Beckman Coulter Life Sciences, a world leader in laboratory automation and innovation, may have a full team of dedicated professionals and informative programming on the American Society of Human Genetics (ASHG) Annual Meeting October 25-29, 2022 in Los Angeles, California on the Los Angeles Convention Center.
At booth 2037, attendees may have the possibility to interact with instruments, including one-on-one demonstrations, to learn learn how to strike next generation sequencing (NGS) workflow gold to assist low- to high-throughput labs. The NGS market is forecasted to succeed in $22.9 billion by 2025, making ASHG a super time to learn more about how labs can realize a latest level of cost savings and throughput, improve end-to-end NGS automation at standard and reduced response volumes, automate current and future workflows, and deliver laboratory results with confidence by generating high-quality sequencing data.
Given the substantial growth of the NGS market, we all know labs have many questions and wishes for workflow evaluation and enhancements. Beckman Coulter Life Sciences is uniquely positioned to paved the way with solutions and be a trusted partner within the lab. Nobody desires to have their research ruined by errors or delays, so we’re especially pleased to have the option to deliver solutions that provide more reliable and accurate laboratory results with significantly fewer physical steps, allowing the main target to return to the work and never the workflow.”
Amy Yoder, Director of Genomics Product Management.
The corporate’s entire NGS suite can be on display, including the Biomek NGeniuS Next Generation Library Prep System, the Echo 525 Acoustic Liquid Handler, the Biomek i5 Automated Workstation, together with NGS cleanup reagents and the EMnetik System for plasmid prep and Polymerase Chain Response (PCR) cleanup.
Beckman Coulter Life Sciences can be offering two presentations through the event. Biomek NGeniuS Product Manager Calvin Cortes will highlight the revolutionary methodology to expedite NGS workflows in his presentation: “Optimizing Your NGS Lab with a Game-Changing, Easy-to-Use Automation Solution,” which takes place Wednesday, October 26 at 3:00 p.m. PST in CoLab Theater 3.
Dr. Ryan Wyllie, Assistant Research Scientist in Biomedical Engineering at University of Michigan, will present on “Improving High-Throughput Genomics Protocols with Statistical Design of Experiments.” The presentation strives to supply clarity, as quite a lot of industrial and home-made methods exist to lower the price or increase the efficiency of genomic assays. A lot of these techniques are suboptimal when applied to latest samples or when the protocol or reagents must be modified or automated. Re-optimizing a protocol by trial-and-error is an expensive and laborious process. Systematic frameworks just like the statistical design of experiments (DOE) can improve processes by exploring the quantitative relationship between multiple aspects. DOE allows experimenters to search out factor interactions that won’t be apparent when aspects are studied in isolation. Dr. Wyllie’s presentation will happen Thursday, October 27 at 1:15 p.m. PST in CoLab Theater 2.
Each presentations are included with admission to ASHG. To learn more about NGS solutions, visit https://becls.co/next-generation-sequencing.
Source:
Beckman Coulter Life Sciences