STAT July 9, 2024
Ashley Smart — Undark

STAT is co-publishing this investigation by Undark.

They numbered 20 in all — 10 men and 10 women who came to a sprawling medical campus in downtown Buffalo, N.Y., to volunteer for what a news report had billed as “the world’s biggest science project.”

It was the spring of 1997, and the Human Genome Project, an ambitious attempt to read and map a human genetic code in its entirety, was building momentum. The project’s scientists had refined techniques to read out the chemical sequences — the series of As, Cs, Ts, and Gs — that encode the building blocks of life. Now, the researchers just needed suitable human DNA to work with. More exactly, they needed DNA from ordinary people...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, Pharma / Biotech, Precision Medicine
Cost of whole-genome sequencing approaching current routine genetic testing in blood cancer
Tempus Expands Collaboration with Remix Therapeutics on RNA-Based Cancer Therapies
Innovations in biomarker detection and personalized medicine for prostate cancer
UN talks aim to turn DNA data into assets
All for one, not one for all: The promise and challenges of personalized medicine

Share This Article