What would you do if you could sequence everything?
- 1 October 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Biotechnology
- Vol. 26 (10) , 1125-1133
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt1494
Abstract
It could be argued that the greatest transformative aspect of the Human Genome Project has been not the sequencing of the genome itself, but the resultant development of new technologies. A host of new approaches has fundamentally changed the way we approach problems in basic and translational research. Now, a new generation of high-throughput sequencing technologies promises to again transform the scientific enterprise, potentially supplanting array-based technologies and opening up many new possibilities. By allowing DNA/RNA to be assayed more rapidly than previously possible, these next-generation platforms promise a deeper understanding of genome regulation and biology. Significantly enhancing sequencing throughput will allow us to follow the evolution of viral and bacterial resistance in real time, to uncover the huge diversity of novel genes that are currently inaccessible, to understand nucleic acid therapeutics, to better integrate biological information for a complete picture of health and disease at a personalized level and to move to advances that we cannot yet imagine.Keywords
This publication has 112 references indexed in Scilit:
- Functional classification analysis of somatically mutated genes in human breast and colorectal cancersGenomics, 2008
- The methylome: approaches for global DNA methylation profilingTrends in Genetics, 2008
- Highly Integrated Single-Base Resolution Maps of the Epigenome in ArabidopsisCell, 2008
- ChIPping away at gene regulationEMBO Reports, 2008
- Bioinformatics challenges of new sequencing technologyPublished by Elsevier ,2008
- High-Resolution Profiling of Histone Methylations in the Human GenomePublished by Elsevier ,2007
- Control of Developmental Regulators by Polycomb in Human Embryonic Stem CellsCell, 2006
- Core Transcriptional Regulatory Circuitry in Human Embryonic Stem CellsCell, 2005
- A map of human genome sequence variation containing 1.42 million single nucleotide polymorphismsNature, 2001
- Initial sequencing and analysis of the human genomeNature, 2001