JustPaste.it

Increasing Applications of RNA Sequencing in the Transcriptomics Market

The increasing focus on biomarker discovery and toxicogenomics, along with the increasing interest in outsourcing services, is expected to offer significant growth opportunities for the players operating in the global RNA analysis/transcriptomics market. On the other hand, the requirement of high capital investments and data management issues are expected to restrain the growth of this market to a certain extent. 

 

Personalized medicine, which has become a core area of research in the healthcare industry, has entered mainstream clinical practice and is changing how many diseases are identified, classified, and treated. 

 

25f021f4f5e2854afe900a025f3edead.jpg

The growth of this market is majorly driven by the increasing demand for personalized medicine, increasing pharmaceutical and biotechnology R&D expenditure and government funding for omics, and the increasing applications of RNA sequencing in the transcriptomics market. 

 

Download PDF Brochure @ https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=240344576 

 

With the widespread implementation of novel applications, the use of transcriptomics research extends all the way from the discovery of novel drugs, vaccines, and diagnostic targets, toxicology, and identification of surrogate markers of activity in clinical research to the ability to provide information on the mechanisms of drug action. This requires the use of different types of platforms and instruments as well as laboratory documentation systems, contributing to the high cost of analytics. 

 

The microarray technology used in transcriptomic analysis offers the promise of widespread study of diseases at the genomic level. It also aids in developing novel clinical biomarkers, identifying novel molecular abnormalities, and investigating drug efficacy.  

 

Moreover, RNA sequencing data from transcriptomics studies have low genome coverage and high amplification bias, which makes data analysis extremely challenging, especially without effective bioinformatics tools. Many existing tools developed for bulk cell sequencing have not been effective in the analysis of transcriptomics data. 

 

Based on technology, the RNA analysis market is segmented into microarrays, PCR, sequencing technologies (Sanger sequencing and NGS technologies), and RNAi (gene silencing).