Genomics

The study of the genome provides researchers with a rich variety of information, for which DNA sequence information is the 'raw data'. Through the study of genomics, researchers aim to investigate a broad range of scientific questions, for example:

  • How do genes relate to disease?
  • What diseases am I at risk of?
  • How closely does a genome predict the risk of a disease?
  • Why is cancer in one person more aggressive than in another person?
  • Why does a specific drug work for one patient but not another?
  • Why do different patients need different doses of a drug for it to be effective?
  • What is this disease? What subtype of the disease is it?
  • What is this infectious organism? How is this infectious organism evolving?
  • How do I predict efficacy/adverse events for a patient?
  • Can I rescue a failed drug? How do I de-risk drug development and approval?
  • How did humans and other species evolve?
  • What were the migration patterns of early humans?
  • Can this organism be changed so that it can manufacture a drug or produce energy?
  • Can the yield of this crop be improved?

 

For information about Oxford Nanopore's DNA sequencing technology click here.