Quantum-Si Announces Presentation on the Use of Next-Generation Protein Sequencing™ to Detect Disease-Relevant Proteoforms at the Festival of Genomics and Biodata
Quantum-Si announced a presentation by Dr. Gloria Sheynkman at the Festival of Genomics and Biodata in Boston on June 12-13, 2024. The talk will cover the use of Quantum-Si’s Next-Generation Protein Sequencing (NGPS) technology to identify disease-relevant proteoforms. Dr. Sheynkman’s research involves advanced analytical methods to uncover proteomic variations driving complex diseases. The Quantum-Si platform uses dye-labeled amino acid recognizers to detect subtle variations in proteins, providing new insights into human health. The presentation will also discuss the creation of a protein isoform database and mapping splicing events related to bone mineral density in human fetal osteoblast cells.
- Quantum-Si's NGPS technology offers advanced detection of disease-relevant proteoforms.
- Presentation at a major conference increases Quantum-Si's visibility in the genomics community.
- Use of dye-labeled amino acid recognizers provides unique insights into protein variants.
- Research aims to identify novel disease proteoforms, potentially advancing medical research.
- Creation of a comprehensive protein isoform database can enhance data-driven disease research.
- No direct impact on revenue or financial performance from the presentation itself.
- The success of NGPS technology in clinical settings remains to be proven.
- The presentation focuses on research, with no immediate commercial application mentioned.
The presentation, titled “Next Generation Proteomics to Detect Disease-Relevant Proteoforms” will be on Wednesday, June 12th at 2:50 p.m. on the Omics Stage and will describe the application of Quantum-Si’s Next-Generation Protein Sequencing (“NGPS”) to identify protein variants that have a role in complex disease.
Dr. Sheynkman and her team at the University of
NGPS is a complementary, powerful technology that reveals proteoforms that are difficult to distinguish with antibodies and sometimes mass spectrometry. The Quantum-Si platform uses dye-labeled amino acid recognizers to distinguish subtle amino acid variations in isoform-specific peptides, generating new proteoform insights related to human health and disease.
In this presentation, Dr. Sheynkman will describe creation of a database for long-read-guided interpretation of protein isoforms and construction of a map of protein isoforms for splicing events associated with bone mineral density in the human fetal osteoblast (hFOB) cell line. Using this approach the lab derived a list of actin-binding tropomyosin (TPM1/2)-informative peptides and TPM2 isoform-informative peptides from their long-read transcript database, then utilized the Quantum-Si Platinum® instrument to differentiate synthetic peptides that correspond to TPM1/2 paralogs and spliceoforms. Overall, single molecule sequencing with orthogonal methods facilitates proteogenomics and the transition from the discovery to proteoform scoring phase.
About Quantum-Si Incorporated
Quantum-Si, The Protein Sequencing Company™, is focused on revolutionizing the growing field of proteomics. The Company’s suite of technologies is powered by a first-of-its-kind semiconductor chip designed to enable next-generation single-molecule protein sequencing and digitize proteomic research in order to advance drug discovery and diagnostics beyond what has been possible with DNA sequencing. Learn more at quantum-si.com or follow us on LinkedIn or X.
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Source: Quantum-Si Incorporated
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