Mapping the foremost illnesses we are genetically
predisposed to could be only a few years away. The Australian technology Media
Centre says that in the subsequent decade, non-public genome sequencing can be
less expensive to all. the primary human genome to be sequenced, in 2003, took
13 years and cost billions of greenbacks. however advances have added the price
down into the thousands and it is anticipated to drop further.
"understanding what our genes hold will allow us to are expecting which
diseases we might be afflicted by in the future and could permit us to address
hazard elements earlier than they expand,'' says Lyndal Byford, Australian
technological know-how Media Centre media supervisor.
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