Now on ScienceBlogs: Charles Darwin February 12, 1809 - April 19, 1882

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Genetic Future

Commentary on human genetics and evolution, direct-to-consumer genetic testing, and the personal genomics industry.

Search

Profile

Daniel MacArthur
I write about the genetic and evolutionary basis of human variation, and the companies trying to sell you information about your genome.

Daniel also blogs about personal genomics at Genomes Unzipped.

Subscribe via RSS.
Follow me on Twitter.

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogs I read:

Consumer Genomics:

Genomic Science:

Genetics/Evolution Blogs:

General Science:

Corporate Blogs:

Skeptics:

« What is it with rich white guys and genome sequences? | Main | Another genomics blog to follow: Pathogenomics »

Pacific Biosciences raises $68M for third-gen sequencing development

Category: financehelicosnext-generation sequencingpacbio
Posted on: August 12, 2009 1:15 PM, by Daniel MacArthur

The announcement of the Helicos genome sequence (which I've already discussed in detail) engendered a huge amount of media interest, sometimes for the wrong reasons

Having the media attention directed elsewhere in the third-generation sequencing space was clearly an unwelcome experience for Helicos competitors Pacific Biosciences, who have responded with a press release announcing the successful raising of $68M to finance further development of their single-molecule real-time (SMRT) sequencing platform.

To be fair, raising that sort of capital in the current economic climate is no mean feat, although this is perhaps as much a tribute to PacBio's PR acumen as to their promising technology and financial potential. 

The challenges lying ahead for this company in penetrating a sequencing market already thoroughly dominated by Illumina (who has already signed a distribution contract with a competing third-generation platform, Oxford Nanopore) should not be understated. PacBio's technology will have to represent a spectacular advance over the current state of the art (unlike, say, Helicos' offering) to have a chance, at least over the medium term. 

Still, the promise of super-long single-molecule reads from PacBio is enticing, and I look forward to seeing the results that emerge from their platform once it finally reaches the market. The press release suggests that the commercial launch will come in late 2010, so we still have a while to wait.

Meanwhile, on a tangent: I note with interest that one of the investors is the Wellcome Trust, a major UK-based charitable foundation that has invested heavily in genomic research. I hope the Trust realises that their investment in PacBio could earn them another semi-coherent rant from Applied Biosystems/Life Technologies' Kevin McKernan unless the Trust swiftly make a precisely equal contribution to Life Technologies. In the interests of fairness and competition, of course.

If that last paragraph made no sense to you, see David Dooling and Nick Loman for context.


Share on Facebook
Share on StumbleUpon
Share on Facebook
Find more posts in: Life ScienceMedicine & Health

Comments

1

I found it interesting that another of the named investors was Monsanto. Unless they're getting into that subset of GMOs known as GMHs, it appears they're interested in PacBio for its non-human applications. Makes me wonder about the viability of the Complete Genomics model which, last I heard, involved human genomes only.

Posted by: Dan Vorhaus | August 12, 2009 3:46 PM

2

Oxford Nanopore and Pacific Biosciences systems may be 2-3 years in the future. The price of a Helicos machine should go down in the near turn. It can easily take a significant market share away from other companies like Illumina.

Posted by: Johnny | August 15, 2009 10:37 PM

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

© 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.