From Genetics to Genomics The Human Genome Project and Beyond Prof. Dr Hub Zwart Department Philosophy & Science Studies Centre for Society & Genomics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Unit 1 Hello!. Alice Su Nan Kitty Wu Chen Colin Kevin.
Advertisements

Welcome Each of You to My Molecular Biology Class.
Genetics: from Mendel to Venter Introduction. Subject:Molecular genetics Period:1 semester Lectures/practical courses:2 lectures per week 2 seminars/practical.
Peace Officers Guardians by choice… …heroes by chance.
James Watson, Ph.D. Unlocking the DNA Structure Presented by David A. Miller.
Deputy Andrew Kriss EOW May 25, 1864 San Diego County Sheriff’s Department.
Biology in Focus, HSC Course Glenda Childrawi, Margaret Robson and Stephanie Hollis Blueprint of Life Topic 15: Chemical Nature of Chromosomes and Genes.
This presentation is dedicated to the memory of our deceased classmates. We will always keep their names and faces on our minds and in our hearts.
A Lot More Advanced Biotechnology Tools DNA Sequencing.
A Man, a President, and a Legend Taylor Giarrizzo CSCI 150 Section 3 October 30, 2008 Assignment 8.
Public-Private Cooperation for the Future of Genomics Cindy Fung & Miranda Ip Stanford-in-Washington "How Health & Science Policy Decisions Are Made”
E. coli Genetics: From Genes to Genomes. Figure 4.1a: Gregor Mendel © National Library of Medicine.
The Human Genome Project (H.G.P.) By Ben Fuhr. What is the Human Genome Project? The Human Genome Project was a great scientific endeavor designed to.
Watson and Crick(1953)- Double helix model of DNA
Towards Personal Genomics Tools for Navigating the Genome of an Individual Saul A. Kravitz J. Craig Venter Institute Rockville, MD Bio-IT World 2008.
Watson and Crick’s double helix model of DNA Let me introduce myself…………. ………
By: Ivy Philips. Erwin Chargaff’s most notable discovery was finding out through experimentation was that in DNA, Adenine bonds with Thymine, and Cytosine.
Julia Henning Biology Senior Seminar April 22, 2013 THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT: ANALYSIS AND IMPLICATIONS.
6.4 Studying Genetic Changes Student text p
Lesson 10 Bioinformatics
In the beginning, there were… Then someone [actually many] had a vision and an idea…
UMass Academic Health Center Strategic Planning Task Force October 16-18, 2007 Revised 11/01/07.
Learning Styles Needs, and Preferences
Sequence Variation Identification and Functional/Structural Inference in the Influenza Research Database (IRD) and Virus Pathogen Resource (ViPR) Yun Zhang.
A Brief History. Rosalind Franklin Born: July 1920 Notting Hill, London Fields X-ray crystallography Alma Mater: Newham College, Cambridge Died: April.
Lesson Overview 12.2 The Structure of DNA.
Section 4 Lesson 1– The Human Genome Project. Applications of DNA Technology Advances in gene manipulation have made many things possible. This section.
Yun Zhang J. Craig Venter Institute San Diego, CA, USA August 4, 2012 Integrated Bioinformatics Data and Analysis Tools for Herpesviridae.
“Living in a Microbial World” Global Health Program Council on Foreign Relations New York, NY April 10, 2014 Dr. Larry Smarr Director, California Institute.
ELSI: Ethical, Legal and Social Issues surrounding availability of genomic information DOD and NIH devoted ~3-5% of annual HGP budgets to ELSI research.
Examples dealing with cursors and tables Please use speaker notes for additional information!
CS Ltd Board Ed Monaghan (Chair) George Bell Derek Shewan Newell McGuinness Industry Leadership Group Ed MonaghanMartin English Alastair Wallace David.
From DNA to Proteins Chapter 12. If the DNA of one cell is stretched out, it makes a 9 ft. long string There are about 7 trillion cells in the human body.
Open Public Hearing 1.David Antonuccio University of Nevada Irving Kirsch University of Connecticut 3 minutes 1.David Antonuccio University of Nevada Irving.
Honours Programma Achtste Bijeenkomst 18 november 2004 Denkstijlen Zichtbare Wetenschappers.
A brief history of Molecular biology. Big names Charles Darwin ( ) On the origin of species by means of the natural selection (1859)
STEM in City of Edinburgh Alison Kidd Quality Improvement Officer, Technologies. Jill Pringle Quality Improvement Officer, Sciences and Mathematics.
Center for Biomedical Imaging at Stanford (CBIS) Survey Department of Radiology March 4, 2008.
© Copyright 2010 Robert D. Conway All Rights Reserved Who Invented It? The Controversial History of Technology and Invention
All of the following processes occur within mitochondria except: A) the splitting of glucose. B) the formation of citric acid. C) the catabolism of citric.
1 陕西旅游出版社三年级上册 Unit 1 Hello!. 人物表 Alice Su Nan Kitty Wu Chen Colin Kevin.
Synthetic Biology Overview
A Scan of Chromosome 10 Identifies a Novel Locus Showing Strong Association with Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease Andrew Grupe, Yonghong Li, Charles Rowland,
DNA DNA. DNA is often called the blueprint of life. In simple terms, DNA contains the instructions for making proteins within the cell.
The building blocks of life. What is DNA? deoxyribonucleic acid An extremely long macromolecule that is the main component of chromosomes The material.
Dave Kenny BID Chair Executive Board Christos Stylianou Executive Director Helen Bowden Executive Director Jennie Clements Company Secretary & Executive.
유전공학이란 ? GENETIC ENGINEERING 생물환경학과 김 정 호 Department of Bio-Environmental Science
Identification of Functional Elements and Regulatory Circuits by Drosophila modENCODE by, Sushmita Roy, Jason Ernst, Peter V. Kharchenko, Pouya Kheradpour,
Human Genome Project By: Scott Kutschke.
Environmental Genome Shotgun Sequencing of the Sargasso Sea
Building a community for genome and proteome annotation
Volume 16, Pages (February 2017)
Anderson Grove Presbyterian Church
HILLSBOROUGH Football Disaster
Association Analyses Identify Three Susceptibility Loci for Vitiligo in the Chinese Han Population  Xian-Fa Tang, Zheng Zhang, Da-Yan Hu, Ai-E Xu, Hai-Sheng.
METEOROLOGICAL COURSES RATINGS
The Sequence of the Human Genome
In Memoriam.
人名昵稱簡稱 Pet Names 伍德基 T. K. NG.
What is the structure and function of DNA?
Nucleic Acids Biotechnology.
Volume 74, Issue 6, Pages (December 2018)
What is the structure and function of DNA?
METEOROLOGICAL COURSES RATINGS
DNA.
Management Structure University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
Association Analyses Identify Three Susceptibility Loci for Vitiligo in the Chinese Han Population  Xian-Fa Tang, Zheng Zhang, Da-Yan Hu, Ai-E Xu, Hai-Sheng.
George A White Man 64 years old Owns property Citizen
CE104 In-class Assignment Project Groups November 11, 2008
A Lot More Advanced Biotechnology Tools
Presentation transcript:

