나의 즐겨찾기 | 블로그홈 | 바로가기 바로가기 | 로그인
여러분! 서로 나누어 행복하게 삽시다! 격려하는 답글 좀 많이 달아주세요. 오른쪽 즐겨찾기 클릭하시고 자주 들리시면 좋은 일이 생길겁니다. 화이팅!
블로그  |  사진갤러리  |  동영상갤러리 방명록  |   즐겨찾기 추가
한수수 (sooragan2000)
프로필     
 인기도 :
 이 블로그 점수주기
오늘 전체
방문자 1506 1429218
구독자 0 317
댓글 0 1544
참조글 0 12690
HanRSS 로 구독하기Fish 로 구독하기
2010 02월
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28
최근 댓글 전체보기
감사합니다
윤구병 선생님도 저보고..
그럼요
좋은정보 감사드려요^^..
좋은정보 감사드려요^^..
최근 참조글 전체보기
Zoloft and l..
Cheap levoth..
Effects of l..
Levothyroxin..
Ephedra.
다녀간 블로거 더보기
- UCC조아
- 장애인사랑나눔회
- 나에게로
- 로우맨
- 조유레카
 즐겨찾기
 즐겨찾기 글모음
개설일 : 2004/08/13
 

1. The Retail DNA Test

 

Before meeting with Anne Wojcicki, co-founder of a consumer gene-testing service called 23andMe, I know just three things about her: she's pregnant, she's married to Google's Sergey Brin, and she went to Yale. But after an hour chatting with her in the small office she shares with co-founder Linda Avey at 23andMe's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., I know some things no Internet search could reveal: coffee makes her giddy, she has a fondness for sequined shoes and fresh-baked bread, and her unborn son has a 50% chance of inheriting a high risk for Parkinson's disease.

Learning and sharing your genetic secrets are at the heart of 23andMe's controversial new service — a $399 saliva test that estimates your predisposition for more than 90 traits and conditions ranging from baldness to blindness. Although 23andMe isn't the onl y company selling DNA tests to the public, it does the best job of making them accessible and affordable. The 600,000 genetic markers that 23andMe identifies and interprets for each customer are "the digital manifestation of you," says Wojcicki (pronounced Wo-jis-key), 35, who majored in biology and was previously a health-care investor. "It's all this information beyond what you can see in the mirror."

We are at the beginning of a personal-genomics revolution that will transform not onl y how we take care of ourselves but also what we mean by personal information. In the past, onl y élite researchers had access to their genetic fingerprints, but now personal genotyping is available to anyone who orders the service onl ine and mails in a spit sample. Not everything about how this information will be used is clear yet — 23andMe has stirred up debate about issues ranging from how meaningful the results are to how to prevent genetic discrimination — but the curtain has been pulled back, and it can never be closed again. And so for pioneering retail genomics, 23andMe's DNA-testing service is Time's 2008 Invention of the Year.

The 1997 film Gattaca depicted it as a futuristic nightmare, but human-genotyping has emerged instead as both a real business and a status symbol. Movie mogul Harvey Weinstein says he is backing 23andMe not for its cinematic possibilities but because "I think it is a good investment. This is strictly medical and business-like." Google has chipped in almost half the $8.9 million in funding raised by the firm, which counts Warren Buffett, Rupert Murdoch and Ivanka Trump among its clients.

Weinstein isn't saying what his test told him, but Wojcicki and her famous husband are perfectly willing to discuss their own genetic flaws. Most worrisome is a rare mutation that gives Brin an estimated 20% to 80% chance of getting Parkinson's disease. There's a 50% chance that the couple's child, due later this year, will inherit that same gene. "I don't find this embarrassing in any way," says Brin, who blogged about it in September. "I felt it was a lot of work and impractical to keep it secret, and I think in 10 years it will be commonplace to learn about your genome."

And yet while Wojcicki and Brin aren't worried about genetic privacy, others are. In May, President George W. Bush signed a bill that makes it illegal for employers and insurers to discriminate on the basis of genetic information. California and New York tried to block the tests on the grounds that they were not properly licensed, but have so far been unsuccessful. Others worry about how sharing one 's genetic data might affect close relatives who would prefer not to let a family history of schizophrenia or Lou Gehrig's disease become public. And what if a potential mate demands to see your genome before getting serious? Such hypotheticals are endless. And some researchers argue that the tests are flawed. "The uncertainty is too great," says Dr. Muin Khoury, director of the National Office of Public Health Genomics at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who argues that it is wrong to charge people for access to such preliminary and incomplete data. Many diseases stem from several different genes and are triggered by environmental factors. Since less than a tenth of our 20,000 genes have been correlated with any condition, it's impossible to nail down exactly what component is genetic. "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing," says Dr. Alan Guttmacher of the National Institutes of Health.

23andMe is unfazed by its detractors. "It's somewhat paternalistic to say people shouldn't get these tests because 'we don't want people to misunderstand or get upset,'" says board member Esther Dyson. There can be a psychological upside too: some people decide to lead healthier lifestyles. Brin is currently funding Parkinson's research. And not all customers' results are as troubling as his. Nate Guy, 19, of Warrenton, Va., was relieved that though his uncle had died of prostate cancer, his own risk for the disease was about average. He even posted a video about it on YouTube. And unflattering findings can have a silver lining. "Now I have an excuse for not remembering things, because my memory is probably genetically flawed," Guy says.

Wojcicki and Avey see themselves not just as businesswomen but also as social entrepreneurs. With their customers' consent, they plan to amass everyone's genetic footprint in a giant database that can be mined for clues to which mutations make us susceptible to specific diseases and which drugs people are more likely to respond to. "You're donating your genetic information," says Wojcicki. "We could make great discoveries if we just had more information. We all carry this information, and if we bring it together and democratize it, we could really change health care."

See what your gene test can tell you.

댓글쓰기

댓글쓰기 입력폼

포스트 목록 닫기

목록보기
 
전체 글보기(5117)
축구, 운동
아파트,주택
번역, 통역, 무역 계약
이민, 자녀교육
우수,인기,추천 물품 - 푸르시요
오늘의 행사(Sale) - 푸르시요 슈퍼
'푸르시요' 소개 - 슈퍼 / 클럽 / 농장
아름다운 생활 -- 주말농장 새 글이 있습니다.
애완동물
영어채팅클럽(SECC),영어회화 클럽
웃자 웃자
아토피
성인병,암,당뇨,고혈압,심장병,뇌질환,간경화
변비
친환경/유기농 전문점
취업
인맥관리
여행,세계 새 글이 있습니다.
어르신(60-100세)
여성
미분류 주제, 기타 새 글이 있습니다.
다이어트
생식
효소, 산야초, 청국장
성생활
자녀교육
성인병
생활의 지혜
건강식품
가족관계
대자연
연애,사교
운동
자전거
아름다운 사람
유학 /어학연수 /영어교육
목조주택
수수한 삶의 일기
잘 먹는 법
원하는 것을 얻는 방법
시와 산문
건강 다지기
하나님, 기도, 찬송
돈 벌기, 창업/취업, 경영, 경제
정치,사회,민족,국제관계
음악
우주
설문
백만가지 주제