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Discovery

Human Genome Project's 20th Anniversary

Discovery

BBC

Science, Technology

4.31.2K Ratings

🗓️ 3 August 2020

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Adam Rutherford celebrates the 20th anniversary of one of the most ambitious and revolutionary scientific endeavours of all time - the Human Genome Project. Its scope and scale was breath-taking, set up to read every one of the 3 billion nucleotides, or letters of genetic information, contained within the DNA in every cell of the human body. It took seven years, hundreds of scientists, cost almost $3 billion and, amazingly, came in under budget and on time. Adam reflects back on that momentous time with Ewan Birney, Director of the European Bio-informatics Institute, part of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory. Twenty years ago, he was a PhD student working on the project, in the months leading up to the first draft. The Human Genome Project underpins many branches of science, from human evolution and synthetic biology to forensic genetics and ancestry testing. But a key motivation for the project was to alleviate human suffering. While the ‘cures’, hyped by the media back in 2000, were not realistic our understanding of disease has been revolutionised. Adam talks to Cancer Research UK Scientist, Dr Serena Nik-Zainal, from Cambridge University, who explains why the sequencing of the human genome has been so crucial to the diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer. The Human Genome Project is also playing a crucial role in the COVID-19 pandemic. Dr Kenneth Baillie has been treating critically ill patients at Edinburgh’s Royal Infirmary since the pandemic started. As the Lead on GenOMICC, a global collaboration on genetics and critical illness, he has joined forces with Genomics England and the NHS, to pinpoint genetic signals in these patients to help identify the best treatments. Producers: Beth Eastwood & Fiona Roberts Picture: DNA Genetic Code Colorful Genome, Credit: ktsimage/Getty Images

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:05.2

I'd really like to tell you a bit about what we do. I'm Julie Mackenzie and I commission comedy

0:10.1

podcast at the BBC. It's a bit of a dream job really. Comedy is a bit of a dream job really.

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Comedy is a fantastic joyous thing to do because really you're making people laugh,

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making people's days a bit better, helping them process, all manner of things.

0:22.0

But you know, I also know that comedy is really

0:24.3

subjective and everyone has different tastes. So we've got a huge range of comedy on offer from

0:29.8

satire to silly, shocking to soothing, profound to just general pratting about. So if you

0:36.1

fancy a laugh, find your next comedy at BBC Sounds.

0:40.0

Hello, this is Discovery from the BBC World Service and I'm Adam Rutherford.

0:44.0

Today I'm looking back on the subject that is very close to my heart,

0:48.0

the Human Genome Project, which recently celebrated its 20th birthday.

0:53.0

The 26th of June 2000

0:55.0

was a moment when the scientific century began with a bang.

0:59.0

Let us be in no doubt about what we are witnessing today.

1:02.0

A revolution in medical science whose implications

1:06.9

far surpass even the discovery of antibiotics. The first great technological triumph of the 21st century.

1:14.0

When Galileo discovered he could use the tools of mathematics and mechanics

1:19.0

to understand the motion of celestial bodies,

1:21.0

he felt in the words of one imminent researcher that he had learned

1:25.6

the language in which God created the universe. Today we are learning the

1:30.6

language in which God created life.

...

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