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GENOME SEQUENCING: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE
Commercialized genome sequencing is on the rise. Ancestral knowledge and disease risk information are at our fingertips. What does this mean for medicine and our future?
A GUT FEELING
Did you know that our bodies are mostly bacteria? For every human cell in our body, there are ten tiny microbes living on our skin, in our mouth, or throughout our digestive tract. Humans and bacteria have evolved together for thousands of years. We have a symbiotic relationship with our bacteria: they rely on us for a safe environment and a regular food supply, and in turn, they help us digest our food and produce chemicals that increase our evolutionary fitness as a species. The bacterial population in our gut alone weighs 2-3 pounds, which is about the same weight as the brain! In fact, our gut bacteria may actually have a bigger effect on our brains than we realize.
(IT'S NOT ALL ABOUT) LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION
Imagine for a moment that you’re an oncologist, a doctor specializing in cancer diagnosis and treatment. You’re assigned ten patients: five with lung cancer and five with pancreatic cancer. Now, I want you to group these patients into two categories for treatment.