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Human Genome Work Reaches Milestone.


It's official. Biology's hottest race has been declared an amicable tie, even though one competitor has a clear lead and neither has actually reached the finish line or knows exactly what the prize contains.

In an accomplishment being compared to landing a man on the moon, rival groups of scientists from the private and public sectors announced on June 23 that each has read essentially all of the 3 billion or so letters that spell out the human genome The human genome is the genome of Homo sapiens, which is composed of 24 distinct pairs of chromosomes (22 autosomal + X + Y) with a total of approximately 3 billion DNA base pairs containing an estimated 20,000–25,000 genes. , the genetic information encoded within the 6 feet of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 coiled up in every human cell.

"Today, we celebrate the revelation of the first draft of the human book of life," said Francis Collins This article is about the geneticist. For the Pennsylvania Congressman, see Francis Dolan Collins.

Francis S. Collins (born April 14, 1950), M.D., Ph.D.
 of the National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Md., at a White House celebration.

The announcement, considered premature by some scientists, nevertheless drew praise from leading biologists and government officials worldwide. Calling the reading of the genome "a stunning and humbling achievement," President Clinton stressed its medical implications.

"With this profound new knowledge, humankind is on the verge On the Verge (or The Geography of Yearning) is a play written by Eric Overmyer. It makes extensive use of esoteric language and pop culture references from the late nineteenth century to 1955.  of gaining immense new power to heal. Genome science will have a real impact on all of our lives--and even more, on the lives of our children. It will revolutionize the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of most, if not all, human disease," he said.

While scientists celebrated the genome announcement, some of them appealed for stronger federal legislation to protect people from genetic discrimination by their health insurance companies or employers. The unveiling of the human DNA sequence DNA sequence Genetics The precise order of bases–A,T,G,C–in a segment of DNA, gene, chromosome, or an entire genome. See Base pair, Base sequence analysis, Chromosome, Gene, Genome.  should offer a "wake-up call," demonstrating that we can't delay addressing this issue any longer, says Collins.

The world received its initial look at deoxyribonucleic acid, better known as DNA, more than a century ago. In 1869, German scientist Friedrich Miescher Johan Friedrich Miescher (13 August 1844, Basel - 26 August 1895, Davos) was a Swiss biologist. He isolated various phosphate-rich chemicals, which he called nuclein  isolated a novel chemical, now known to be DNA, from immune cells left in the pus pus, thick white or yellowish fluid that forms in areas of infection such as wounds and abscesses. It is constituted of decomposed body tissue, bacteria (or other micro-organisms that cause the infection), and certain white blood cells.  on bloody bandages.

It took nearly a century for scientists to recognize DNA as the hereditary material of plants, animals, and microbes and determine that its molecular shape is a double helix double helix
n.
The coiled structure of a double-stranded DNA molecule in which strands linked by hydrogen bonds form a spiral configuration. Also called DNA helix, Watson-Crick helix.
 reminiscent of a spiral staircase spiral staircase nescalera de caracol

spiral staircase nescalier m en colimaçon

spiral staircase spiral n
. The two sides of the helix consist of complementary strings of so-called bases, which come in four forms that geneticists This is a list of people who have made notable contributions to genetics. The growth and development of genetics represents the work of many people. This list of geneticists is therefore by no means complete. Contributors of great distinction to genetics are not yet on the list.  abbreviate A, C, T, and G. One base joins with a partner on the opposite strand--A with T, or G with C--to create the steps on DNA's staircase.

The sequences of bases within a gene encode the information that a cell uses to build a protein. In the late 1980s, several scientists raised the provocative idea of sequencing all human genes as well as the even greater lengths of DNA in between--whose functions were, and still are, largely unknown.

"There were people who thought this was sheer lunacy lunacy: see insanity. ," recalls Collins.

This week's announcement emerged from an uneasy truce forged between Celera Genomics, a biotech firm in Rockville, Md., and the Human Genome Project, a publicly funded, international consortium of scientists now led by Collins. The latter group, formed in 1990, had the task of sequencing the human genome largely to itself until 1998. Then, geneticist ge·net·i·cist
n.
A specialist in genetics.



geneticist

a specialist in genetics.

geneticist 
 J. Craig Venter The introduction of this article is too short.
To comply with Wikipedia's lead section guidelines, it should be expanded.
 brashly predicted that his new company, Celera, would do the same job in less time and for less money (SN: 5/23/98, p. 334).

The competing camps took different approaches. The public effort, funded in large part by two U.S. agencies--the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Energy--and Wellcome Trust The Wellcome Trust is a United Kingdom-based charity established in 1936 to administer the fortune of the American-born pharmaceutical magnate Sir Henry Wellcome. Its income was derived from what was originally called Burroughs Wellcome & Co, later renamed in the UK as the , a British charity, first broke the genome into manageable chunks of DNA. The group then mapped the order of these pieces, called clones, with respect to each other. Only in the past few years have Collins and his colleagues focused on sequencing those clones.

