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Wed, Jul 5 2006

The Human Variome Project

Last month, the first meeting of The Human Variome Project took place in Melbourne, Australia headed by Professor Richard GH Cotton AM, director of the Genomics Disorders Research Centre. Those gathered plan to catalog 200,000 currently known disease-causing mutations plus 2 million more mutations so that systematic searches can be done.

The people who will benefit:

  • Individuals with genetic disease; patients will receive the benefit of ALL knowledge.
  • Caregivers of patients with genetic disease; they will find information easier and faster.
  • The diagnostic laboratories; will be able to make faster and more accurate decisions.
  • Biochemical genetic researchers; they will have ready access to more knowledge.
  • Companies; those companies developing equipment or performing diagnostic tests will benefit.

The next project we need is a Human Proteome Project. The closest one I see is Human Proteome Organisation (HUPO), which has ongoing proteome projects for the human liver and brain among other scientific initiatives. And there’s a human proteome project in China that was launched in 2003.

Monsters and Critics, July 3, 2006

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Comments

  1. Trackback
    1905 days ago
    The Human Variome Project: new horizons in clinical genetics « ScienceRoll

    [...] In 2006, Hsien Hsien Lei at Genetics and Health had a post about the Project’s meeting in Melbourne, Australia. And the recommendations from that meeting will be published in April 2007 by Nature Genetics. [...]

  2. Trackback
    2138 days ago
    Migrations » Blog Archive » (belated) Link digest for July 3-9

    [...] 7/5 – The Human Variome Project at Genetics and Health. [...]