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Metacelsus's avatar

>Competition from other sequencing companies

I think the biggest risk is actually competition from other sequencing service providers (such as Azenta/Genewiz, who have been doing Sanger sequencing as a service for years) who are now launching competing services. One of the main reasons that Plasmidsaurus and Primordium have been so successful is that existing Sanger service providers got complacent and didn't keep with the latest technology.

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Jacob's avatar

Fantastic read, huge plasmidsaurus fan. Bit of an old-man pedantic quibble with the idea “plasmids work in mammalian cells”. I think most geneticists would discern between plasmids and episomes or bacterial artificial chromosomes, which contain eukaryotic DNA replication elements and other sequences necessary for mammalian expression. Yeast plasmids kind of muddy the water here. The main difference is copy number and size, with most bacterial ‘plasmids’ classically being ~<10kb and many copies, and the BAC class being bigger, up to 100kb+ and one or few copies per cell. The two classes tend to have different molecular cloning workflows as well due to toxicity, duplication, etc. Nobody calls a human BAC for injecting a mouse embryo to create humanized mice a ‘plasmid’, although they do indeed have rhyme in certain characteristics and workflow. Just an old man yelling at clouds here, ignore me, lovely post.

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