Welcome to the genomic revolution Richard Resnick

ladies and gentlemen I present to you

the human genome chromosome one top left

bottom right are the sex chromosomes

women have two copies of that big X

chromosome men have the X and of course

that small copy of the Y sorry boys but

it’s just a tiny little thing that makes

you different so if you zoom in on this

genome then what you see of course is

this double helix structure the code

‘life spelled out with these four bio

chemical letters or we call them bases

right AC G and T how many are there in

the human genome 3 billion is that a big

number well everybody can throw around

big numbers but in fact if I were to

place one base on each pixel of this

1280 by 800 resolution screen we would

need 3,000 screens to take a look at the

genome so it’s really quite big and

perhaps because of its size a group of

people all by the way with y chromosomes

decided that they would want to sequence

it

and so 15 years actually in about four

billion dollars later the genome was

sequenced and published in 2003 the

final version was published and they

keep working on it that was all done on

a machine it looks like this costs about

a dollar for each base very slow way of

doing it well folks I’m here to tell you

that the world has completely changed

and none of you know about it so now

what we do is we take a genome we make

maybe 50 copies of it we cut all those

copies up into little 50 base reads and

then we sequence them massively parallel

and then we bring that into software and

we reassemble it and we tell you what

the story is and so just to give you a

picture of what this looks like the

human genome project 3 Giga bases right

one run on one of these modern machines

200 Giga bases in a week and that 200 is

going to change to 600 this summer and

there’s no sign of this pay slowing so

the price of a base to sequence a base

has fallen a hundred million times

that’s the equivalent of you filling up

your car with gas in 1998 waiting until

2011 and now you can drive to Jupiter

and back twice

world population PC placements the

archive of all the medical literature

Moore’s law the old way of sequencing

and here’s all the new stuff guys this

is a log scale you don’t typically see

lines that go up like that right so with

a world wide capacity to sequence human

genomes is something like fifty to a

hundred thousand human genomes this year

and we know this based on the machines

that are being placed this is expected

to double triple or maybe quadruple

year-over-year for the foreseeable

future in fact there’s one lab in

particular that represents twenty

percent of all that capacity it’s called

the Beijing genomics Institute the

Chinese are absolutely winning this race

to the new moon by the way what does it

mean for medicine so woman aged thirty

seven she presents with stage two

estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer

she is treated with surgery chemotherapy

and radiation she goes home two years

later she comes back with stage 3c

ovarian cancer unfortunately treated

again with surgery and chemotherapy

comes back three years later at age 42

with more ovarian cancer more

chemotherapy six months later she comes

back with acute myeloid leukemia she

goes into respiratory failure and dies

eight days later so first the way in

which this woman was treated in as

little as ten years will look like

bloodletting and it’s because of people

like my colleague Rick Wilson at the

genome Institute at Washington

University who decided to take a look at

this woman postmortem any sequenced he

took skin cells healthy skin and

cancerous bone marrow and he sequenced

the whole genomes of both of them right

