1 / 7

Genetic Repositories Australia

Genetic Repositories Australia. BACKGROUND GRA supported by an NHMRC Enabling Facility Grant awarded in 2006. Chief Investigators on the NHMRC Enabling Grant are – Professor Peter Schofield (Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute & University of New South Wales)

maalik
Download Presentation

Genetic Repositories Australia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genetic Repositories Australia • BACKGROUND • GRA supported by an NHMRC Enabling Facility Grant awarded in 2006. • Chief Investigators on the NHMRC Enabling Grant are – • Professor Peter Schofield (Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute & University of New South Wales) • Dr Juleen Cavanaugh (Australian National University, Medical School, Canberra Hospital) • Dr Susan Forrest (Australian Genome Research Facility) • Professor John Hopper (Centre for Genetic Epidemiology University of Melbourne) • GRA is based at the Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute in Sydney. • Facility Manager is Mr Steve Turner.

  2. GRA - Aims and Objectives • GRA aims to provide a central national facility for – • establishing • distributing and • maintaining the long-term secure storage of human genetic samples from a variety of sources. • GRA aims to facilitate world-class collaborative health and medical research in Australia, and internationally through: • the provision of clinically validated but de-identified patient material • complete phenotypic descriptors of disease and family, or cohort structure • permits genetic analyses for disease gene identification.

  3. GRA - Services • A central facility for the processing of blood samples and production of B-lymphoblastoid cell lines. • Extraction of DNA from blood or cell lines. • Samples will be processed from patients, controls and epidemiological participants from studies on a range of diseases and their outcomes. • DNA and immortalized cell lines will be stored for distribution to qualified investigators. • Samples available for distribution will be processed at a subsidised academic rate. • Fee-for-service work can be performed for samples not available for distribution.

  4. GRA FURTHER INFORMATION Mr Steve Turner, Facility Manager (GRA) Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute Randwick, Sydney, Email: gra@unsw.edu.au Telephone: (+ 61 2) 9399 1068 Website: www.powmri.edu.au/gra.htm

  5. The ARCBS Aussie Normals • 1000 ARCBS blood donors – healthy Caucasians • Cell lines & DNA • DNA available in 96 well plates from mid April 2007 • Biochemical phenotype available via collaboration with researchers (Cavanaugh & Hickman @ ANU) • Projects subject to approval by ARCBS

  6. AGRF Services • SNP Discovery • Genotyping • Expression analysis

More Related