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UCSC’s David Deamer and Mark Akeson honored for invention of nanopore sequencing

UCSC’s David Deamer and Mark Akeson won the AAAS Golden Goose award for the invention of nanopore sequencing, a transformational technology for reading DNA and RNA.

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David Deamer (left) and Mark Akeson in Santa Cruz in 2023 after receiving the inaugural UCSC Chancellor’s Innovation Impact Award for inventing nanopore sequencing. (photo by 

Today, two UC Santa Cruz researchers were honored at the Library of Congress for the invention of nanopore sequencing, which became a new and revolutionary method to read DNA and RNA.

David Deamer and Mark Akeson, both emeritus professors of biomolecular engineering at the Baskin School of Engineering, received the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s (AAAS) Golden Goose Award for the invention. Their colleague and friend Daniel Branton, a Havard biologist and co-inventor of the technology, was also honored. 

The Golden Goose award is given to scientists whose federally-funded research was seemingly obscure or silly at the outset but created a deep societal impact. Each year, three groups of scientists are lauded by members of congress for their contributions to transformational research breakthroughs in a variety of science and engineering fields. 

The concept for nanopore sequencing technology, licensed to the UK-based company Oxford Nanopore Technologies, led to the creation of the MinION, the only hand-held device for genetic sequencing, priced at a fraction of the cost of other sequencers. This transformational technology allows sequencing to take place in remote and resource-poor environments and has enabled some of the most significant genomics breakthroughs of the last two decades. 

“I like to think of scientists as prospectors, and grants are the grubstakes that keep us going while we search for new knowledge,” Deamer said. “Like the rare prospector who discovers the motherlode, the discoveries emerging from basic research can sometimes change the world. The three of us have a sense of deep satisfaction that we helped to increase our understanding of how the human genome functions in health and disease.”

Nanopore’s impact

Nanopore sequencing is a unique method for achieving long reads of DNA and RNA. Long read sequencing means scientists can read longer stretches of genetic material all at once, instead of piecing together the short pieces that are achieved with traditional short read technology. Long reads are essential for whole genome sequencing efforts, such as the first complete sequence of a human genome and the first human pangenome, both efforts led by UCSC Genomics Institute researchers. 

Use of nanopore sequencing technology is widespread across the genomics field — there are currently around 73,000 research publications that cite the technology. It is being used in a large number of current wide-scale genomic studies, from mapping the spread of diseases such as Ebola and Covid-19, to understanding the genetic mechanisms that regulate cancer, to creating resources for the protection of endangered species. 

Nanopore sequencing is revolutionary because its size and portability allows sequencing to happen anywhere beyond just a typical lab setting. It can be taken to remote or resource-poor areas to do on-demand sequencing, and empower local scientists and clinicians to do DNA and RNA sequencing in their communities. The MinION has even been taken to the international space station to sequence the organisms growing there. 

Akeson called the award a great honor, noting the rich history of the field that began when Nobel Prize-laureate Fredrick Sanger initiated the modern era of DNA sequencing.

“Beginning with Sanger Sequencing in 1977, DNA sequencing technology has impacted all of us,” Akeson said. “It is an honor to be a part of this legacy.”