Accurate diagnosis is a prerequisite for efficient health care. Ideally, if signs of pathogenesis could be detected before or at early stages of disease onset, then effective intervention and treatment may be administered. Many disease states are associate with genomic aberrations such as specific genetic mutations, epigenetic modifications or DNA damage lesions. Characterization of such aberrations at early stage relies on ultra-sensitive genomic analysis that is only partially addressed by the current available technologies. Diagnostics based on cytogenetic approaches provides information on the single-chromosome level but suffers from low resolution and low throughput. In contrast, next generation sequencing (NGS) based diagnostics provides single base resolution and high throughput but suffers from short reads that prevents the analysis of large genomic aberrations, as well as being prone to bias due to PCR-amplification and erasure of epigenetic information.
The ground-breaking goal of this research project is to establish a robust set of diagnostic assays via single-molecule, genetic/epigenetic profiling of native chromosomal DNA. A successful accomplishment of this goal will allow low cost and rapid characterization of genomic aberrations and infectious organisms. Dissemination and commercialization of the developed technologies will open new horizons in biomedical diagnostics and personalized medicine.