Eric Gittins and Eric Morand with the M1000 Pro multifunctional plate reader |
Thanks to the generous donation of
$78,000 from the Victorian Lions Club, Australian Lions Foundation and Lions
Clubs International Foundation, the Arthritis Research Group in the Centre for
Inflammatory Diseases at SCS has been able to purchase a Tecan M1000 Pro
multifunctional plate reader.
The Victorian Lions Club has been
raising funds for over 30 years for the Victorian Lions Rheumatism &
Arthritis Medical Research Foundation,”
said Lions Club representative and Past District Governor Mr Eric Gittins. “In the last 12 years we have donated well over $300,000 to Monash
University for various equipment and facilities.”
“We understand that this equipment will facilitate a faster translational
response to testing carried out in the laboratory.”
Arthritis Research Group leader Dr James
Harris said, “this high-end technology allows us to perform multiple types of
assays using the one machine.”
“We can use it for both functional and clinical assays, such as
ELISA, luminescence and fluorescence-based protocols.”
In lay terms, the new equipment will now
allow researchers to perform multiple experiments without having to use
different machines for each.
“Now we have this technology in one machine in our lab, we can
increase both efficiency and functionality; it lets us design completely new
types of studies,” added Dr Harris.
Some of the assays used in the
laboratory measure levels of immune system proteinsin biological samples, including blood
(serum) and cell culture samples.
“In the clinical context, we use assays to look for biomarkers or
correlates of disease in arthritis and lupus,” said Head of rheumatology
at Monash Health, Professor Eric Morand, also Head of SCS.
The new equipment allows scientists to more
swiftly develop important insights into the biological mechanisms of arthritis
and rheumatic diseases and push their discoveries towards the development of
new drugs.
“Overall, it is an incredibly powerful tool that will not only make
our day-to-day experiments quicker and more efficient, but will also allow us
to expand our repertoire of assays and even design our own.”
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