Scientists are setting out to collect genetic material from 500,000 people of African ancestry to create what they believe will be the worldโs largest database of genomic information from the population.
The hope is to build a new โreference genomeโ โ a template to compare to full sets of DNA from individuals โ and better understand genetic variants that affect Black people. It could eventually translate into new medicines and diagnostic tests โ and help reduce health disparities.
The initiative was launched Wednesday by Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee, as well as Regeneron Genetics Center, AstraZeneca, Novo Nordisk and Roche. The pharmaceutical companies are providing the funding, while the data will be managed by a nonprofit started by Meharry, called the Diaspora Human Genomics Institute.
Organizers said thereโs a clear need for the project, pointing to research showing that less than 2% of genetic information being studied today comes from people of African ancestry.
โWe are going to bridge that gap, and this is just the beginning,โ said Anil Shanker, senior vice president for research and innovation at Meharry.
Scientists have long known that the reference they compare to individual genomes has serious limits because it mostly relies on genetic material from one man and doesnโt reflect the spectrum of human diversity.
Although any two peopleโs genomes โ that is, a set of instructions to build and sustain a human being โ are more than 99% identical, scientists say they want to understand the differences.
The project is not connected with related research already underway. In May, scientists published four studies about building a diverse reference genome that they call a โpangenome.โ At that point, it included the genetic material of 24 people of African ancestry, 16 from the Americas and the Caribbean, six from Asia and one from Europe.
In the new project, Meharry, a historically Black academic health sciences…
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