CSER consortium ends after twelve years of groundbreaking research
It went down to the wire! But the federal government managed to stay ‘open for business’ as we ushered in Fiscal Year 2024 on October 1. Of course, we do not have a Fiscal Year 2024 budget yet; rather, we are operating under a “Continuing Resolution” (CR) until November 17. The CR allows the federal government, and NHGRI, to operate until an official budget is passed by Congress and signed by the President.
Jeanne Marrazzo, M.D., recently started her position as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) succeeding former long-term NIAID director, Anthony Fauci, M.D. Jeanne is an infectious disease expert, joining NIH from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, where she served as the director of the Division of Infectious Diseases since 2016. Prior to that role, she was a professor of medicine at the University of Washington. All of us look forward to working with Jeanne as she takes the reins of a very important NIH Institute!
Finally, the first issue of my monthly newsletter – The Genomics Landscape – was in October 2013. Happy 10th birthday to The Genomics Landscape!
All the best,
In This Issue
- Clinical Sequencing Evidence-generating Research (CSER) consortium ends after twelve years of groundbreaking research
- NIH awards $50.3 million for “multi-omics” research on human health and disease
- New ASHG-NHGRI Fellowship Program now accepting applications
- NIH Cloud Platform Interoperability effort and the Human Pangenome Project named as GA4GH driver projects
- NHGRI selects Sara Hull and Shawn Burgess as new deputy scientific directors
- Charles Rotimi receives New York Academy of Medicine medal for contributions in biomedical science
- Ellen Sidransky receives Breakthrough Prize for key advances in the fight against Parkinson’s disease
- NHGRI senior investigator William Pavan retires
Genomic Research Spotlight
Repeat polymorphisms underlie top genetic risk loci for glaucoma and colorectal cancer
Mukamel et al.
Cell 2023 Aug 17; 186(17): 3659-3673 PMID37527660
Though any two human genomes are very similar to one another, they vary from individual to individual in a variety of ways. The variation between individuals’ genomes results in differences in traits, including the risk for disease. Some genomic variants are small, like changes to single letters of the DNA sequence, but others are large, in some cases involving differences is the size of extended segments of DNA. Some of these length variants are called variable number tandem repeats (VNTRs). A VNTR is a stretch of DNA where a block of bases variably repeats for hundreds or even up to thousands of times. In this study, researchers explored the influence that VNTRs have on human traits, particularly disease risk. They found more than 50 VNTRs that influence human traits. Further, they found that two VNTRs that do not play a direct role in coding for proteins, but that affect the function of nearby genes, in this case the TMCO1 and EIF3H genes, had a larger influence on the risk for glaucoma and colorectal cancer, respectively, compared to previously identified genomic variants. These findings suggest a potentially significant role of VNTRs in human traits.
This research was funded by NIH through a grant to Steven McCarroll, Ph.D., a researcher at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard; that grant is part of the NIH Research Project Grant Program (PA-19-056).
About The Genomics Landscape
A monthly update from the NHGRI Director on activities and accomplishments from the institute and the field of genomics.
Last updated: October 5, 2023