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The One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without

sciencehabit writes Today researchers unveiled the largest ever set of full genomes from a single population: Iceland. The massive project, carried out by a private company in the country, deCODE genetics, has yielded new disease risk genes, insights into human evolution, and a list of more than 1000 genes that people can apparently live without. The project also serves as a model for other countries' efforts to sequence their people's DNA for research on personalized medical care, says study leader Kári Stefánsson, deCODE's CEO. For example, the United States is planning to sequence the genomes of 1 million Americans over the next few years and use the data to devise individualized treatments.

2 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Boo, you fad killer! by Nemyst · · Score: 4, Interesting

    People believing they are smarter than billions of years of evolution gives me no assurance that these people have a clue, let alone care about modifying people.

    Putting evolution on a pedestal isn't much smarter. It's not some godlike entity which designed humans with a goal in mind, it's a very long, very sinuous process which often gives locally optimal but globally suboptimal results. There is no reason to think that humans, for some reason, can't do better.

  2. Math by goombah99 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    3 billion base pairs.

    Each base pair is 2 bits (AGC or T). A byte is 8 bits or 4 base pairs. so

    3E9 / 4 = 750 MegaBytes.

    A CD holds up to 900MB of data. No need to even compress the data, and it would be highly(!) compressible

    Q.E.D.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.