• Battelle Report Finds $800-Million Economic Impact of Human Genome Project

    Fast Company | The Human Genome Project has driven $796 billion in economic impact and generated $244 billion in total personal income, according to a new report from Battelle.  

    May 11, 2011
  • More Big Biotech Mergers On the Way

    Reuters | Major drugmakers need the growth potential of biotech now more than ever, says David Snow, even though drug executives and bankers are keeping quiet on big price tag mergers and acquisitions.

    May 10, 2011
  • DNA2.0 Offers Third-Party Genetic Constructs

    Bio-IT World | DNA2.0 will announced that it will offer third-party genetic constructs through the company’s groundbreaking gene assembly and design application, Gene Designer, tomorrow at PEGS 2011 in Boston.

    May 9, 2011
  • Illumina Announces $5,000 Genome Pricing

    Bio-IT World | Illumina is lowering the price for sequencing whole human genomes through its the Illumina Genome Network (IGN) to $5,000 per genome (for orders of ten samples or more) and just $4,000 for projects of 50 samples or more.  

    May 9, 2011
  • PacBio Shares Fall

    Motley Fool | PacBio shares fell 12% yesterday after commentary plugged Illumina and Life Technologies and hinted that GE and IBM may enter the market.

    May 3, 2011
  • BGI Shenzhen is World's Largest Sequencing Facility

    Newsweek | The world's largest genome sequencing facility is in Shenzhen, China. 128 Illumina HiSeq 2000s are in the Shenzhen BGI facility, a modest building in a gritty neighborhood surrounded by mechanics and scrap yards.

    May 1, 2011
  • Get SMRT: Pacific Biosciences Unveils Software Suite with Commercial Launch

    Bio-IT World | Pacific Biosciences marks the long-awaited commercial shipment of its single-molecule DNA sequencer this week with a package of custom software tools. The SMRT (single molecule/real time) Analysis software suite features web-based tools and algorithms for sequence alignment and de novo assembly, and even offers information on the kinetics of nucleotide incorporation. 

    Apr 29, 2011
  • Myriad Genetics Buys Rules-Based Medicine

    Statesman | Myriad Genetics has agreed to buy Rules-Based Medicine for $80 million in cash.

    Apr 28, 2011
  • Oxford Nanopore Raises Another $41 Million for GridION Platform

    Bio-IT World | Oxford Nanopore Technologies has raised a further £25 million ($41 million) in new private funding round that will support further development for the British firm's molecular sensing and next-generation sequencing technology. 

     

    Apr 26, 2011
  • PatientsLikeMe Study Shows Social Media's Value as Research Tool

    Wall Street Journal | A new clinical trial using social networking, conducted by researchers at Patients Like Me and published in Nature Biotechnology, shows the potential value of recruiting and analyzing data from volunteers in a virtual trial at a fraction of the cost and time of traditional trials, even as it refutes the claims of previously published trial on the effects of lithium in patients with Lou Gehrig's disease.  

    Apr 25, 2011
  • Meet Tanuki, a 10,000-core Supercomputer in the Cloud

    Bio-IT World | Connecticut-based Cycle Computing recently helped Genentech successfully spin up a 10,000-core supercomputer named Tanuki in the Amazon cloud, and CEO Jason Stowe sees no reason why he can't go further still.  

    Apr 25, 2011
  • Oracle Software Supporting Moffitt’s Personalized Medicine Ambitions

    Bio-IT World | Moffitt Cancer Center recently announced that it selected Oracle Health Sciences solutions as the foundation for its next-generation health and research informatics platform. The groundbreaking partnership will support efforts by Moffitt’s longitudinal research initiative Total Cancer Care (TCC) to supply doctors of the future with a bedside decision-making tool for better matching patients to trials and treatments, says Mark Hulse, R.N., vice president, information technology and chief information officer at Moffitt Cancer Center.

    Apr 20, 2011
  • Hey, Where Did the Cloud Go?

    The Atlantic Wire | An outage at Amazon's cloud-based EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) Web hosting service, reportedly affecting servers in Virginia, took down a number of popular social media sites, including Foursquare, Reddit, and Hootsuite.  

    Apr 21, 2011
  • Genome Sequencing in Clinic Leads to Life-Saving Cancer Treatment

    AFP | In another example of sequencing in the clinic, researchers at Washington University's Genome Institute have used a patient's genome to inform clinical decisions about leukemia treatment.

    Apr 21, 2011
  • The Value of Outsourcing Bioinformatics

    Guest Commentary | With reducing R&D budgets, revenue streams under threat from expiring drug patents, and general loss of consumer confidence, every biotech organization is faced with making difficult decisions about the future structure and purpose of R&D teams. Outsourcing is vital to the ongoing ability of bioinformatics teams to effectively support R&D activities within their organizations.

    Apr 20, 2011
  • Blueprint Medicines Target Cancer with Genomics

    Technology Review | Blueprint Medicines, which announced $40 million in funding from Third Rock Ventures, is planning to develop drugs designed to target cancer cells with genomics.  

    Apr 19, 2011
  • Computerized Brain Model

    Wall Street Journal | Scientists at the Allen Institute for Brain Science unveiled a $55 million computerized atlas of the brain last week thanks to funding from Microsoft. The atlas has cataloged 1,000 anatomical landmarks in two normal adult brains.  

    Apr 18, 2011
  • VIDEO: The $1,000 Genome

    Bio-IT World Video | Bio-IT World Editor-in-Chief, Kevin Davies, spoke last month at Harvard Medical School on the $1,000 Genome and genetics in medicine.

    Apr 18, 2011
  • Decoding Tumors in Search of More Effective Cancer Treatments

    LA Times | "Every tumor is telling its own story, its own history," says Kevin White, director of the Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology at the University of Chicago, which is leading one of numerous national and international cancer genome projects.

    Apr 18, 2011
  • Bio-IT World Announces 2011 Best Practices Winners

    Bio-IT World—Bio-IT World magazine announced the winners of its seventh Best Practices Awards program this morning at an awards ceremony following the opening keynote at the 2011 Bio-IT World Conference & Expo.

    Apr 13, 2011