• Skip to content (access key 1)
  • Skip to search (access key 7)
FWF — Austrian Science Fund
  • Go to overview page Discover

    • Research Radar
      • Research Radar Archives 1974–1994
    • Discoveries
      • Emmanuelle Charpentier
      • Adrian Constantin
      • Monika Henzinger
      • Ferenc Krausz
      • Wolfgang Lutz
      • Walter Pohl
      • Christa Schleper
      • Elly Tanaka
      • Anton Zeilinger
    • Impact Stories
      • Verena Gassner
      • Wolfgang Lechner
      • Georg Winter
    • scilog Magazine
    • Austrian Science Awards
      • FWF Wittgenstein Awards
      • FWF ASTRA Awards
      • FWF START Awards
      • Award Ceremony
    • excellent=austria
      • Clusters of Excellence
      • Emerging Fields
    • In the Spotlight
      • 40 Years of Erwin Schrödinger Fellowships
      • Quantum Austria
    • Dialogs and Talks
      • think.beyond Summit
    • Knowledge Transfer Events
    • E-Book Library
  • Go to overview page Funding

    • Portfolio
      • excellent=austria
        • Clusters of Excellence
        • Emerging Fields
      • Projects
        • Principal Investigator Projects
        • Principal Investigator Projects International
        • Clinical Research
        • 1000 Ideas
        • Arts-Based Research
        • FWF Wittgenstein Award
      • Careers
        • ESPRIT
        • FWF ASTRA Awards
        • Erwin Schrödinger
        • doc.funds
        • doc.funds.connect
      • Collaborations
        • Specialized Research Groups
        • Special Research Areas
        • Research Groups
        • International – Multilateral Initiatives
        • #ConnectingMinds
      • Communication
        • Top Citizen Science
        • Science Communication
        • Book Publications
        • Digital Publications
        • Open-Access Block Grant
      • Subject-Specific Funding
        • AI Mission Austria
        • Belmont Forum
        • ERA-NET HERA
        • ERA-NET NORFACE
        • ERA-NET QuantERA
        • ERA-NET TRANSCAN
        • Alternative Methods to Animal Testing
        • European Partnership Biodiversa+
        • European Partnership BrainHealth
        • European Partnership ERA4Health
        • European Partnership ERDERA
        • European Partnership EUPAHW
        • European Partnership FutureFoodS
        • European Partnership OHAMR
        • European Partnership PerMed
        • European Partnership Water4All
        • Gottfried and Vera Weiss Award
        • netidee SCIENCE
        • Herzfelder Foundation Projects
        • Quantum Austria
        • Rückenwind Funding Bonus
        • WE&ME Award
        • Zero Emissions Award
      • International Collaborations
        • Belgium/Flanders
        • Germany
        • France
        • Italy/South Tyrol
        • Japan
        • Luxembourg
        • Poland
        • Switzerland
        • Slovenia
        • Taiwan
        • Tyrol–South Tyrol–Trentino
        • Czech Republic
        • Hungary
    • Step by Step
      • Find Funding
      • Submitting Your Application
      • International Peer Review
      • Funding Decisions
      • Carrying out Your Project
      • Closing Your Project
      • Further Information
        • Integrity and Ethics
        • Inclusion
        • Applying from Abroad
        • Personnel Costs
        • PROFI
        • Final Project Reports
        • Final Project Report Survey
    • FAQ
      • Project Phase PROFI
      • Project Phase Ad Personam
      • Expiring Programs
        • Elise Richter and Elise Richter PEEK
        • FWF START Awards
  • Go to overview page About Us

    • Mission Statement
    • FWF Video
    • Values
    • Facts and Figures
    • Annual Report
    • What We Do
      • Research Funding
        • Matching Funds Initiative
      • International Collaborations
      • Studies and Publications
      • Equal Opportunities and Diversity
        • Objectives and Principles
        • Measures
        • Creating Awareness of Bias in the Review Process
        • Terms and Definitions
        • Your Career in Cutting-Edge Research
      • Open Science
        • Open-Access Policy
          • Open-Access Policy for Peer-Reviewed Publications
          • Open-Access Policy for Peer-Reviewed Book Publications
          • Open-Access Policy for Research Data
        • Research Data Management
        • Citizen Science
        • Open Science Infrastructures
        • Open Science Funding
      • Evaluations and Quality Assurance
      • Academic Integrity
      • Science Communication
      • Philanthropy
      • Sustainability
    • History
    • Legal Basis
    • Organization
      • Executive Bodies
        • Executive Board
        • Supervisory Board
        • Assembly of Delegates
        • Scientific Board
        • Juries
      • FWF Office
    • Jobs at FWF
  • Go to overview page News

    • News
    • Press
      • Logos
    • Calendar
      • Post an Event
      • FWF Informational Events
    • Job Openings
      • Enter Job Opening
    • Newsletter
  • Discovering
    what
    matters.

