Article 5XQ9R First complete gap-free human genome sequence published

First complete gap-free human genome sequence published

by
Hannah Devlin Science correspondent
from on (#5XQ9R)

More than 20 years after milestone of first draft, missing sections of sequence have been completed

More than two decades after the draft human genome was celebrated as a scientific milestone, scientists have finally finished the job. The first complete, gap-free sequence of a human genome has been published in an advance expected to pave the way for new insights into health and what makes our species unique.

Dr Karen Miga, a scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz who co-led the international consortium behind the project, said: These parts of the human genome that we haven't been able to study for 20-plus years are important to our understanding of how the genome works, genetic diseases, and human diversity and evolution."

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