Cracking the DNA code for a complex region of the human genome helped scientists chart new territory in immunity research.
That means even though drugs, treatments and vaccinations are designed to treat whole populations, our response to them could be individualistic.
After completely sequencing the immensely repetitive DNA in the human genome's one million nucleotide-long immunoglobulin heavy (IGH)-chain locus, a team of US scientists, including those at Simon Fraser University found that ethnicity may influence immunity.
"Because this is the most complete version of a human's IGH sequence, our data has been integrated into the official human genome project assembly," said Watson.
The scientists uncovered the link between antibody makeup and ethnicity when they screened the chromosomes of 425 people of Asian, African and European descent for several DNA insertions and deletions.
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