    FWF-Newsletter Press-Newsletter Calendar-Newsletter Job-Newsletter scilog-Newsletter

    SOCIAL MEDIA

    • LinkedIn, external URL, opens in a new window
    • , external URL, opens in a new window
    • Facebook, external URL, opens in a new window
    • Instagram, external URL, opens in a new window
    • YouTube, external URL, opens in a new window

    SCILOG

    • Scilog — The science magazine of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
  • elane login, external URL, opens in a new window
  • Scilog external URL, opens in a new window
  • de Wechsle zu Deutsch

  

Development of a high throughput methodology to measure recombination in male meiosis

Development of a high throughput methodology to measure recombination in male meiosis

Irene Tiemann-Boege (ORCID: 0000-0002-3621-7020)
  • Grant DOI 10.55776/M1097
  • Funding program Lise Meitner
  • Status ended
  • Start January 5, 2009
  • End January 4, 2010
  • Funding amount € 61,240
  • Project website

Disciplines

Biology (70%); Nanotechnology (30%)

Keywords

    Bead Emulsion Pcr, Single Molecule Amplification, Recombination Hotspot, Fluorescent Imaging, Bead Array, Microscopy Scanning

Abstract

Recombination is not uniform across the human genome but occurs in small regions of 1-2 kilobases known as recombination hotspots. The position of recombination hotspots is not constant over time and varies between closely related species such as humans and chimpanzees or even between different human populations and among individuals of the same ethnicity. My long term goal is characterizing the inter- and intra- population variation in recombination hotspot position and activity. Studying recombination hotspots is quite relevant since not much is know about what controls the activity of hotspots or how this activity changes over time. We now know that hotspots are very common, but we know very little about the molecular nature of meiotic hotspots. Currently, the techniques that accurately measure recombination in single individuals are very laborious and costly. Therefore, the focus of this proposal is to develop a high throughput methodology that will allow the characterization of many hotspots in a large sample size of individuals to further understand recombination hotspots. A new technology based on the amplification of single molecules on magnetic beads contained in micro- droplets suspended in an emulsion will be used for this purpose. On a broader perspective, adapting this new technology to study recombination hotspots will have also the benefit of perfecting and extending a technology which, given its high throughput, has fostered new approaches to analyzing biological problems. My specific aims are to: 1. Adapt the emulsion-bead technology for measuring recombination events. This assay will allow "counting" crossover events in human male meioses (sperm DNA). Specifically, a reaction where two distinct genetic markers can be simultaneously amplified on a single magnetic bead in the emulsion needs to be developed. 2. Find sensitive and specific assay conditions that allow distinguishing the rare recombinants from the much more numerous non-recombinants. 3. Improve the throughput of the emulsion-bead technology by testing different detection biochemistries, as well as optimizing the optical, mechanic, and fluidic components of the microscope that allows a fast analysis of the arrayed beads.

Research institution(s)
  • Universität Linz - 100%

Research Output

  • 34 Citations
  • 2 Publications
Publications
  • 2012
    Title Massively Parallel Haplotyping on Microscopic Beads for the High-Throughput Phase Analysis of Single Molecules
    DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0036064
    Type Journal Article
    Author Boulanger J
    Journal PLoS ONE
    Link Publication
  • 2009
    Title Product Length, Dye Choice, and Detection Chemistry in the Bead-Emulsion Amplification of Millions of Single DNA Molecules in Parallel
    DOI 10.1021/ac900633y
    Type Journal Article
    Author Tiemann-Boege I
    Journal Analytical Chemistry
    Pages 5770-5776
    Link Publication

Discovering
what
matters.

Newsletter

FWF-Newsletter Press-Newsletter Calendar-Newsletter Job-Newsletter scilog-Newsletter

Contact

Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Georg-Coch-Platz 2
(Entrance Wiesingerstraße 4)
1010 Vienna

office(at)fwf.ac.at
+43 1 505 67 40

General information

  • Job Openings
  • Jobs at FWF
  • Press
  • Philanthropy
  • scilog
  • FWF Office
  • Social Media Directory
  • LinkedIn, external URL, opens in a new window
  • , external URL, opens in a new window
  • Facebook, external URL, opens in a new window
  • Instagram, external URL, opens in a new window
  • YouTube, external URL, opens in a new window
  • Cookies
  • Whistleblowing/Complaints Management
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Data Protection
  • Acknowledgements
  • IFG-Form
  • Social Media Directory
  • © Österreichischer Wissenschaftsfonds FWF
© Österreichischer Wissenschaftsfonds FWF