In Venter's more radical strategy, previously used to read the genes of many bacteria and the fruit fly, Celera shattered human DNA into snippets whose ends were immediately sequenced. The firm then identified overlapping base sequences among the DNA fragments. By analyzing an amount of DNA equivalent to many genomes, the scientists hoped to accumulate, and put in order, enough end sequences to construct an entire genome.

This method, called whole-genome shotgunning, is akin to shredding many copies of a book and reassembling one copy sentence by sentence, whereas the clone-by-clone technique is more like first breaking a book into ordered chapters, and then performing the shredding and assembly within those chapters, says Eric Lander Eric Steven Lander (b. February 3, 1957) is a Professor of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), a member of the Whitehead Institute, and director of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard who has devoted his career toward realizing the promise of the human , a geneticist at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Mass.

Most geneticists had considered a shotgun approach 'shotgun approach' A diagnostic philosophy in which every conceivable parameter is measured, especially in a Pt with an obscure disease, to detect rare conditions that may cause a particular Sx. See Defensive medicine. Cf Screening.  to the entire human genome to be too difficult. Human DNA, they argued, harbored many repetitive sequences, which would thwart any assembly attempts.

On June 23, Venter venter /ven·ter/ (ven´ter) pl. ven´tres   [L.]
1. a fleshy contractile part of a muscle.

2. abdomen.

3. a hollowed part or cavity.


ven·ter
n.
 and his colleagues proved the skeptics wrong. That afternoon, after more than 500 million trillion comparisons of base sequences, Celera's powerful supercomputers finished their first assembly of the human genome. The resulting sequence, approximately 3.12 billion bases long, spans more than 99.9 percent of the human genome, says Venter.

This assembled sequence sits in Celera's databases, open to companies and schools that pay a subscription fee. The only academic subscriber so far, Vanderbilt University Medical Center The Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) is a collection of several hospitals and clinics associated with Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. It comprises the following units:[2]
  • Vanderbilt University Hospital
  • Monroe Carell, Jr.
 in Nashville, expects to start accessing the data next week.

Although universities had feared that Celera would demand rights to patents or discoveries their professors make with the firm's data, Vanderbilt did not grant the company any such options, stresses Lee E. Limbird, the center's associate vice-chancellor for research.

Venter announced that Celera would make a limited version of its database available at no charge after the company publishes its results.

The results of the public genome effort flow daily into a database available free to researchers worldwide. In fact, Celera has made use of the public data in its own genome assembly.

The public version of the genome sequence represents a working draft in which scientists have put in order DNA fragments covering 97 percent of the genome and sequenced more than 85 percent of them to varying degrees of accuracy. The two groups plan to independently but simultaneously publish papers this fall that will provide additional details and perhaps set the stage for a joint conference in which scientists fully analyze both sets of data.

The effort to unravel the human genome does not offer as tangible a climax as an astronaut stepping onto the lunar surface. Some geneticists have even called this week's announcement more a matter of public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most  than a true finale to the genome effort.

"The point at which both Celera and the public project have chosen to announce the `completion' of the genome is wholly arbitrary and does not correspond to any scientifically justifiable criterion for completion. The previously agreed criteria of few or no gaps, gaps of known size, and an error rate of 1 in 10,000 bases have clearly not been met by either group," charges Philip P. Green of the University of Washington in Seattle.

Indeed, the two groups did not offer any details on how many holes remain in the two genome sequences or claim to meet the 99.99-percent target for accuracy.

"We should not be satisfied with a book of life that has gaps and errors in it," concedes Collins, emphasizing that the public effort will continue to improve the quality of its genome information. Venter is also careful to call Celera's work the "first assembly" of the human genome, implying that better versions will come.

Illustrating the large gaps in knowledge that remain, neither Celera nor the international consortium answered the question of how many genes people have. In the June NATURE GENETICS, three research teams using different methods offered predictions that range from 30,000 to 120,000 human genes. Several scientists have established a pool in which a person can record a prediction for a $1 wager.

To aid their analysis of the human genome, biologists plan to sequence all the DNA of several more animals. Celera has already moved on to the mouse genome. The rat and the zebrafish genomes should follow quickly, adds Collins.

Also, some scientists plan to map all the interactions between the many thousands of proteins encoded by the human genome, and others intend to determine the three-dimensional structure of each molecule.

Norton Zinder, a geneticist at Rockefeller University in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, recently offered an elegant analogy for how the human DNA sequence merely sets the stage for future research. In the June 12 NEW YORKER, he compared the revealing of the genome to the 1543 publication of the first book on human anatomy.

Even though that book identified almost all the parts of the human body, physicians today still struggle to understand how many of them work and interact. A similarly daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 task--one that scientists say may also take several centuries to complete--now awaits those who seek to make sense of the myriad genes of the human genome.
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Author:Travis, J.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2000
Words:1470
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