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Is genetics research the next big hobby?

Can serious genetics research be undertaken in a garage?

That's a question that renowned Harvard geneticist George Church, the founder of Knome, is asking as one of his former students undertakes an ambitious genetics project in her own apartment. Using equipment bought on eBay, 23-year-old MIT graduate Katherine Aull has been studying the genetic mutations responsible for her father's hemochromatosis, a condition in which iron builds up in the body.

Her father is fine, after treatment, and now Aull has been testing herself.

"For so many people, biology is something scary that takes place in a lab," Aull told the Boston Globe. "This shows people it's understandable, and part of your life... You can do it with basic kitchen equipment."

"Can genetics map onto electronics--is it ready to go into the garage shop in a hobbyist sense?" said Church. "That's the question she's asking, and I think that's a very big, profound question... There seems to be a very deep and growing curiosity about genetics that might dwarf electronics. No matter how much we love our gadgets, we're totally fascinated by our ancestry and health."

- read the report from the Boston Globe

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More stories about genetic sequencing   Knome   genetics   George Church  

Comments

Genetics research is not only the next big hobby, but it is also the next big atomic bomb.
" The Atomic & Genetic Hobby of the next Century"
13.5.2009

Despite the existence of various nuclear reduction treaties, the hobby involving the development of the atomic bomb is still very 'much alive' in Asian and the rest of the developing world aka the have-nots.

In tandem with the atomic hobby is the genetic hobby. Both are equally dangerous, if not expensive.

Atomic bomb may not solved the current epidemic grade 5 swine flu except for nuclear fusion methodology utilised in the treatment of life-threatening diseases.

Genetic R & D is equally on the same plane. It may be developed as the next 'atomic bomb' or it could be used as a method of tackling/resolving contemporary health problems such as swine flu.

Government around the world must make a serious effort to jointly develop both nuclear and genetic-based technologies to improve world health and propel it to the next level.

The best level is the green level of sustainable drug development using both nuclear and genetics sources.

....................
Jeong Chun phuoc
Lecturer-in-Law
Jeongphu@yahoo.com

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