The Agnos Biosciences™ team developed the AirSeq™ technology which provides rapid detection of airborne pathogens, transforming capabilities for early pathogen detection. This new technology is a method for characterising biological particles in the air using a combination of novel molecular biology, DNA sequencing and bespoke computational analysis.
With a very low false positive rate, it can be used to quantify the presence of bacteria, viruses, fungi, pollen or any other biological material. Unlike alternatives, AirSeq™ is unbiased, is not targeted to specific pathogens and can detect multiple (1000s) species.
Culminating years of scientific research and development funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), Earlham Institute, NHM and other public and philanthropic funding bodies in the UK and US, AirSeq™ technology has a range of potential applications with proven results in environmental monitoring, agricultural pathogens, food manufacturing - and biological threat detection following extensive research with the US DARPA (United States’ Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency).
Earlham Institute Group Leader and Agnos Biosciences Co-Founder and CTO Dr Richard Leggett said: “I'm delighted to launch AirSeq as a service after so many years of research and development. This is an exciting opportunity to use this technology to help new customers with different applications, as well as develop AirSeq's continued use in agriculture, the wider food industry and in biosecurity.”
At the Earlham Institute scientists have contributed over a decade of research to AirSeq technology.
Natural History Museum Research Leader and Agnos Biosciences’ Co-Founder and CSO Professor Matt Clark said: “AirSeq is the culmination of many years of research. We are very excited about how fast and accurate it is at detecting pathogens or indeed any organism via their DNA – identifying them in the air enables early, critical interventions hopefully preventing infections and pandemics taking hold.”