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Cara Machacek Phones & Addresses

  • 5332 8Th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105 (206) 782-2471
  • Boise, ID
  • Colorado Springs, CO
  • 5332 8Th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105

Work

Company: Stratos genomics Dec 2009 Position: Senior research associate

Education

Degree: High school graduate or higher

Industries

Biotechnology

Resumes

Resumes

Cara Machacek Photo 1

Senior Research Associate

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Location:
2211 Elliott Ave, Seattle, WA 98121
Industry:
Biotechnology
Work:
Stratos Genomics
Senior Research Associate

Publications

Us Patents

Single Molecule Nucleic Acid Detection By Mismatch Cleavage

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US Patent:
20210164016, Jun 3, 2021
Filed:
Aug 3, 2018
Appl. No.:
16/636619
Inventors:
- Seattle WA, US
John Tabone - Kirkland WA, US
Melud Nabavi - Seattle WA, US
Cara Machacek - Seattle WA, US
International Classification:
C12Q 1/683
Abstract:
Methods and materials are provided for detecting nucleic acid sequence differences including single nucleotide mutations or polymorphisms, one or more nucleotide insertions, and one or more nucleotide deletions in single molecule target members present in a test population of nucleic acid fragments. Heteroduplexes are formed between members of the test nucleic acid population and their corresponding complements provided in a pool of mismatch cleavage probes. Mismatched base pairs in the heteroduplexes are specifically cleaved and cleaved probe fragments are electronically detected to signal the present of the target members in the test population.

Single Molecule Nucleic Acid Sequencing With Molecular Sensor Complexes

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US Patent:
20170159115, Jun 8, 2017
Filed:
Aug 9, 2016
Appl. No.:
15/232593
Inventors:
- Seattle WA, US
Robert N. McRuer - Mercer Island WA, US
John C. Tabone - Kirkland WA, US
Cara Machacek - Seattle WA, US
International Classification:
C12Q 1/68
G01N 27/447
G01N 33/487
Abstract:
The present disclosure relates to methods and constructs for single molecule electronic sequencing of template nucleic acids. The constructs are molecular sensor complexes which comprise a processive nucleic acid processing enzyme localized to a nanopore. Conformational changes in the enzyme induced by single nucleic acid processing events are transduced into electric signals by the nanopore, which are used to identify individual nucleotides. The methods can include the steps of providing a membrane with the nanopore and the enzyme complexed with a template nucleic acid localized proximal to an opening in the pore, contacting the enzyme with an ion conductive reaction mixture including the reagents required for nucleic acid processing, providing a voltage drop across the pore that induces ion current through the pore that is modulated by conformational changes in the enzyme, measuring current through the pore over time to detect nucleotide-dependent conformational changes in the enzyme, and identifying the type of nucleotide processed by the enzyme using current modulation characteristics, thus determining sequencing information about the nucleic acid molecule.
Cara Patricia Machacek from Seattle, WA, age ~40 Get Report