Genetics Society Spring Meeting: Genomforschung für Gesundheit und Gesellschaft

The aim of of the meeting was to begin to answer the question:

“Was werden die Auswirkungen der großen Sequenzierung der menschlichen Bevölkerung im 21. Jahrhundert?”

Held in der Royal Society in London am 19. April 2013, An dem Treffen nahmen einige bekannte Persönlichkeiten aus der klinischen Genetik, Populationsgenomik, DNA fingerprinting and the legal implications of genomics. There is an excellent summary of the meeting on Storify, as a collection of Tweets from several authors assembled by DJ de Koning, but I have included some highlights in this post.

Speakers at the meeting were Kate Bushby and the people shown below:

First to present was Jim Lupski from Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, onPersonal Genomes”.

According to Jim, one of his claims to fame should be that he was the first person in the world to be both first author and the subject of study on a personal genome paper.  His whole genome was sequenced and analysed because he is part of a pedigree orclan”  (as he called it) segregating a peripheral neuropathy called Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.  Jim Lupski’s talk was a bit of a romp with paper, case study and human stories tumbling out so fast it sometimes seemed difficult for him to draw breath.  The last story was particularly compellinga tale of fraternal twins, with a movement disorder, that had undergone numerous inconclusive medical investigations before whole genome sequencing enabled a clear diagnosis and improved therapy.

Sir John Burn entitled his talkPower to the People”. One of his main themes was that we were heading towards a clinical genome sequence datatraffic jam”.  An example of this is the recently announced NHS plan to spend 100M pounds on sequencing about 100,000 patient genomes. Some of the other issues this project raises are discussed in an excellent blog post, hier.  Sir John emphasised that, in order to extract maximum value from these date, it will be vital to share information on variants in a way that preserves patient confidentiality.  One way to encourage sharing these data is to usemicroattribution“, where scientists who have annotated a sequence variant gain credit for their efforts.

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