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  • GW_OK
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 411

    Quantum Biosystems

    A new single-strand sequencer emerges!

    Quantum Biosystems
    Like a nanopore, but pulling the DNA through a 2D gate instead of through a membrane.

    Company website here:


    Raw data download (WHAAAT?!) here:
  • GenoMax
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2008
    • 7142

    #2
    Any bets if this or MinION can actually be seen in action next month at AGBT?

    Comment

    • ymc
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2010
      • 496

      #3
      Nicely done website.

      In particular, am impressed by their claim that it can detect methylation during sequencing. I think this can help greatly when doing tumor-normal comparions.

      The only thing missing is some hard number claims about the throughput. read length and cost.

      Comment

      • ymc
        Senior Member
        • Mar 2010
        • 496

        #4
        wow. The data is really "raw". Only rows of floats within the range of 0 and 0.025

        According to the accompanying pdf, you need to write your own HMM to call the bases. I don't see that the HMM has a state for methylated C though...

        Comment

        • ymc
          Senior Member
          • Mar 2010
          • 496

          #5
          From the pdf: I hope this is not the read length of the final product or the read length here is not the same thing as the read length I know...

          "4 Read length distribution
          GATGAT GTGATG TATAG TGAGTAGTAGTGTATA ATGATG GAGT GAGT TGTGATGAT
          Figure 6: Data set with reads of four or more bases highlighted.
          After collapsing homopolymer subsequences, the reference sequence contains 18 bases. This data set contains 23 reads,
          of which the longest is 16 bases (again treating homopolmers as single bases). Events in the signal that most likely
          represent a read of single base were ignored in these counts.
          The average read length was 3.95, for a total of 91 bases over 0.2 seconds. The 8 reads of 4 or more bases are shown
          in Figure 5."

          Comment

          • ajthomas
            Senior Member
            • Mar 2010
            • 167

            #6
            I looks like their technology might turn into something useful at some point, but it's far from ready for prime time.

            Comment

            • ymc
              Senior Member
              • Mar 2010
              • 496

              #7


              Interesting. Nava Whiteford and Johnathan Teutenberg jumped ship from Oxford Nanopore.

              Comment

              • new299
                Junior Member
                • Feb 2014
                • 2

                #8
                ymc/ajthomas: yes quite early days. We've been going for about a year and have received a relatively low level of financing. Hopefully we'll be able to talk about larger datasets in the near future, but we wanted to start engaging with the community at this, relatively early, stage.

                Comment

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                • GATTACAT
                  Reply to Nine Things a Sample Prep Scientist Thinks About Before Sequencing
                  by GATTACAT
                  Love this - good data definitely starts from good input, and poor input can only give relatively poor data. I particularly like the mention of Nanodrop/absorbance based methods for quantification. It's such a toss up if you'll get an accurate reading or what amounts to a randomly generated number, and a lot of library/sequencing related issues can be traced back to poor quant.
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                • SEQadmin2
                  Nine Things a Sample Prep Scientist Thinks About Before Sequencing
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