Program Grants Support Projects to Improve Food Security in      Developing World    
    SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 9, 2014--      Illumina, Inc. (NASDAQ: ILMN) today announced two new recipients of its      Agricultural Greater Good Initiative Grants. The recipients, Iowa State      University and University of California at Riverside, will apply      Illumina’s array genotyping and software solutions to further their      research into sustainable crop and livestock breeding practices. The      grants are designed to help identify measures that can increase crop      yields and improve livestock welfare and productivity to alleviate      poverty and hunger in the developing world.    
      Iowa State University will use the grant to better understand the      genetics associated with grazing under heat stress in goats and sheep in      Egypt. This research, in collaboration with the Animal Production      Research Institute of Egypt and the International Center for      Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas, will enable the identification      of genetic signatures in livestock species important to small holder      farmers, and improve the selection of animals and breeds most resilient      to heat stresses associated with climate change.    
      “We are proud to further our research into genes associated with      resilience in grazing under heat stress,” said Max Rothschild,      Distinguished Professor at Iowa State University and Co-Director of the      University’s Global Food Security Consortium. “Through this grant, we      look forward to improving understanding of the genetics of sheep and      goats while also offering training and development to Egyptian      scientists to ensure our findings can be implemented to improve farming      practices in the region.”    
      University of California at Riverside will use the grant to improve      cowpea tolerance to the stresses of Sub-Saharan Africa through the      development of genetic knowledge of the cowpea, training on how to use      that knowledge in breeding, and applying that knowledge to cowpea      breeding programs in West Africa.    
      “The support of the Illumina Agricultural Greater Good Initiative will      enable genotyping of more samples and enhance our ability to turn      knowledge into meaningful results by training African breeders on how to      use genomics to boost crop resilience,” said Tim Close, Professor and      Geneticist at the University of California at Riverside. “This      technology ultimately will help local production systems identify and      adopt more climate resilient cowpea varieties, and improve nutrition and      livelihood for the people who depend on this crop.”    
      “Illumina is proud to advance food security through the Agricultural      Greater Good Initiative Grant Program by providing researchers with the      tools and technologies necessary to improve agricultural practices in      the developing world,” said Kirk Malloy, Senior Vice President and      General Manager of Illumina’s Life Sciences business. “By unlocking the      power of the genome, Illumina is enabling our collaborators to improve      human health and well-being on a global scale.”    
      Illumina’s Agricultural Greater Good Initiative grants, launched in 2011      and awarded annually at the Plant and Animal Genome Conference, help to      spur critically needed research that will increase the sustainability,      productivity, and nutritional density of agriculturally important crop      and livestock species. Grant recipients receive donations of Illumina      products to support their projects.    
      For more information about Illumina’s agrigenomics offerings, visit: www.illumina.com/agrigenomics.    
      About Illumina    
      Illumina (www.illumina.com)      is a leading developer, manufacturer, and marketer of life science tools      and integrated systems for the analysis of genetic variation and      function. We provide innovative sequencing and array-based solutions for      genotyping, copy number variation analysis, methylation studies, gene      expression profiling, and low-multiplex analysis of DNA, RNA, and      protein. We also provide tools and services that are fueling advances in      consumer genomics and diagnostics. Our technology and products      accelerate genetic analysis research and its application, paving the way      for molecular medicine and ultimately transforming healthcare.    
      Forward-Looking Statements    
      This release may contain forward looking statements that involve risks      and uncertainties. Important factors that could cause actual results to      differ materially from those in any forward-looking statements are      detailed in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission,      including our most recent filings on Forms 10-K and 10-Q, or in      information disclosed in public conference calls, the date and time of      which are released beforehand. We do not intend to update any      forward-looking statements after the date of this release.    
    

Source: Illumina, Inc.
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