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| Saturday, 30 December, 2000, 00:03 GMT Code cracker to be knighted Dr Sulston is preparing the "rough draft" for publication One of the driving forces behind the effort to decipher the human genome is to get a knighthood from the Queen.
The announcement in June that a "rough draft" of the 3bn-letter-long code had been produced was one of the major news stories of 2000. The achievement was hailed as one of the great scientific landmarks of all time. Commentators believe the work will revolutionise medicine by giving us new diagnostic tests, and drugs for previously untreatable diseases. Patent law Dr Sulston is honoured for "services to genome research". He was part of the team that produced the first DNA sequence of an animal - the small soil worm Caenorhabditis elegans - which was completed in 1998.
Dr Sulston, who said the knighthood reflected great credit on all his colleagues, is passionate in his belief that fundamental science should be done "out in the open". He told BBC News Online: "I think the great majority of us would not want the benefits of human genome research to go exclusively to the wealthy. A very big step towards doing that is to try to keep as much of the fundamental information as we can beyond the reach of patent law." Comparing genomes The data collected during the production of the human "rough draft" are likely to be published jointly by the journals Nature and Science in the spring.
"We shall learn about everything by comparing the genomes of all organisms, and that includes plants, humans, flies and worms," Dr Sulston said. "The big excitement now is bioinformatics and comparative genomics which requires a lot of computer work. "We've got all the fundamental data but we don't understand it. But by comparing one genome with another and fiddling around with computers and then running into the lab and checking our ideas, we will get there." | See also: 30 Dec 00 | Science/Nature 26 Jun 00 | Science/Nature 30 May 00 | Human genome 10 Dec 98 | Science/Nature Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Science/Nature stories now: Links to more Science/Nature stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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