Wednesday, 10 October 2007 10:17 am
Member name:   Password:   
home
about us
register online
nz education
kids
parents
links
faq
contact
 
General NZ Educ(25)
Pre-school Info.(22)
Primary/Intermediate Schools(19)
Associations/Orgs(47)
Secondary Schools(13)
Tertiary(14)
Adult Education Area(4)
Special Education.(28)
Teaching (8)
Profess Development(3)
Gifted/Talented Ed(19)
Scholarships(19)
Apprenticeships(5)
ICT(12)
Home Schooling.(3)
Parents + Families (50)
Maori(8)
Distance Education(2)
Learning(1)
Behaviour(1)
English Second Language(11)
 
The Montessori classroom
19 Aug 2007
Special Needs Support
19 Aug 2007
The Birds and the Bees
11 Jul 2007
Boy's Behaviour
10 Jul 2007
How to grow healthy children?
19 Jun 2007
LD and Touch Typing
20 May 2007
TESOLANZ
20 May 2007
MOE recognises dyslexia
24 Apr 2007
Teaching Children
10 Apr 2007
Temper Tantrums
05 Feb 2007
 
Community have say for Schools
07 Oct 2007
DNA 100 times faster at Massey
07 Oct 2007
New Teacher Scholarships
25 Sep 2007
NZ Diploma Online
13 Sep 2007
New chair for Tertiary Educati
14 Aug 2007
Auckland Museum Ed Programme
13 Aug 2007
Darwin at Auckland Museum
13 Aug 2007
Dip Business Online
07 Aug 2007
New Nat Dip Business Online
25 Jul 2007
Huge improvement maths results
19 Jul 2007
 
  edusearch articles
You are here > Sections > Education News > DNA one hundred times faster at Massey

print this article

DNA one hundred times faster at Massey  
Author : Beehive







Created : 07 Oct 2007
Last Revision : 07 Oct 2007

DNA one hundred times faster at Massey

A new piece of technology that can provide extremely fast and detailed information on DNA has been unveiled today at the Allan Wilson Centre in Massey University by Research, Science and Technology Minister Steve Maharey.

---------------------------------

A new piece of technology that can provide extremely fast and detailed information on DNA has been unveiled today at the Allan Wilson Centre in Massey University, by Research, Science and Technology Minister Steve Maharey.

Steve Maharey says the new $700,000 'Solexa Genome Analyzer System' will enable Massey scientists to analyse DNA a hundred times faster and cheaper than they could before.

"This machine is the first of its kind in the southern hemisphere, and will enable the Allan Wilson Centre to take a leading role in showing the world how such new technology can be applied to study populations, individuals and diseases.

"The new Solexa will advance our knowledge of the causes of diseases like Hepatitis B and the genetic susceptibility to cancers, such as stomach cancer.  It will also help us find new tests for diseases.

"It can be used to study the genetic diversity of our native plants and animals, or to identify the microbes that cause diseases on grape vines, which would be a huge benefit to the New Zealand wine industry.

"Another major advantage of the Solexa is that scientists don't need to clone genes to analyse them, and they don't transfer genetic material between species.  This will help address concerns about this kind of research."

Steve Maharey says researchers from both universities and CRIs around the country will be able to pool their expertise and equipment with the new 'Solexa Genome Analyzer System'.

"Being the first such machine in this part of the world, there are also opportunities to tap into the Australian research community, as well as to other Pacific countries like Fiji."

The Allan Wilson Centre is one of two prestigious Centres of Research Excellence (CoRE) at Massey University.  The second is the Riddet Centre, which became a CoRE earlier this year and focuses on food and biologicals.

 

Comments on this article:  

Need help? call on (09) 4730034 or fax (09) 4737034
EduSearch.co.nz © 2001 | advertise | legal | privacy | site maintained by Virtusoft Ltd.