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  • Roche hostile takeover bid for Illumina!

    Roche is attempting a hostile takeover of Illumina...still absorbing this news...

    Roche is trying to buy its way into the DNA race for the second time -- and perhaps a technology is coming of age.

  • #2
    Reactions on twitter seem to be very negative, echoing yours: "Let me be the first of many to say that I don't want Roche anywhere near illumina"

    Would it mean the end of 454, and the start of the end for Illumina sequencing?

    Comment


    • #3
      Roche is a giant, with a market cap of $153.50bn vs $4.5bn for Illumina, so I guess they could make this happen if they really wanted to.

      But in a way this news is strange because if Roche cares enough about the sequencing market to make an expensive hostile takeover bid for Illumina, why did they let the 454 technology stagnate for so long.

      Being a player in sequencing demands constant technological innovation. Perhaps they have learnt their lesson!?

      Comment


      • #4
        Sounds like a bad idea considering that Illumina probably has reached its peak and their technology is strongly threatened to be made obsolete within the next 1-2 years (by IonTorrent).

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by steinmann View Post
          Sounds like a bad idea considering that Illumina probably has reached its peak and their technology is strongly threatened to be made obsolete within the next 1-2 years (by IonTorrent).
          This is why constant innovation is important. I don't believe Illumina are out of ideas just yet. Roche/454 seem to be though.

          Comment


          • #6
            Sounds like a bad idea considering that Illumina probably has reached its peak and their technology is strongly threatened to be made obsolete within the next 1-2 years (by IonTorrent).
            IonTorrent is a closer competitor to the 454 technology. The Illumina sequencing method is a bit more like Pacific Bioscience's SMRT cell, which uses different colours for different bases. That looks like it's still got a fair bit of time before it develops into a large-scale competitor.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by gringer View Post
              IonTorrent is a closer competitor to the 454 technology. The Illumina sequencing method is a bit more like Pacific Bioscience's SMRT cell, which uses different colours for different bases. That looks like it's still got a fair bit of time before it develops into a large-scale competitor.
              I'm not sure I'd agree with that assessment. Sure PacBio and Illumina both employ colour (as does SOLiD) but otherwise they are quite different. PacBio is a single-molecule technology which makes it markedly different from the others.

              Ion Torrent, 454, SOLiD and Illumina all require amplification of DNA to produce clonal molecular colonies for detection, but the first three technologies use bead-based emPCR whereas Illumina uses bridge amplification on a solid surface.

              Right now your choice for whole genome sequencing of humans is between Illumina and SOLiD. Proton should be a third option when released.

              454 and PGM are suited for microbial-sized genome projects and amplicon sequencing.

              PacBio is good for specialised applications including eukaryotic de novo assembly and detection of nucleotide base modifications but doesn't directly compete with the others as doesn't have the throughput right now.

              Comment


              • #8
                I'm not sure I'd agree with that assessment. Sure PacBio and Illumina both employ colour (as does SOLiD) but otherwise they are quite different. PacBio is a single-molecule technology which makes it markedly different from the others
                Fair enough. My main line of thought was that the technologies are different enough that they could probably exist together. I guess I just saw too much difference between IonTorrent and Illumina, and hunted around for something more appropriate (casting aside SOLiD without a second thought). For some reason I ignored the single-molecule difference.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Not many people know what Illumina have round the corner though. Details of the Oxford Nanopore collaboration is still sketchy.
                  Plus, Illumina still has some pretty useful IP that would be applicable to all the high throughput sequencing platforms.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    As far as the US is concerned, the "clinical sequencing" market is probably the all important one. If Illumina is close to getting regulatory approval for sequencing of clinical samples then that could be the real reason of this takeover bid.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by nickloman View Post
                      This is why constant innovation is important. I don't believe Illumina are out of ideas just yet. Roche/454 seem to be though.
                      Yes, but the issue here is that there has been no real innovation from Illumina since the introduction of their first machine. There has been nothing but gradual improvements and doing more of the same stuff using a bigger and more expensive machine (HiSeq2000).

                      As their technology relies on fancy optics and lasers it will always remain pretty expensive, slow and unreliable. They may offer the most bp per buck right now, but a clinical grade 1000$ or even 100$ genome using their current techology does not seem very realistic to me.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        People need to serioulsy remove their research vision of sequencing, 100$, 1000$, 10000$ of buffer, chip and enzyme cost to sequencing have nothing to do witha proper clinical execution. There is a lot more involved in clinical worth than the simple part of sequencing... Anyone talking Solid or Pac Bio in a clinical study have not worked in the diagnostic field... There is SIMPLY no way this type sample prep can be automated under a 501K FDA let alone 21 CFR 11 software implementation (Ion Torrent also needs work there but much better IMO). There also needs to be a clinical worth... Need we talk about service and manufacturing demands of clinical requirements ?

                        May I remind everyone that Roche is the only player to manufacture drugs, manufacture diagnostic molecular instruments and have a basic research entity... Makes a lot of sense.

                        Seriously, the cost of NGS could be zero $ today, there are still millions of dollars involved in proper clinical execution other than putting a drop on a chip...

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Roche have a history of overpaying for technology that, depending on you point of view is either at it's peak, or that they kill. I favor the later based on the rosetta inpharmatics, 454 and Nimblegen experiences. I suspect that Roche are too big and ungainly to be nimble as nothing seems to progress once they touch it.

                          SOLiD is dead, 454 is a Zombie, IonTorrent/Proton will not compete $/bp with Illumina, and PacBio is niche. The killer tech that Illumina have is clusters, it scales so much faster and better than emPCR - thats why IonTorrent can't win and will remain for smaller centers.

                          That leaves nanopores, of which Oxford Nanopore is probably the leader, and Roche would be able to snag an interest in at least the Exonuclease sequencing version through Illumina - possibly killing both SBS and Nanopore.

                          I hope this deal never happens.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by steinmann View Post
                            Yes, but the issue here is that there has been no real innovation from Illumina since the introduction of their first machine. There has been nothing but gradual improvements and doing more of the same stuff using a bigger and more expensive machine (HiSeq2000).
                            I would disagree here. I think there has been great innovation by Illumina. Each upgrade brings improved performance and reliability and increased output. RNA-Seq, ChIP-Seq and resequencing are now all common and affordable tools for the majority of researchers. Those kind of experiments are in the same ball park as microarrays are in terms of costs which was unthinkable when the first Solexa machines arrived.

                            It's the same with all technology (TV's, computers, mobile phones, sequencers, whatever) in that a basic model comes to market and then there are gradual improvements over time. However, you can only improve something so far before you need change the core technology (when it becomes available). This the reason why we're no longer running computers the size of rooms powered by valves, why we have nice flat screen TV's in our living rooms and why we can play Angry Birds on the way to work.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by matholomew View Post
                              Roche have a history of overpaying for technology that, depending on you point of view is either at it's peak, or that they kill. I favor the later based on the rosetta inpharmatics, 454 and Nimblegen experiences. I suspect that Roche are too big and ungainly to be nimble as nothing seems to progress once they touch it.

                              SOLiD is dead, 454 is a Zombie, IonTorrent/Proton will not compete $/bp with Illumina, and PacBio is niche. The killer tech that Illumina have is clusters, it scales so much faster and better than emPCR - thats why IonTorrent can't win and will remain for smaller centers.

                              That leaves nanopores, of which Oxford Nanopore is probably the leader, and Roche would be able to snag an interest in at least the Exonuclease sequencing version through Illumina - possibly killing both SBS and Nanopore.

                              I hope this deal never happens.
                              I take it you're a "glass half empty" kinda guy ;-)

                              Comment

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