To analyze the genome or the genetic characteristics of a living organism, scientists typically rely on samples of millions of cells. The problem is that the DNA in each of our cells is not identical.
Until recently, the amount of DNA that could be extracted from a single cell couldn’t provide enough material for genetic analysis, but advances in single-cell genomics could be the key to solving some of the mysteries of diseases like cancer, which is the result of damage to individual cells. It could also help researchers better understand complex bodily systems like the brain and the immune system that are composed of a variety of cell types, each with their own unique genetic characteristics.
As a means to solving the problems posed by single-cell genomics, a process called whole-gene amplification is providing researchers with ways to generate sufficient quantities of DNA necessary for analysis by replicating the genetic material extracted from each cell. The process is not without its challenges, but a by Shiwei Liu, a Ph.D. candidate in biology in the University of Virginia’s College of Arts & Sciences; UVA biology professor Jennifer L. GĂĽler; and others, published recently in the journal Genome Medicine, outlines an approach to whole-genome amplification resulting from a collaboration with neuroscientists in Âé¶ąĆĆ˝â°ć School of Medicine that could provide an effective framework for creating new and more effective treatments for a variety of diseases.
Assistant professor of biology Jennifer GĂĽler studies the genetic and metabolic mechanisms that allow malaria to adapt to and survive anti-malarial medications. (Photo by Molly Angevine)
Güler and Liu study the single-celled protozoan parasite, called Plasmodium, that causes malaria, a disease that kills nearly half a million people every year. There are no effective vaccines in widespread use for the disease, and one of the problems the medical community faces is that the organism can rapidly develop resistance to the drugs that have been developed to wipe it out. Güler’s team has been working to understand cellular mechanisms that allow it to survive and how genetic diversity within the parasite population affects its resistance to drugs.

.jpg)