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Unique technology with the potential to test for hundreds of diseases,

cancers and genes in one, cheap, test

10-Sep-2004 News-Medical.Net

Queensland, Australia PhD student Angus ston has invented a unique

technology with the potential to test for hundreds of diseases, cancers

and genes in one, cheap, test. He hopes that within five years the

technology will be available in a desktop unit for less than AU$30,000.

“This is a unique, patented technology that has the potential to

revolutionise genetic testing,” said Angus ston, PhD student and

co-inventor of the technology.

“A simple machine could be installed in a doctor’s surgery which would

give almost instantaneous feedback on which diseases the patient is

susceptible.”

GeneBalls would not only help diagnosing cancer and other diseases, but

also give an early warning for diseases like heart disease. With this

early warning the patient can make lifestyle changes before any symptoms

occur.

Geneballs can currently look at 12 genes in one test, but in the next 12

months we plan to increase this number to tens or hundreds of thousands.

The existing technology, is too expensive and inaccurate for clinical

applications.

Angus is one of 16 early-career scientists presenting their research to

the public for the first time thanks to Fresh Science. The researcher

who best meets the criteria of the national competition will present

their work in the UK courtesy of British Council Australia.

It’s been an exciting journey for the student researcher. “I’ve had the

opportunity to do a PhD that’s led to direct commercial outcomes,” says

Angus.

“It has given me two international patents and a shareholding in a

company which is commercialising the technology.”

GeneBalls are tiny particles one tenth the diameter of a human hair and

work like a barcode on items in a supermarket.

Each tiny bead contains a mixture of fluorescent dyes and is coated with

DNA. If a patient has DNA the same as DNA on one of the GeneBalls, their

DNA will stuck to the GeneBall.

http://www.scienceinpublic.com/, http://www.freshscience.org/

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