From Genetics to Genomics The Human Genome Project and Beyond Prof. Dr Hub Zwart Department Philosophy & Science Studies Centre for Society & Genomics Institute for Science, Innovation & Society Faculty of Science Radboud University Nijmegen

From Genetics to Genomics 1900: Mendel 1953: Watson & Crick 2000: Human Genome

Gregor Mendel

Watson & Crick

Molecular structure of Nucleic Acids WATSON, J. D. & CRICK, F. H. C. Medical Research Council Unit for the Study of Molecular Structure of Biological Systems, Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge. A Structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of deoxyribose nucleic acid (D.N.A.). This structure has novel features which are of considerable biological interest. A structure for nucleic acid has already been proposed by Pauling and Corey 1. They kindly made their manuscript available to us in advance of publication. Their model consists of three intertwined chains, with the phosphates near the fibre axis, and the bases on the outside. In our opinion, this structure is unsatisfactory for two reasons: (1) We believe that the material which gives the X-ray diagrams is the salt, not the free acid. Without the acidic hydrogen atoms it is not clear what forces would hold the structure together, especially as the negatively charged phosphates near the axis will repel each other. (2) Some of the van der Waals distances appear to be too small. 1 Another three-chain structure has also been suggested by Fraser (in the press). In his model the phosphates are on the outside and the bases on the inside, linked together by hydrogen bonds. This structure as described is rather ill-defined, and for this reason we shall not comment on it.