in a couple weeks no big deal right and

then he compared those two genomes and

software and what he found among other

things was a deletion a 2,000 base

deletion across three billion bases

right in a particular gene called tp53

if you have this deleterious mutation in

this gene you’re 90% likely to get

cancer in your life so unfortunately

this doesn’t help this woman but it does

have severe a profound if you will

implications to her family right I mean

if they have the same mutation and they

get this genetic test and they

understand it then they can go and get

regular screens and they can catch

cancer early and

significantly longer life let me

introduce you now to the beery twins

diagnosed with cerebral palsy at the age

of two their mom is a very brave woman

who didn’t believe it the symptoms

weren’t matching up and through some

heroic efforts and a lot of internet

searching she was able to convince the

medical community that in fact they had

something else what they had was dopa

responsive dystonia and so they were

given l-dopa and their symptoms did

improve but they weren’t totally

asymptomatic significant problems

remained turns out the gentleman in this

picture is a guy named Joe Barry who was

lucky enough to be the CIO of a company

called Life Technologies they’re one of

the two companies that makes these

massive whole genome sequencing tools

and so what he did was he got his kids

sequenced and what they found was a

series of mutations in a gene called SPR

which is responsible for producing

serotonin among other things so on top

of l-dopa that gave these kids a

serotonin precursor drug and they’re

effectively normal now guys this would

never have happened without whole genome

sequencing and at the time this was a

few years ago it cost a hundred thousand

today it’s ten thousand next year at

2000 the year after it’s a hundred give

or take a year that’s how fast this is

moving so here’s little Nick likes

Batman and squirt guns and turns out

Nick shows up at the Children’s Hospital

with this distended belly like a famine

victim and it’s not that he’s not eating

it’s that when he eats his intestine

basically opens up and feces spill out

into his gut so a hundred surgeries

later right he looks at his mom and says

mom please pray for me I’m in so much

pain his pediatrician happens to have a

background in clinical genetics and he

has no idea what’s going on but he says

let’s get this kid’s genome sequence and

what they find is a single point

mutation in a gene responsible for

controlling programmed cell death so the

theory is that he’s having some

immunological reaction to what’s going

on - the food essentially right and

that’s a natural reaction which causes

some programmed cell death but the gene

that regulates that down is broken and

so this informs among other things of

course a treatment for bone marrow

transplant which he undertakes and after

nine months of grueling recovery he’s

now eating steak with a1 sauce the

prospect of using the genome as a

universal diagnostic is upon us today

today it’s here and what it means for

all of us is that everybody in this room

could

live in extra 5 10 20 years just because

of this one thing which is a fantastic

story unless you think about humanity’s

footprint on the planet and our ability

to keep up food production so it turns

out that the very same technology is

also being used to grow new lines of

corn wheat soybean and other crops that

are highly tolerant of drought a flood

of paths and pesticides now look as long

as we continue to increase the

population we’re going to have to

continue to grow and eat genetically

modified foods and that’s the only

position that I’ll take today unless

