Sigma-Aldrich Donates $50K in Products to the Reproducibility Project to Foster Replicable Research and Accelerate Scientific Discoveries in Cancer Biology
Donation is part of Sigma-Aldrich’s commitment to help translational researchers address irreproducibility in research, a growing industry concern
10 May 2015Sigma-Aldrich Corporation (NASDAQ: SIAL) a leading life science and high technology company, today announced a $50,000 product donation to the Reproducibility Project: Cancer Biology, a large-scale initiative to replicate key findings from recent high-impact papers in the field of cancer biology. The project is a collaboration between the online research marketplace Science Exchange, the non-profit Center for Open Science and the open-access journal eLife. The goal of the project is to identify variables in the current scientific process that affect research outcomes and to promote open practices that have a sustainable impact on the culture of research.
In December, Sigma-Aldrich released its 2014 State of Translational Research Survey Report, which found that only 22 percent of translational researchers had complete success in the last year reproducing other labs’ published work. The Reproducibility Project: Cancer Biology aims to set a standard of best practices that maximize reproducibility and facilitate an accurate accumulation of knowledge, enabling potentially impactful findings to be effectively built upon by the scientific community.
“Sigma-Aldrich is committed to helping the scientific community address a serious issue in academic research,” said Amanda Halford, Vice President of Sigma-Aldrich’s Academic Research Business. “Science that cannot be replicated delays breakthroughs and ultimately affects patient outcomes.”
With support from Sigma-Aldrich, Science Exchange and its supporters hope to achieve this goal by independently replicating key experimental findings in the field. The group plans to replicate key experiments from each of the 50 most impactful cancer biology studies published between 2010-2012, according to best practices for replication established by the Center for Open Science and others.
“Science Exchange provides easy access to the world’s top scientific service providers. We’re proud to leverage our network of experts to rigorously conduct the replication studies for the Reproducibility Project,” said Elizabeth Iorns, Ph.D., co-founder and CEO of Science Exchange. “In order to ensure the robustness of our replication results, we need our labs to use the highest-quality products. That’s why we’re excited about our collaboration with Sigma-Aldrich, whose superb products will help us ensure the fidelity and accuracy of our experiments.”
To meet the quality needs and requirements for translational researchers to conduct accurate experiments, Sigma-Aldrich has more than 700 employees across 37 countries dedicated to quality control systems. Additionally, within its global network, the Company boasts 44 quality control laboratories and nine quality certifications. As primary standards, Sigma-Aldrich complies with and maintains quality assurance qualifications of cGLP, cGMP, cGDP, ISO, SafeBridge and USDA. This commitment to quality enables the Company to provide the most validated reagents in the industry including product lines such as the MISSON® shRNA offering, Prestige Antibodies®, validated CRISPRs, and ECACC® cell lines.