selectedauthors.com selectedauthors.com selectedauthors.com
Site Home About Us Privacy Policy ToS Add Url Submit Article
Search:   
Add URL
 

Home Family & Garden

Teens & Children

Computers & Networking

People & Communities

Adventure & Sports

Lifestyle & Fashion

Medical Care

Health & Therapy

Science & Space

Companies & Business

Employment & Careers

Eating & Drinking

Policies & Law

Property & Estate

Academics & Education

Self Enhancement

Culture & Art

Automobiles

Finance & Investment

News & Events

Online Shopping

Games & Play

Travel & Vacation

Music & Entertainment

 

Site Home › Academics & Education › Science Courses
 

Human Genome Project Milestones Celebrated at White House

 

Author: Aaron Hall
Clinton Calls Working Draft "Starting Point for Even Greater Discoveries"

L-R: Venter, Patrinos, Collins
Craig Venter (head of Celera Genomics), Ari Patrinos (director of DOE Human Genome Program and Biological and Environmental Research Program), and Francis Collins (director, NIH National Human Genome Research Institute).
On June 26, Human Genome Project (HGP) leaders and representatives from the private company Celera Genomics joined President Bill Clinton at the White House to announce the completion of a working draft reference DNA sequence of the human genome. Clinton observed that the working draft is a starting point for even greater discoveries. This achievement provides scientists worldwide with a virtual road map to an estimated 95% of all genes. All HGP data are available on the Internet, and publication in Science and Nature is expected early in 2001.

The draft contains gaps and errors, but it provides a valuable scaffold for generating the high-quality reference genome sequence--the ultimate HGP goal expected to be achieved by 2003 or sooner. This knowledge will speed the understanding of how genetics influences disease development, aid scientists looking for genes associated with particular diseases, and contribute to the discovery of new treatments.

Ari Patrinos, head of the DOE Human Genome Program, led a series of meetings this year at his home that resulted in the joint announcement and agreement by the public- and private-sector projects to publish at the same time.

Speaking of the value of genome data and technologies, Patrinos said, "We are eager to offer a future to our children and grandchildren in which cancer will be only a constellation in the sky."

"Researchers in a few years will have trouble imagining how we studied human biology without genome sequence in front of us," said Francis Collins, head of the NIH genome program.

More than $3 billion has been spent worldwide on the Human Genome Project since its formal inception in 1990.

Although 16 institutions participate in the HGP, most sequencing takes place at 5 locations. These are the DOE Joint Genome Institute, Washington University (St. Louis), Sanger Centre (U.K.), Baylor College of Medicine, and Whitehead Institute. Bioinformatics teams at the Ensembl database project and the University of California, Santa Cruz, generated an ordered view of the 400,000 sequenced DNA fragments in the working draft.

In July, the Wellcome Trust (U.K.) announced a 5-year investment in Ensembl of more than $14 million ('8.8 million) for automatic annotation of human genome data, including identification of genes and other biologically important sequence features.

Lowering Public, Private Costs
The projects early phase was characterized by efforts to generate the biological, instrumentational, and computational resources necessary for efficient production-scale DNA sequencing. Pilot studies on large-scale sequencing began in 1996, and successes led to a ramp up in 1998.

In 1999, international HGP leaders set the accelerated goal of completing a rough draft of all 24 human chromosomes a year ahead of schedule. This ever-increasing pace was facilitated by the commercialization of a new generation of automated capillary DNA sequencing machines and by BACs (DNA fragments) pioneered in DOE-sponsored projects. Researchers in both the public and private sectors use BACs to speed their sequencing procedures. The extraordinary achievements of the HGP stand as a testimony to the successful collaborations among scientists intent on overcoming massive technological challenges to move toward the common goal of understanding life at its most basic level.

The situation today is well captured by the words of Winston Churchill, who said in November 1942, after 3 years of war, "Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning."

Author Bio:

You can also reach this article by using: social sciences, health colorado at denver & health sciences, 10 social sciences
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Fumehoods Promote Speedy Criminal Evidence Processing
 
Biodiesel and You
 
The Role of Private Enterprise in Putting Man into Space - Part 1
 
Pump It Up!
 
Active Aerial Minefields
 
Renewable Energy
 
Sophisticated Telemetry Receivers
 
Canadian Scientists Discover Gene for Depression
 
Answers to Teachers, Counselor, and Principcal Questions About Students Who Struggle and Have Challenges
 
Are Dreams An Exercise In Quantum Physics?
 
 
 
 
 

World-Class Athlete: Do You Have What It Takes?

The following excerpt comes from the book, Soccer Dreams, (a top-seller in sports journalism at Amaz ... - Leah Lauber
 

Learning And Teaching Social Skills: A Relationship-Based Approach

For those of us committed to helping children overcome learning challenges, the quest to teach socia ... - Adam Cox
 

Understanding Learning: How Recent Research Supports Natural Affinities

Ever get frustrated with yourself for not being able to grasp a concept? How about frustration with ... - Natalie Tucker Miller
 

Renewable Energy

Powering everything with solar energy isn't possible just yet, since the UK doesn't produce enough s ... - GuideMeGreen
 

The Meaning of Color

Do you know your colors? - Adrian Barrett
 

Metal Detectors ?C Pre-Purchase Guidelines

Metal detectors ?C When people think of Metal Detectors, some people think of combing a beach in sea ... - Colin
 
 
   Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> ToS
© 2008 www.selectedauthors.com All Rights Reserved.