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Human Genome Project |
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Human Genome ProjectResearch scheme to map the complete nucleotide (see nucleic acid) sequence of human DNA. It was begun in 1990 and a working draft of the genome (a mapping of 97% of the genome, sequencing of 85%, and completion of 24% of the human genome) was achieved in 2000, with the results being published in February 2001. The publicly-funded Human Genome Organization (HUGO) coordinated the US$300 million project (the largest research project ever undertaken in the life sciences), which took place in over 20 centres around the world. In a competing effort, sequencing was also carried out commercially by US biotechnology company Celera Genomics, using the method of shotgun sequencing (breaking up the DNA into many small fragments, ordering the sequences of these fragments and then reassembling them). The completed detailed mapping of the genome was released on 14 April 2003. Since then, complete sequences of individual human chromosomes have been completed and published one by one. In October 2004, researchers estimated that the human genome only contains between 20,000 and 25,000 different genes – far fewer than expected – and one gene may contain more than 2 million nucleotides. The knowledge gained from mapping all these genes is expected to help prevent or treat many crippling and lethal diseases, but there are potential ethical problems associated with knowledge of an individual's genetic make-up, and fears that it could lead to genetic discrimination.
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nbsp;to the human genome initiative, Tony White, chairman, president and CEO of Perkin-Elmer, said, "As the pace of genomic sequencing accelerates throughout the world, we are rapidly nearing an era in which genomic information will have a profound effect. The Los Alamos lab and its so-called GenBank (a repository for genetic sequencing data) join Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and Columbia University as the primary centers for the Department of Energy's (DOE) Human Genome Initiative ( This effort builds on Regeneron's internal discovery efforts, as well as the human genome initiative. |
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