Press Releases

For Immediate Release
July 23, 2004

Contact:
Carolyn Hawley
Canale Communications for Orion Genomics
619-849-5375
carolyn@canalecomm.com

Scientists Describe Structural Basis of DNA's "Second Code"

ST. LOUIS, MO July 23, 2004 - Orion Genomics, a "second code" biotechnology company developing and commercializing oncology diagnostic products, announced today that research conducted by the company's scientific co-founder Rob Martienssen, professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, has advanced understanding of the epigenetic code or "second genetic code" and the relationship between epigenetic changes and diseases including cancer. As described in today's issue of the leading scientific journal Nature, Martienssen related epigenetic information to gene expression patterns over large parts of the Arabidopsis genome, a plant model system. His work validates the role of epigenetic information in determining gene activity, and debuts a powerful new microarray-based methylation profiling technology invented in his laboratory.

In the paper, titled "Role of Transposable Elements in Heterochromatin and Epigenetic Control," Martienssen and his colleagues at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory investigated how chromosomal modifications, including epigenetic information encoded in DNA as methylation patterns, are related to gene expression. The researchers found that changes in DNA methylation and associated modifications result in changes in gene expression. Such control of gene expression by methylation is carried out at the level of specific regions of repeated DNA, rather than over large chromosomal regions as previously believed, since even in strongly methylated regions, active genes were found in unmethylated "islands" of DNA. These modifications are correlated with small interfering RNA (siRNA) that may guide epigenetic modifications to the DNA sequence.

"Our research concerns the mechanism by which methylated DNA and other epigenetic information determines gene activity," said Martienssen, a Professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and co-founder of Orion Genomics. "Because of this 'second code', epigenetic changes are emerging as important defects in childhood diseases, as well as in cancer. The profiling technology described in this paper will help to uncover these epigenetic defects, providing biomarkers and leads for potential therapy."

The technology used to determine methylation patterns was invented by Martienssen and his collaborators, exclusively licensed by Orion Genomics, and is marketed under the name MethylScope for the discovery of proprietary cancer biomarkers and the development of oncology diagnostic products. Abnormal methylation patterns are associated with the majority of all cancers, and the ability to determine them on a genome-wide basis has resulted in Orion's ongoing development of early noninvasive tests for cancer, which may enable earlier and more effective treatment and improve the cost, power and efficiency of clinical trials.

About Orion Genomics


Orion Genomics, the Second Code Company, develops epigenetic research tools and molecular diagnostic products to fulfill the promise of personalized medicine. Orion's lead product is a simple blood-based test that is being developed to identify people at elevated risk for colorectal cancer. The company has active biomarker discovery programs in cancers of the bladder, breast, lung, ovaries and colon, and the company offers genomics services to the medical, agricultural and bio-fuels research communities. Orion Genomics is located in the Center for Emerging Technologies in St. Louis. For more information, visit the Orion Genomics website at http://www.oriongenomics.com.