The Human Genome Project,

The Genome War: How Craig Venter Tried to Capture the Code of Life and Save the WorldPublished in Hardcover by Knopf (06 January, 2004)Author: James Shreeve

Francis Collins

Craig Venter

Craig Venter ( ) 1946: Salt Lake city 1967/68 – Vietnam (intensive care ward) Hobby: Surfing Ph.D in Physiology and Pharmacology (University of California, San Diego) 1984 – National Institutes of Health (gene expression) 1986 – Gene sequencing 1987 – Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences – “The very first genes sequenced by automated DNA sequencing” 1992 – Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) 1998 – Celera Genomics 2001 – HGP: Nature (15 February); Celera: Science (16 February) Now: DNA Collector

Craig Venter

"The sequence of the human genome,“ By J. Craig Venter and 284 others Science, 291(5507): , 16 February 2001.

The Sequence of the Human Genome J. Craig Venter,1* Mark D. Adams,1 Eugene W. Myers,1 Peter W. Li,1 Richard J. Mural,1 Granger G. Sutton,1 Hamilton O. Smith,1 Mark Yandell,1 Cheryl A. Evans,1 Robert A. Holt,1 Jeannine D. Gocayne,1 Peter Amanatides,1 Richard M. Ballew,1 Daniel H. Huson,1 Jennifer Russo Wortman,1 Qing Zhang,1 Chinnappa D. Kodira,1 Xiangqun H. Zheng,1 Lin Chen,1 Marian Skupski,1 Gangadharan Subramanian,1 Paul D. Thomas,1 Jinghui Zhang,1 George L. Gabor Miklos,2 Catherine Nelson,3 Samuel Broder,1 Andrew G. Clark,4 Joe Nadeau,5 Victor A. McKusick,6 Norton Zinder,7 Arnold J. Levine,7 Richard J. Roberts,8 Mel Simon,9 Carolyn Slayman,10 Michael Hunkapiller,11 Randall Bolanos,1 Arthur Delcher,1 Ian Dew,1 Daniel Fasulo,1 Michael Flanigan,1 Liliana Florea,1 Aaron Halpern,1 Sridhar Hannenhalli,1 Saul Kravitz,1 Samuel Levy,1 Clark Mobarry,1 Knut Reinert,1 Karin Remington,1 Jane Abu-Threideh,1 Ellen Beasley,1 Kendra Biddick,1 Vivien Bonazzi,1 Rhonda Brandon,1 Michele Cargill,1 Ishwar Chandramouliswaran,1 Rosane Charlab,1 Kabir Chaturvedi,1 Zuoming Deng,1 Valentina Di Francesco,1 Patrick Dunn,1 Karen Eilbeck,1 Carlos Evangelista,1 Andrei E. Gabrielian,1 Weiniu Gan,1 Wangmao Ge,1 Fangcheng Gong,1 Zhiping Gu,1 Ping Guan,1 Thomas J. Heiman,1 Maureen E. Higgins,1 Rui-Ru Ji,1 Zhaoxi Ke,1 Karen A. Ketchum,1 Zhongwu Lai,1 Yiding Lei,1 Zhenya Li,1 Jiayin Li,1 Yong Liang,1 Xiaoying Lin,1 Fu Lu,1 Gennady V. Merkulov,1 Natalia Milshina,1 Helen M. Moore,1 Ashwinikumar K Naik,1 Vaibhav A. Narayan,1 Beena Neelam,1 Deborah Nusskern,1 Douglas B. Rusch,1 Steven Salzberg,12 Wei Shao,1 Bixiong Shue,1 Jingtao Sun,1 Zhen Yuan Wang,1 Aihui Wang,1 Xin Wang,1 Jian Wang,1 Ming-Hui Wei,1 Ron Wides,13 Chunlin Xiao,1 Chunhua Yan,1 Alison Yao,1 Jane Ye,1 Ming Zhan,1 Weiqing Zhang,1 