Gene-Sequencing Warrior
Welcome to the Future
The Danger of Personal Gene Tests
Recent Columns
-
A Birthday Gift for Darwin
Feb 12 20099:00 am EDT -
Green Crude
Jan 07 20098:00 am EDT -
2009: The Year of Bespoke Medicine
Dec 31 200812:00 am EDT -
Discount DNA
Dec 17 200812:00 am EDT -
Finding Cancer in a Drop of Blood
Nov 26 200812:00 am EDT
Jay Flatley wants your DNA. In fact, he wants everyone's DNA. He would love to sequence the genes of everyone on earth.
Short and scrappy with closely cut white hair and laser-blue eyes, Flatley has been making some bold tactical moves to position his San Diego-based company, Illumina, at the top of an industry that he says should have total revenue of more than $3 billion by 2012. He reckons DNA sequencing generates about $200 million today.
DNA sequencing could be worth far more to the pharmaceutical industry if the promised genomics revolution finally takes hold and the development of drugs based on intracellular molecular mechanisms begins to produce rafts of new therapies.
Tools to sequence DNA have been evolving rapidly of late, growing according to a sort of mega-. In less than a decade, Illumina and its competitors have moved from chips that identified a few dozen genetic markers to microarrays that scan for more than 1 million markers in a matter of hours. And this type of sequencing now costs only a few hundred dollars.
Microarrays and other technologies have recently been augmented by next-generation sequencers—so-called next-gens—that use novel approaches to speed up the much more complex task of sequencing whole sections of the human genome.
Arrays sequence only the small sections of DNA—single pairs of nucleotides, in most cases—that differ among people and which give clues to whether or not someone is at risk of contracting cancer or some other malady. (For more detail, read "Welcome to the Future" from the November 2007 issue of Condé Nast Portfolio.)
Full sequencing of a person's genes and genome—all 6 billion nucleotides that make each of us who we are—yields a much more thorough picture of the proclivities hidden our DNA. The cost, however, was so high that only four people have had their entire genome scanned: geneticists James Watson and Craig Venter and an anonymous Chinese man sequenced at the Beijing Genomics Institute; and an anonymous African sequenced by Illumina.
Sequencing the genomes of James Watson and the Chinese man took about two months to complete and cost about $1 million, down from $3 billion and more than a decade for the human genome project completed in 2003.
Knome, a startup based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is charging $350,000 for sequencing and analysis, while Illumina this week claimed to have sequenced a complete genome for about $100,000, taking only about a month.
A year ago, Illumina purchased a next-gen sequencing company, Solexa, for $600 million. This transformed Illumina from an array company to one with a platform that can test both genetic markers and entire genes and genomes. "We are merging arrays with sequencing, which allows us to fine-map sections of the genome," Flatley explains.
The company has already sold 200 Genome Analyzer sequencers, which are based on Solexa technology, to research labs and pharmaceutical companies.






