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Can genetic data be a magic bullet for drug R&D?

pharmaphorum

The cost of testing per human genome in 2006 was approximately $14 million , and in less than two decades, an average consumer-purchased genetic test costs $100. The same is becoming true for the healthcare industry, and one of the first major breakthroughs in the area was the 100,000 Genomes Project.

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Estonia National Biobank to sequence 10,000 whole genomes 

Drug Discovery World

The university will also support the European Union’s 1+ Million Genomes initiative, which seeks to boost innovation in healthcare across Europe. Driving new understanding 10,000 whole human genomes will be sequenced and analysed by the Institute of Genomics at the University of Tartu.

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Why a recent advancement is a giant leap for human genomics

Drug Discovery World

The first complete, gapless sequence of a human genome was published 1 April 2022 in a special issue of the journal Science 1. While The Human Genome Project mapped about 92% of the human genome two decades ago, sequencing the last 8% of the genome proved highly challenging.

Genome 52
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Nutrigenomics: The Future of Personalized Nutrition

Roots Analysis

Nutrigenomics is the science studying the relationship between human genome, nutrition and health. In part, the success of the Human Genome Project has also paved a path for the novel concept of nutrigenomics. It further highlights the variation in the genome of patients and identify the sites of metabolic weakness.

Genome 40