases such as cancer. DNA-seq and RNA-seq techniques,
enabled by Fluidigm, are opening up new opportunities to discover and
explore the diverse nature of cells at the highest possible resolution.
Notes to Editors:
Fluidigm Technology
The Single-Cell Genomics Centre employs Fluidigm’s C1 Single-Cell Auto
Prep and BiomarkTM HD systems, and has access to Fluidigm’s
CyTOF® mass spectrometry technology as well.
Publications:
Mahata B et al. Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals T helper cells
synthesizing steroids de novo to contribute to immune
homeostasis. Cell Reports 2014 May 22; 7(4): 1130-42. (http://europepmc.org/abstract/MED/24813893)
Brennecke P et al. Accounting for technical noise in single-cell RNA-seq
experiments. Nature Methods 2013 Nov; 10(11): 1093-5.
(http://europepmc.org/abstract/MED/24056876)
Voet T et al. Single-cell paired-end genome sequencing reveals
structural variation per cell cycle. Nucleic Acids Research. Jul
2013; 41(12): 6119–6138. (http://europepmc.org/abstract/MED/23630320)
Use of Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the
meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995,
including statements relating to the SCGC collaboration, Fluidigm’s
products, and the field of single-cell biology research. Forward-looking
statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could
cause actual results to differ materially from currently anticipated
results, including inherent risks relating to research and development
activities and emerging markets. Information on these and additional
risks affecting Fluidigm's business and operating results are contained
in its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including
its most recently filed Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter
ended September 30, 2014. These forward-looking statements speak only as
of the date hereof and Fluidigm disclaims any obligation to update these
statements except as may be required by law.
About Fluidigm
Fluidigm (NASDAQ:FLDM) develops, manufactures, and markets life science
analytical and preparatory systems for growth markets such as
single-cell biology and production genomics. We sell to leading academic
institutions, clinical laboratories, and pharmaceutical, biotechnology,
and agricultural biotechnology companies worldwide. Our systems are
based on proprietary microfluidics and multi-parameter mass cytometry
technology, and are designed to significantly simplify experimental
workflow, increase throughput, and reduce costs, while providing
excellent data quality. Fluidigm products are provided for Research Use
Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
For more information, please visit www.fluidigm.com.
Fluidigm, the Fluidigm logo, Biomark, C1 and CyTOF are trademarks or
registered trademarks of Fluidigm Corporation.
Copyright Business Wire 2014