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The Human Genome Has Been Thoroughly Mapped For The First Time

The human genome, made up of all of our DNA, has been fully mapped for the first time with the work of nearly 100 scientists. Scientists announced that this important development will open new doors to humanity.
 The Human Genome Has Been Thoroughly Mapped For The First Time
READING NOW The Human Genome Has Been Thoroughly Mapped For The First Time

The scientific world, which continues to work at full speed to understand human nature and structure, has made another extremely important development. A team of nearly 100 international scientists announced that, with their research published in the journal Science, they have succeeded in making a complete map of the human genome for the first time in the world.

In the most advanced study to date on this subject, scientists succeeded in mapping a large part of human DNA years ago. But due to the technology of that day, some parts of DNA could not be observed. While the developing technology has reduced this rate to a maximum of 8%, the expected development has now occurred.

“It took more than 20 years, but we finally made it”

University of Washington scientist Evan Eichler, who was involved in the current study and the original Human Genome Project “Some of the genes that make us uniquely human were actually in this ‘dark matter of the genome’ and were unknown. It took more than 20 years but we finally made it.” used the expressions.

Scientists shared that the complete map of the genome will give humanity a better understanding of our evolution and biology, while also opening the door to medical discoveries in areas such as aging, cancer and heart disease. Although it has been said that the entire human genome has been discovered several times before, scientists have stated that it is now a definite end.

The new study contains exactly 3 trillion 55 billion base pairs of a human genome. The study included gapless assemblies in all chromosomes except the Y chromosome, rectifying errors in previous studies, and revealed nearly 200 million new base pairs, including gene predictions from 1956, of which 99 were predicted to be protein-coding.

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