there’s anybody in the audience that

would like to volunteer to stop eating

none not one this is a typewriter a

staple of every desktop for decades

right and in fact the typewriter was

essentially deleted by this thing and

then more general versions of word

processors came about but ultimately it

was a disruption on top of a disruption

it was Bob Metcalfe inventing the

ethernet and the connection of all these

computers that fundamentally changed

everything right and suddenly we had

Netscape and we had Yahoo and we had

indeed the entire com bubble

not to worry though that was quickly

rescued by the iPod and Facebook and

indeed Angry Birds look this is where we

are today this is the genomic revolution

today this is where we are okay so what

I’d like for you to consider is what

does it mean when these dots don’t

represent the individual basis of your

genome but the connected genomes all

across the planet so I just recently had

to buy life insurance and I was required

to answer a I have never had a genetic

test B I’ve had one here you go and see

I’ve had one and I’m not telling

thankfully I was able to answer a and I

say that honestly in case my life

insurance agent is listening but what

would have happened if I had said C

consumer applications for genomics they

will flourish you want to see whether

your genetically compatible with your

girlfriend

sure DNA sequencing on your iPhone

there’s an app for that

personalized genomic massage anyone

there’s already a lab today that tests

for allele 334 of the AVP r1 gene the so

called cheating gene so anybody who’s

who’s here today with your significant

other just turn over to them and swab

their mouth sent it to the lab and

you’ll know for sure

do you really want to elect a president

whose genome suggests cardiomyopathy now

think of it it’s 2016 and the leading

candidate releases not only her four

years of back tax returns but also her

personal genome and it looks really good

and then she challenges all of her

competitors to do the same do you think

that’s not gonna happen do you think it

would help john mccain how many people

in the audience have the last name

Resnick like me raise your hand

anybody nobody typically there’s one or

two so my father’s father is one of 10

Resnick brothers they all hated each

other right and they all move to

different parts of the planet and so

it’s likely that I’m related to every

Resnick that I ever meet but I don’t

know so imagine if my genome were

de-identified sitting in software right

and a third cousins genome was also

sitting there and there was software

that could compare these two and make

these associations not hard to imagine

my company a software that does this

right now and so imagine one more thing

that that software is able to ask both

parties for mutual consents would you be

willing to meet your third cousin and if

we both say yes voila

welcome to chromosomally LinkedIn right

now this is probably a good thing right

a bigger clan gatherings and so on but

maybe it’s a bad thing as well how many

father’s in the room raise your hands

okay so it just turns experts think that

one to three percent of you are not

actually the father of your child look

these genomes these 23 chromosomes they

don’t in any way represent the quality

of our relationships or the nature of

our society at least not yet and like

any new technology it’s really in

humanity’s hands to wield it for the

betterment of mankind or not and so I

urge you all to wake up and to tune in

and to influence the genomic revolution

that’s happening all around you thank

you

女士们先生们,我向你们展示

人类基因组染色体一个左上角

右下角是性染色体

女性有两个大 X

染色体的副本男人有 X,当然还有

那个 Y 的小副本对不起男孩,但

它只是一个很小的 让

你与众不同的东西,所以如果你放大这个

基因组,那么你看到的当然是

