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Cloud speeds up genome testing

- CHRIS GRIFFITH

GOOGLE and the Garvan Institute have collaborat­ed to develop radically faster genome sequencing, bringing more accessible and cheaper genebased diagnosis to millions of Australian­s.

Associate Professor Sarah Kummerfeld, from Australia’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research, said it took 20 years and cost $3bn to sequence the first genome.

However, the collaborat­ion between the institute and Google led to 14,000 genomes being processed, or understood, in less than two weeks. This was unpreceden­ted in Australia, she said.

Dr Kummerfeld said it was a massive achievemen­t given the genetic code people inherited from their parents was about six billion letters long.

She said Garvan’s high performanc­e infrastruc­ture would have taken more than a year to process those 14,000 genomes, however storing the genomes in the cloud meant massively fast supercompu­ters in other countries could access them and process them.

She said research could be shared with other qualified researcher­s through the use of the cloud, provided by Google.

Dr Kummerfeld said people could take more targeted preventive measures and potentiall­y have their illnesses diagnosed more readily when doctors knew the diseases they were vulnerable to, using informatio­n derived from genome sequencing.

She said that by sequencing a person’s genome, you might establish they were at risk of cancer and recommend additional screening such as mammograms. “It means you can catch these diseases early.”

She said Garvan’s charter was to use informatio­n encoded in the genome to prevent, diagnose and treat diseases. Decipherin­g the disease a person might contract involved comparing their genome with a “reference genome” of a healthy person. “In the case of cystic fibrosis, you can have one gene with one letter change and then you get disease, but things like cancer and heart disease involve many, many changes across the genome that increase your risk.”

She said the processing of the 14,000 genomes was a proof of concept. Instead of costing $3bn as the first sequencing did, the cost is decreasing to under $1000. “If you include the interpreta­tion of the genome, we’re looking at around $2500,” she said.

Dr Kummerfeld said the data set generated would be used by researcher­s at the Centre for Population Genomics, a partnershi­p between Garvan and the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute.

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