Hongyu Zhang,1 Qi Zhao,1 Liansheng Zheng,1 Fei Zhong,1 Wenyan Zhong,1 Shiaoping C. Zhu,1 Shaying Zhao,12 Dennis Gilbert,1 Suzanna Baumhueter,1 Gene Spier,1 Christine Carter,1 Anibal Cravchik,1 Trevor Woodage,1 Feroze Ali,1 Huijin An,1 Aderonke Awe,1 Danita Baldwin,1 Holly Baden,1 Mary Barnstead,1 Ian Barrow,1 Karen Beeson,1 Dana Busam,1 Amy Carver,1 Angela Center,1 Ming Lai Cheng,1 Liz Curry,1 Steve Danaher,1 Lionel Davenport,1 Raymond Desilets,1 Susanne Dietz,1 Kristina Dodson,1 Lisa Doup,1 Steven Ferriera,1 Neha Garg,1 Andres Gluecksmann,1 Brit Hart,1 Jason Haynes,1 Charles Haynes,1 Cheryl Heiner,1 Suzanne Hladun,1 Damon Hostin,1 Jarrett Houck,1 Timothy Howland,1 Chinyere Ibegwam,1 Jeffery Johnson,1 Francis Kalush,1 Lesley Kline,1 Shashi Koduru,1 Amy Love,1 Felecia Mann,1 David May,1 Steven McCawley,1 Tina McIntosh,1 Ivy McMullen,1 Mee Moy,1 Linda Moy,1 Brian Murphy,1 Keith Nelson,1 Cynthia Pfannkoch,1 Eric Pratts,1 Vinita Puri,1 Hina Qureshi,1 Matthew Reardon,1 Robert Rodriguez,1 Yu-Hui Rogers,1 Deanna Romblad,1 Bob Ruhfel,1 Richard Scott,1 Cynthia Sitter,1 Michelle Smallwood,1 Erin Stewart,1 Renee Strong,1 Ellen Suh,1 Reginald Thomas,1 Ni Ni Tint,1 Sukyee Tse,1 Claire Vech,1 Gary Wang,1 Jeremy Wetter,1 Sherita Williams,1 Monica Williams,1 Sandra Windsor,1 Emily Winn-Deen,1 Keriellen Wolfe,1 Jayshree Zaveri,1 Karena Zaveri,1 Josep F. Abril,14 Roderic Guigó,14 Michael J. Campbell,1 Kimmen V. Sjolander,1 Brian Karlak,1 Anish Kejariwal,1 Huaiyu Mi,1 Betty Lazareva,1 Thomas Hatton,1 Apurva Narechania,1 Karen Diemer,1 Anushya Muruganujan,1 Nan Guo,1 Shinji Sato,1 Vineet Bafna,1 Sorin Istrail,1 Ross Lippert,1 Russell Schwartz,1 Brian Walenz,1 Shibu Yooseph,1 David Allen,1 Anand Basu,1 James Baxendale,1 Louis Blick,1 Marcelo Caminha,1 John Carnes-Stine,1 Parris Caulk,1 Yen-Hui Chiang,1 My Coyne,1 Carl Dahlke,1 Anne Deslattes Mays,1 Maria Dombroski,1 Michael Donnelly,1 Dale Ely,1 Shiva Esparham,1 Carl Fosler,1 Harold Gire,1 Stephen Glanowski,1 Kenneth Glasser,1 Anna Glodek,1 Mark Gorokhov,1 Ken Graham,1 Barry Gropman,1 Michael Harris,1 Jeremy Heil,1 Scott Henderson,1 Jeffrey Hoover,1 Donald Jennings,1 Catherine Jordan,1 James Jordan,1 John Kasha,1 Leonid Kagan,1 Cheryl Kraft,1 Alexander Levitsky,1 Mark Lewis,1 Xiangjun Liu,1 John Lopez,1 Daniel Ma,1 William Majoros,1 Joe McDaniel,1 Sean Murphy,1 Matthew Newman,1 Trung Nguyen,1 Ngoc Nguyen,1 Marc Nodell,1 Sue Pan,1 Jim Peck,1 Marshall Peterson,1 William Rowe,1 Robert Sanders,1 John Scott,1 Michael Simpson,1 Thomas Smith,1 Arlan Sprague,1 Timothy Stockwell,1 Russell Turner,1 Eli Venter,1 Mei Wang,1 Meiyuan Wen,1 David Wu,1 Mitchell Wu,1 Ashley Xia,1 Ali Zandieh,1 Xiaohong Zhu1

