Zygem And Usamriid Sign Research and Development Agreement
Zygem And Usamriid Sign Crada For Development Of Simplified Sample Processing Solutions For Biothreat Agents
—Will Leverage ZyGEM’s Unique Enzymatic Technologies to Further Simplify and Enhance Nucleic Acid Sample Preparation for Molecular-Based Clinical Diagnostics—
Charlottesville, VA – January 5, 2012 –
ZyGEM Corp. Ltd., a developer and marketer
of innovative products for the analysis of DNA and other
nucleic acids, and the US Army Medical Research Institute of
Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), today announced the signing
of a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA)
for the development of simplified sample processing
solutions for biothreat agents. The two organizations will
collaborate on the development, testing and validation of
new solutions for the rapid and efficient extraction of DNA
and other nucleic acids for the detection of biothreat
agents and other pathogens from a variety of sample
matrices, including buffer, serum, whole blood and swabs.
The CRADA effort will leverage ZyGEM’s proprietary technology for the extraction of DNA and other nucleic acids from diverse samples using thermophilic enzymes produced by extremophile organisms. USAMRIID and ZyGEM intend to collaboratively explore the utility of a number of enzymes capable of isolating nucleic acids. ZyGEM’s enzyme technologies will be evaluated and optimized to provide sample processing capabilities for the detection of a variety of biothreat agents and for use in challenging environments.
ZyGEM currently markets products based on a similar approach. The unique properties of its EA1 protease, the key ingredient in the company’s prepGEM™, forensicGEM™, livestockGEM™ and RNAGEM™ families of nucleic acid extraction kits, make possible cost effective and flexible solutions for researchers performing a wide variety of studies, including human genotyping, animal testing and basic research This enzyme has characteristics that make it well-suited for DNA and RNA extraction in a closed tube, where a simple temperature shift modulating enzyme activity rapidly provides high quality DNA and RNA that is ready for analysis by most PCR-based methods, while avoiding the contamination and low yields that can be encountered with other approaches.
“Molecular diagnostics offers the potential to increase the speed, efficiency and accuracy of pathogen detection, but its use has been limited by the fact that isolation of the nucleic acids needed for the analysis is often laborious and inefficient, yielding low quality material that is contingent on the target organism and the sample matrix,” noted David Saul, Ph.D., senior scientist at ZyGEM. “We believe our enzymatic approaches have the potential to enable the rapid preparation of high quality DNA and RNA for the timely detection of biothreat pathogens from a variety of sample matrices simply and efficiently, which could be especially valuable for use in demanding conditions in the field. We are very pleased to be working with the infectious disease experts at USAMRIID to assess and develop new approaches that seek to harness our unique enzymes to help combat potential biothreats.”
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