home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT2418>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: The Race to Map Our Genes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 57
- The Race to Map Our Genes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A French team is running ahead of America's lavishly funded
- genome project--and on higher moral ground
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTINE GORMAN - With reporting by Dick Thompson/Washington
- and Frederick Ungeheuer/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Biologists, unlike physicists, are unaccustomed to
- gargantuan, gazillion-dollar research projects. So when American
- geneticists embarked on a $3 billion effort to map out all the
- hereditary information found on the 23 pairs of human
- chromosomes, they decided, like the proverbial tortoise, to take
- the slow and careful route. Plotting out a 12-year game plan,
- the geneticists subdivided the work among nine different
- laboratories so that eventually the scientists could pool their
- results in one highly detailed chart. Along the way, they have
- been trying to patent their discoveries, even before knowing
- precisely what their importance was.
- </p>
- <p> But they did not count on the harelike speed--and less
- mercenary mind-set--of Daniel Cohen. An ambitious French
- geneticist, he has jumped ahead of his American rivals and is
- close to completing the first map of the human genome.
- </p>
- <p> Cohen and his colleagues at the Center for the Study of
- Human Polymorphism in Paris will soon unveil their pioneering
- cartography. Thanks to a series of clever shortcuts, the French
- team's map will be available two years ahead of the schedule
- U.S. scientists set for themselves. Though somewhat rudimentary,
- Cohen's charts will make it easier for researchers to track down
- and isolate single genes scattered along the length of human
- chromosomes. "We don't want to say that we have beaten the
- Americans," the 41-year-old geneticist protests. "We like to
- compete, but not on a nationalistic basis." And yet he notes,
- "On this map, 90% of the work will have been done in France."
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. government has tacitly acknowledged the French
- achievement by awarding researchers at M.I.T. $24 million to
- adopt Cohen's techniques. But the American effort has yet to
- emulate the most admirable aspect of the French effort: Cohen
- intends to donate his gene map to the United Nations as a gift
- to the world, thereby ensuring all scientists unrestricted
- access to the vital data. Cohen feels he owes this to the public
- because his work has been largely funded by public donations to
- a muscular-dystrophy telethon.
- </p>
- <p> The federally funded U.S. project, led by the National
- Institutes of Health, has mounted a campaign to patent each DNA
- fragment that its researchers can reproduce, even before its
- usefulness is determined. The policy has been heavily criticized
- within scientific circles and figured in the abrupt resignation
- last spring of Nobel-prizewinning geneticist James Watson as
- head of the Genome Project. Cohen speaks for many critics when
- he names the two big problems with the NIH approach: "The first
- is moral. You can't patent something that belongs to everyone.
- It's like trying to patent the stars. The second is economic. By
- patenting something without knowing the use of it, you inhibit
- industry. This could be a catastrophe."
- </p>
- <p> The initial maps under construction on both sides of the
- Atlantic will not identify every gene on every chromosome.
- Instead, the maps describe fragments of DNA arranged in the
- proper order as they would appear on the chromosomes. So far,
- researchers have identified a few genetic markers on each
- fragment: for example, the gene for Huntington's disease on a
- fragment of chromosome 4. In a later phase, they hope to crack
- the code of each gene--a code that is written in chemical
- constituents called base pairs. The great challenge is the sheer
- size of the task. The human genome contains 3.5 billion base
- pairs.
- </p>
- <p> To decipher so much material, researchers must first chop
- the genetic material into smaller, more manageable fragments.
- Most U.S. scientists have been working with fragments that are
- about 50,000 base pairs long. Unfortunately, since there are
- 70,000 fragments to analyze, the work is extraordinarily
- tedious. Cohen had a better idea: use fewer but much bigger
- fragments. He was able to create large chunks of human DNA by
- genetically manipulating yeast cells to produce them. "It's a
- big breakthrough," says David Botstein, chairman of Stanford's
- genetics department. "It's terrific for getting the order of
- things, even though it won't give you the fine detail."
- </p>
- <p> Cohen's scheme worked so well that his lab was able to
- divide the entire human genome into just 500 pieces--each
- about 7 million base pairs long. Some of these fragments have
- since been further divided for more precise analysis.
- Researchers are using computers to examine the pieces and
- arrange them in the proper order. But such fast progress comes
- at a price. The huge fragments often contain bits of yeast DNA
- and omit some of the human stuff. Cohen's team can catch only
- the most glaring errors.
- </p>
- <p> Even a slightly faulty map will speed the search for the
- specific genes of disease. Cohen hopes to deliver it as soon as
- this spring. But it may be another 10 years before scientists
- can consult the ultimate genetic recipe book: a printout of the
- base-pair sequences for all 100,000 human genes. But whether
- they will be able to consult it for free or for a fee is being
- decided now. If Cohen follows through on his intention to
- donate his research, the NIH may have to abandon its attempts
- to profit from the genome. Heredity will belong to all of
- humanity.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-