Oxford Gene Technology (OGT) to design and fabricate microarrays for the Innate Discovery Team as part of the Centre for HIV-Aids Vaccine Immunology (Chavi) project to develop vaccines for HIV
The team is led by Professor Andrew McMichael, senior scientific leader, Oxford University, and Persephone Borrow of the Edward Jenner Institute.
OGT will design and develop a high quality optimised oligonucleotide microarray to study genes of interest involved in the cellular immune response in early stage HIV infected patients.
The microarrays will be printed using the OGT ink jet in-situ synthesis (Ijiss) platform and will investigate the use of its multi sample array (MSA) format enabling the parallel analysis of multiple samples.
This will effectively reduce the cost per sample and speed up sample processing time.
James Clough, commercial director at OGT said: "We are very excited to be working with Professor McMichael's team and the wider Chavi network.
"OGT's complete microarray combines its bioinformatics expertise with innovative microarray technology and is well suited to the project task."