Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
News

Australian gene technology launched in US

7 November 2008

A new gene expression analysis platform developed in collaboration between Australian scientists and Invitrogen Corporation to help other researchers understand fundamental aspects of human development has been launched in the US market.

IMBcom Pty Ltd and Invitrogen Corporation have partnered to commercialise the proprietary non-coding RNA content developed by researchers at the Institute for Molecular Bioscience (IMB) at The University of Queensland.

Professor John Mattick and Dr Marcel Dinger from the IMB developed content that was exclusively licensed to Invitrogen for the first commercially available high-density microarray chip, the NCodeTM Human and Mouse non-coding RNA microarray, which can be used by researchers to profile both messenger and non-coding RNAs.

Standard microarray chips interrogate messenger RNAs to determine which genes are active in a cell at any particular moment in time. Non-coding RNAs are not traditional genes, as they do not produce proteins, but they appear to comprise a vast hidden layer of genetic programming implicated in development and disease pathways in mammals.

"Non-coding RNA transcripts play a variety of roles in a cell, ranging from simple housekeeping to complex regulatory functions, and evidence is mounting that their expression is perturbed in many cancers," Professor Mattick said.

"Because their function remains largely unknown, these transcripts represent a new frontier of molecular genetic, molecular biological, physiological and cell biological research."

IMBcom, UQ’s company for the commercialisation of intellectual property arising from research conducted at the IMB, licensed the non-coding RNA content to Invitrogen, which will market and sell the arrays built using this content.

"When we talked to scientists about their interest in studying non-coding RNA, many told us they wanted a microarray that consisted of both mRNA and non-coding RNA content, which would help them elucidate the function of specific non-coding RNAs in relation to known pathways of gene expression," Amy Butler, Vice President of Gene Expression Profiling for Invitrogen, said.

The NCodeTM microarray answers this need, with thousands of coding and non-coding sequences that could answer multiple scientific questions in a single experiment.

Media:
Professor John Mattick 07 3346 2079 or 0412 547 827
Dr Marcel Dinger 07 3346 2080
Dr Peter Isdale (CEO of IMBcom) 07 3346 2180
Bronwyn Adams (IMB Communications) 07 3346 2134 or 0418 575 247

Related articles

Female researcher holding ultrasound paddles to man lying back in chair.

Human trial finds ultrasound treatment for dementia is safe

Scanning ultrasound to potentially treat Alzheimer's disease has been found to be safe and well tolerated in a first-in-human pilot study conducted by University of Queensland researchers.
16 December 2025
Visitors to Bondi Pavilion lay flowers after in memorial for the lives lost in a mass shooting.
Opinion

How can parents talk to their kids about the Bondi terror attack?

As the community begins to grapple with the horror and tragedy of the Bondi shootings on Sunday, children will likely have questions. Parents may also be wondering how to talk to their little kids and teenagers about what happened.
15 December 2025

Media contact

Subscribe to UQ News

Get the latest from our newsroom.