Human Genome Project and Other Genetic Engineering Links
- http://www.er.doe.gov/production/oher/hug_top.html -- Human Genome Program:
The Human Genome Program of the Department of Energy is a focused
effort to reach the goals of the U.S. Human Genome Project in
cooperation with the extramural division of the National Center
for Human Genome Research of the National Institutes of Health.
The U.S. project is part of a larger international effort to characterize
the genomes of humans and several model organisms. (Other genome
programs include the DOE microbial genome program, a project to
characterize microbes of environmental or industrial interest.)
The DOE human genome program includes research projects at universities,
three DOE Genome Centers, DOE-owned National Laboratories, and
other research organizations.
- http://www.gdb.org/Dan/DOE/prim1.html#1 -- The complete set of instructions for making an organism is called its genome.
It contains the master blueprint for all cellular structures and
activities for the lifetime of the cell or organism. Found in
every nucleus of a persons many trillions of cells, the human
genome consists of tightly coiled threads of deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA) and associated protein molecules, organized into structures
called chromosomes (Fig. 1). If unwound and tied together, the
strands of DNA would stretch more than 5 feet but would be only
50 trillionths of an inch wide. For each organism, the components
of these slender threads encode all the information necessary
for building and maintaining life, from simple bacteria to remarkably
complex human beings. Understanding how DNA performs this function
requires some knowledge of its structure and organization.
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ -- GenBank
- http://ndbserver.rutgers.edu:80/ -- The goal of the Nucleic Acid Database Project
is to assemble and distribute structural information about nucleic
acids
- http://pundit.colorado.edu:8080/RNA/GRPI/introns.html -- Group I Intron DatabaseWelcome
to the database.This database is still under construction. Soon
there will be more extensive searching capabilities as well as
added structures. I am currently seeking opinions on the form
of this database. Please send me your comments.
- http://www.nig.ac.jp/ -- Welcome to the [Japanese] National Institute of Genetics,
Yata 1111, Mishima, Shizuoka 411, JAPAN NOTE: Home Page in Japanese
is here
- http://www.ncgr.org/gsdb/gsdb.html -- The Genome Sequence DataBase
is a collection of DNA sequence data and related information.
- http://gdbwww.gdb.org/ -- The Genome Database
An international collaboration in support of the Human Genome
Project Hosted by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
Baltimore, Maryland USA and available at mirror sites worldwide.The
Genome Database (GDB) stores and curates genomic mapping data
submitted by researchers worldwide and provides this information
electronically to the scientific community. With the release of
Version 6.0, GDB becomes the first database of its kind to allow
online public curation and third party annotation.
- http://chipo.chem.uic.edu/~richard/mbdata.htm -- Molecular biology, biochemistry databases.
Content: Nucleic acid databases; Three-dimensional structure of
nucleic acids (DNA, RNA); Gene, DNA, sequences - general; RNA
sequences - general; Gene, DNA, RNA databases of species (E. coli,
B. subtilis, etc.); Gene mutation databases; Protein databases;
Secondary and tertiary structures of proteins; Protein sequences;
Enzyme, metabolic pathway, antigen databases.
- http://mistral.ere.umontreal.ca/~williamg/genethics.html --
Genetics and Ethics
- http://ncgr.org./gpi/Index.html - Ethics and Genetics:
Individuals, families, health care providers and policymakers
face important health care decisions every day. Today, with the
growing awareness of the role that genetics plays in our society,
decision-making requires more information than ever before. And
it's often information that can be hard to find and interpret.
This portion of NCGR's web site has been created to help provide
and interpret this information
- http://hugo.gdb.org/ -- HUGO's Mission: The Human Genome Organisation (HUGO)
is the international organisation of scientists involved in the
Human Genome Project (HGP), the global initiative to map and sequence
the human genome. HUGO was established in 1989 by a group of the
world's leading genome scientists to promote international collaboration
within the project. HUGO carries out a complex coordinating role
within the HGP. HUGO activities range from support of data collation
for constructing genetic and physical maps of the human genome
to the organisation of workshops to promote the consideration
of a wide range of ethical, legal, social and intellectual property
issues. HUGO fosters the exchange of data and biomaterials, encourages
the spreading and sharing of technologies, provides information
and advice on aspects of human genome programmes and serves as
a coordinating agency for building relationships between various
governmental funding agencies and the genome community. HUGO provides
an interface between the HGP and the many groups and organisations
interested or involved in the human genome initiative.
- http://www.exploratorium.edu/genepool/genepool_home.html --
Diving Into the Gene Pool,
a major, multifaceted exhibition developed by the Exploratorium,
exploring genetics and the Human Genome Project from a variety
of perspectives from April 8 to September 4, 1995.
- http://www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/resource/elsi.html
-- Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues (ELSI)
Serious study is now under way on the ethical, legal,and social
issues (ELSI) related to increasingly rapid progress in understanding
human genetics. Four areas were identified by advisers to the
ELSI program for initial emphasis: privacy of genetic information,
safe and effective introduction of genetic information in the
clinical setting, fairness in the use of genetic information,
and professional and public education. The program gives strong
emphasis to understanding the ethnic, cultural, social, and psychological
influences that must inform policy development and service delivery.