这个双螺旋结构,代码

“生命”用这四个生化字母拼写出来,

或者我们称它们为

碱基 AC G 和 T 有多少

在人类基因组中,30 亿是一个很大的

数字,每个人都可以抛出

很大的数字,但事实上,如果我要

在这个 1280 x 800 分辨率屏幕的每个像素上放置一个碱基,

我们将

需要 3,000 个屏幕来查看

基因组 所以它真的很大,

也许是因为它的大小,

一群有 y 染色体的人

决定要对它进行测序

,所以 15 年后实际上大约 40

亿美元的基因组是

测序并于 2003

年出版 最终版本已出版,他们

一直在努力,

这一切都是在一台

机器上完成

的 世界已经完全改变了

,你们都不知道,所以

现在我们要做的是我们获取一个基因组,我们制作

大约 50 个副本,我们将所有这些

副本切割成 50 个碱基读数,

然后我们对它们进行大规模并行测序

,然后我们 把它带入软件,

我们重新组装它,我们告诉

你故事是什么,所以只是为了给你一张

图片,这看起来像

人类基因组计划 3 Giga bases right

one run on one of these modern machines

200 Giga bases in a 一周,

今年夏天 200 美元将变为 600 美元,而且

没有任何迹象表明这种支付速度会放缓,因此

对碱基进行测序的碱基价格

下降了一亿倍

,这相当于

你在 1998 年为汽车加满油等待 直到

2011 年和现在你可以开车去木星

和返回两倍

世界人口 PC 放置

所有医学文献的存档

摩尔定律旧的排序方式

和这里的所有新东西伙计们这

是一个你通常看不到的对数刻度

线 就像那样,所以

在全球范围内对人类基因组进行测序的能力

是今年大约有 50 到 10

万个人类基因组

,我们根据正在放置的机器

知道这一点,预计这

一年将翻三倍或四倍 - 在可预见的

未来,事实上,有一个实验室

特别代表

了所有能力的百分之二十,它被

称为北京基因组学研究所,

中国人绝对赢得

了这场新月竞赛,这

对医学意味着什么 三十

七岁 她患有

雌激素受体阳性乳腺癌二期

她接受了手术化疗

和放射治疗 两年后她回家了

她又得了 3c 期

卵巢癌,不幸

再次接受手术治疗,

三年后又回来了,42 岁时

患上了更多的卵巢癌

六个月后她

又得了急性髓性白血病,她

呼吸衰竭,

八天后死亡,所以 首先

,这个女人在

短短十年内接受治疗的方式看起来就像

放血一样,这是因为

我在华盛顿大学基因组研究所的同事里克·威尔逊(Rick Wilson)等

人决定看看

这个女人死后他

采取的任何测序 皮肤细胞 健康皮肤和

癌性骨髓 他在几周

内对它们的全基因组进行了测序

没什么大不了的

然后他比较了这两个基因组和

软件 他发现除其他

外有一个缺失 2,000 个碱基

缺失

如果您在该基因中存在这种有害突变,则在称为 tp53 的特定基因中跨越 30 亿个碱基

你有 90% 的可能

在你的生活中患上癌症,所以不幸的是,

这对这个女人没有帮助,但

如果你会对

她的家人产生影响,它确实会产生严重的影响,我的意思是

如果他们有相同的突变并且他们

接受了这个基因测试 他们

明白这一点,然后他们就可以去

定期筛查,他们可以

及早患上癌症,并且

寿命显着延长让我

现在向您介绍两岁时

被诊断出患有脑瘫的啤酒双胞胎

,他们的妈妈是一个非常勇敢的女人

,她没有 不相信

症状不匹配,通过一些

英勇的努力和大量的互联网

搜索,她能够说服

医学界,事实上他们还有

其他东西,他们所拥有的是多巴

反应性肌张力障碍,所以他们被

给予了 l- 多巴和他们的症状确实

有所改善,但他们并非完全没有

症状

仍然存在重大问题原来这张

照片中的绅士是一个名叫乔巴里的人,他

有幸成为一家公司的首席信息官 任何

一家叫做 Life Technologies 他们

是制造这些

大规模全基因组测序工具的两家公司之一

,所以他所做的就是让他的孩子进行

测序,他们发现的是一个

名为 SPR 的基因中的一系列突变,

该基因负责产生

5-羟色胺以及其他东西

,比如左旋多巴,它给这些孩子提供了一种

血清素前体药物,

现在他们实际上是正常的,如果

没有全基因组测序,这永远不会发生,而

几年前,这要花费一百

今天是一万 明年 2000 年是一万

一百年后

的一年 给或取一年 这就是发展的

速度 所以这里的小尼克喜欢

蝙蝠侠和喷枪 结果

尼克出现在儿童

医院 肚子胀得像 一个饥荒的

受害者,并不是他不吃

东西,而是当他吃东西的时候,他的肠子

基本上打开了,粪便溢出

到他的肠子里,所以他后来做了一百次手术

看着他的妈妈,说

妈妈请为我祈祷,我非常

痛苦,他的儿科医生恰好有

临床遗传学背景,

他不知道发生了什么,但他说

让我们得到这个孩子的基因组序列,

他们发现了什么 一个

负责

控制程序性细胞死亡的基因中的单点突变,所以

理论是他

对正在发生的事情有一些免疫反应

  • 食物基本上是正确的,

这是一种自然反应,会导致

一些程序性细胞死亡,但是

调节它的基因 是坏了,

所以这当然通知了

他进行的骨髓移植治疗,经过

九个月的艰苦康复,他

现在正在吃牛排配a1酱

,使用基因组作为

通用诊断的前景今天就在我们面前

在这里,

对我们所有人来说,这意味着这个房间里的每个人都

可以

多活 5 10 20 年,

因为这件事是粉丝 精彩的

故事,除非你考虑到人类

在地球上的足迹以及我们

保持粮食生产的能力,所以事实

证明,同样的技术

也被用于种植

玉米小麦、大豆和其他

高度耐旱的作物的新品系

现在看来,

只要我们继续增加

人口,就会出现大量道路和杀虫剂,我们将不得不

继续种植和食用转

基因食品,这

是我今天唯一的立场,除非

观众中有任何人

愿意 喜欢自愿停止吃东西,

不是一个,这是一台打字机

,几十年来每个台式机的主食

,事实上,打字机

基本上被这个东西删除了,

然后出现了更通用的文字处理器版本,

但最终它

是一个颠覆 颠覆的

是鲍勃·梅特卡夫发明了

以太网和所有这些

计算机的连接,从根本上改变了

一切,突然之间 我们有

网景,我们有雅虎,我们

确实有整个 com 泡沫

不用担心,尽管这很快

被 iPod 和 Facebook 和

愤怒

的小鸟救

了出来 好的,所以

我想让你考虑的是,

当这些点

不代表你基因组的个体基础,

而是代表整个星球上相互关联的基因组时,这意味着什么,

所以我最近

不得不购买人寿保险,我被要求

回答 a 我从来没有做过基因

测试

正在听,但

如果我说 C

基因组学消费者应用程序

将会蓬勃发展,你想看看

你的基因是否与你的女朋友兼容

确定你的 iPhone 上的 DNA 测序

有一个用于

个性化基因组按摩的应用程序 任何

人今天已经有一个实验室来测试

AVP r1 基因的等位基因 334,即

所谓的作弊基因,所以

今天和你的另一半在一起的任何人

只要把它交给他们,用拭子擦拭

他们的嘴,然后把它送到实验室,

你就会知道 你确定

你真的想选举

一位基因组显示心肌病的总统 现在

想想现在是 2016 年,领先的

候选人不仅公布了她

四年的纳税申报表,还公布了她的

个人基因组,看起来真的很好

,然后她挑战了所有人 她的

竞争对手做同样的事情你认为

这不会发生你认为这

会帮助约翰麦凯恩吗

观众中有多少

人像我一样姓雷斯尼克举手

任何人通常没有一

两个所以我父亲的父亲是一个 在 10 个

Resnick 兄弟中,他们都彼此憎恨

,他们都搬到

了地球的不同地方,所以

我很可能与我遇到的每一个 Resnick 都有关系,

但我不知道 不

知道所以想象一下,如果我的基因组

在软件中被取消识别,

并且第三代堂兄弟的基因组

也在那里,并且有

软件可以比较这两者并产生

这些关联,不难想象

我的公司有一个软件可以做到这

一点 现在,再想象一件事

,该软件能够征求

双方的共同同意,你

愿意见见你的第三代堂兄吗?如果

我们都说是,瞧

,现在欢迎来到染色体 LinkedIn,

这可能是一件好事,对

一个更大 家族聚会等等,但

也许这也是一件坏事

,房间里有多少父亲举手

好,所以专家们认为

你们中的百分之一到三实际上不是

你孩子的父亲看看

这些基因组这 23 条染色体 它们

无论如何都不代表

我们关系的质量或我们社会的性质,

至少现在还没有,就像

任何新技术一样,它确实

掌握在人类手中 是否为了

人类的福祉,所以我

敦促你们所有人醒来,关注

并影响

发生在你们周围的基因组革命,谢谢