21 oktober 2004 Finishing the sequencing of the human genome 20,000 – 25,000 genes September 1988 NIH establishes the Office of Human Genome Research. Watson declares that 5% of the genome budget should be devoted to studies of social and ethical issues. February 2001 The HGP consortium publishes its working draft in Nature (15 February), and Celera publishes its draft in Science (16 February). June 26, 2000 Bill Clinton, Craig Venter, Francis Collins announce completion of the human genome

2004 Human Chromosome 5 Completed, September Human Chromosome 9 Completed, May Human Chromosome 10 Completed, May Human Chromosome 19 Completed, March Human Chromosome 13 Completed, March Human Chromosome 6 Completed, October Human Chromosome 7 Completed, July Human Chromosome Y Completed, June Human Genome Project Completion, April 2003 Human Chromosome 14 Finished - Chromosome 14 is the fourth chromosome to be completely sequenced Human Chromosome 20 Finished - Chromosome 20 is the third chromosome completely sequenced to the high quality specified by the Human Genome Project.

Wat is genomics? Converging technology Enabling technology Understanding complexity Kennissamenleving

Elsification Human Genome Project ($ in 13 jaar) ; Regie-Orgaan Genomics ( €) ; Nanoned ( €) Ethical, Legal & Social Issues The Human Genome Project: 5 %

Nature 431, (21 October 2004); doi: /nature03001 Finishing the euchromatic sequence of the human genome INTERNATIONAL HUMAN GENOME SEQUENCING CONSORTIUM The sequence of the human genome encodes the genetic instructions for human physiology, as well as rich information about human evolution. In 2001, the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium reported a draft sequence of the euchromatic portion of the human genome. Since then, the international collaboration has worked to convert this draft into a genome sequence with high accuracy and nearly complete coverage. Here, we report the result of this finishing process. The current genome sequence (Build 35) contains 2.85 billion nucleotides interrupted by only 341 gaps. It covers 99% of the euchromatic genome and is accurate to an error rate of 1 event per 100,000 bases. Many of the remaining euchromatic gaps are associated with segmental duplications and will require focused work with new methods. The near-complete sequence, the first for a vertebrate, greatly improves the precision of biological analyses of the human genome including studies of gene number, birth and death. Notably, the human genome seems to encode only 20,000– 25,000 protein-coding genes. The genome sequence reported here should serve as a firm foundation for biomedical research in the decades ahead.

Human Genome 1990: genes 2000: genes 2002: genes 2005: genes

Stephen Jay Gould

Genomics: Paradigm-shift Reductionism Complexity

Genomics Health Food EnvironmentEnvironment

Medische (“rode”) genomics: Pharmaco-genomics Community genomics Nutri-genomics

Medische genomics (vervolg): Multi-factoriële ziektebeelden Obesitas, alcoholisme, kanker, Alzheimer Voedingsgenomics Werking van medicijnen

Medische (rode) genomics: Screening & Preventie Genetische informatie: relevant voor dragers, specifieke risico-groepen Genomics: relevant voor iedereen Toegang tot / zeggenschap over informatie (biobanken) Klassieke thema’s: privacy, recht op niet weten, autonomie Nieuwe thema’s: veranderende mensbeelden, veranderende opvattingen over eigen verantwoordelijkheid, gedragsverandering, ziekte & gezondheid, pre-employment screening

Medische genomics (vervolg) Preventie-paradox Pre-patiënten Vergrijzing Nieuwe intermediaire beroepen: leefstijlconsulenten Verzekerbaarheid Digitale gezondheidszorg Spreiding van kennis Antropotechnieken / enhancement

1960s Emergence of science-based, high technology-based medicine Criticism: medical nemesis Criticism: Reductionism The phenomenological view on man

Example: Intelligence Testing Intelligence Looking for the Intelligence-gene Intelligence as an emergent property, interaction between various genetic and environmental factors