- http://www.gdb.org/Dan/DOE/intro.html -- Primer on Molecular Genetics
(Department of Energy) This primer was prepared by Denise Casey
(Human Genome Management Information System Oak Ridge National
Laboratory) for the 1991-92 DOE Human Genome Program Report and
modified for Web access by Dan Jacobson. The primer is now being
extensively revised and updated by HGMIS.
- http://kumchttp.mc.ukans.edu/instruction/medicine/genetics/homepage.html
-- Welcome to the Genetics Education Center University of Kansas Medical Center
For educators with an interest in human genetics and the human
genome project.
- http://www.nchgr.nih.gov/Other_resources/genetic.html -- Genetic/Genome Resources
- http://www.sciencemag.org/science/scripts/display/full/274/5287/540.html
-- A Gene Map of the Human Genome.
The human genome is thought to harbor 50,000 to 100,000 genes,
of which about half have been sampled to date in the form of expressed
sequence tags. An international consortium was organized to develop
and map gene-based sequence tagged site markers on a set of two
radiation hybrid panels and a yeast artificial chromosome library.
More than 16,000 human genes have been mapped relative to a framework
map that contains about 1000 polymorphic genetic markers. The
gene map unifies the existing genetic and physical maps with the
nucleotide and protein sequence databases in a fashion that should
speed the discovery of genes underlying inherited human disease.
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/SCIENCE96/ -- A Gene Map of the Human Genome:
The Human Genome Project is expected to produce a sequence of
DNA representing the functional blueprint and evolutionary history
of the human species. However, only about 3% of this sequence
is thought to specify the portions of our 50,000 to 100,000 genes
thatencode proteins. Thus an important part of basic and applied
genomics is to identify and localize these genes in a process
known as transcript mapping. When genes are expressed, their sequences
are first converted into messenger RNA transcripts, which can
be isolated in the form of complementary DNAs (cDNAs). Approximately
half of all human genes had been sampled as of 15 June, 1996.
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/SCIENCE96/genelist --
Featured Genes:
To see more details on a Featured Gene, click on the symbol to
the left or on the gene symbol. If your gene of interest is not
included on this list, you might find additional medical information
in the Online Mendelian Inheritence in Man (OMIM) database, a
comphrehensive catalog of human genes and inherited disorders.
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/ -- Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST)
BLAST performs fast database searching combined with rigorous
statistics for judging the significance of matches. Five BLAST
programs search many different combinations of query and database
sequences.
- http://www-leland.stanford.edu/group/morrinst/HGDP.html --
The Human Genome Diversity Project is
an international project that seeks to understand the diversity
and unity of the entire human species.
- http://www.faseb.org/genetics/ashg/policy/pol-00.htm -- Policy Papers
American Society of Human Genetics
- http://gdbwww.gdb.org/gdb/docs/genomic_links.html -- Human Genome Project
and Other Biology Resources
- http://www.cpn.org/sections/affiliates/hastings_center.html
-- The Hastings Center
For twenty-seven years the work of The Hastings Center has covered
the broad range of problems and issues posed to our society by
developments in medicine and the life sciences--from test-tube
babies to genetic engineering, organ transplantation, end-of-life
decisions, health care rationing, and more. With the addition
of projects in enviromental ethics, and more recently a focus
on biotechnology and institutional changes in the health care
system, such as managed care, we have broadened the scope of our
interest and involvement further still. The following pages present
snapshots of our major projects. They also offer a glimpse of
projects still on the drawing board, for which support is being
sought. This will provide, we hope, a useful introduction to our
work and an overview of the rich agenda of the Center's research
programs.
- http://www.geneletter.org/mainmenu.htm -- The Gene Letter
- http://www.nchgr.nih.gov/home.html -- National Center For
Human Genome Research
- http://www.nchgr.nih.gov:80/HGP/ -- The Human Genome Project:The
Human Genome Project (HGP) is an international research program
designed to construct detailed genetic and physical maps of the
human genome, to determine the complete nucleotide sequence of
human DNA, to localize the estimated 50,000-100,000 genes within
the human genome, and to perform similar analyses on the genomes
of several other organisms used extensively in research laboratories
as model systems. The scientific products of the HGP will comprise
a resource of genomic maps and DNA sequence information that will
provide detailed information about the structure, organization
and characteristics of human DNA, information that constitutes
the basic set of inherited "instructions" for the development
and functioning of a human being.
- http://operon.com/repkits.html --Three Kits for Representational Difference Analysis
- http://biology.uoregon.edu/Biology_WWW/Biospheres/Spring95/albertson2.html
-- Representational Difference Analysis (RDA):
The Technique: Simplification of the Genomes. Complex genomes
have been very difficult to analyze for genetic differences due
to the large amount of DNA present in non-coding regions of the
genome. RDA eliminates this problem in the first step by simplifying
the two genomes that are being compared. The two genomes are simplified
by making "representations" that consist of small DNA
restriction fragments amplified by PCR. The success of RDA depends
on the fact that even small genetic differences can cause changes
in restriction enzyme cutting patterns.