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Genetic entrepreneur to compete in Genomics X Prize

By Helen Briggs BBC News

A race to unlock genetic clues behind living to 100 is set to begin next year,

after a US team announced it will compete for the $10m Genomics X Prize.

Genetic entrepreneur Dr Jonathan Rothberg is entering the challenge to identify

genes linked to a long, healthy life.

His team - and any other contenders - will be given 30 days to work out the

full DNA code of 100 centenarians at a cost of no more than $1,000 per genome.

The race will start in September 2013.

Under the rules of the Archon Genomics X Prize, teams have until next May to

register for the competition.

Dr Rothberg's team from Life Technologies Corporation in California is the

first to formally enter the race.

Dr Jonathan Rothberg

Pioneer of DNA sequencing

His latest business venture, Ion Torrent, makes the Personal Genome Machine and

the Ion Proton sequencer

Rothberg claims his machines can sequence DNA more quickly and cheaply than

ever thought possible

The Ion Proton sequencer will be used for the challenge

Being able to sequence the full human genome at a cost of $1,000 or less is

regarded as a milestone in science.

It is seen as the threshold at which DNA sequencing technology becomes cheap

enough to be used widely in medicine, helping in diagnosis and in matching

drugs to a patient's genetic make-up.

Continue reading the main story

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If they can do a human genome in two hours with one little machine, it's just

stunning. We have come a long way.

Dr Craig Venter Genetic entrepreneur

One hundred people aged 100 have donated their DNA for the project.

Scientists believe people who reach a very old age may have certain rare

changes in their genes which protect against common diseases of later life,

such as heart disease and cancer.

If these genes can be identified by analysing the DNA codes of centenarians, it

will help scientists search for new medical treatments and perhaps ways to

prolong life.

However, many sample DNA sequences will be needed in order to get the accuracy

needed to pinpoint changes on the scale of a few genetic letters among the

three billion in the human genome.

Dr Craig Venter

One of the scientists behind the effort to decode the first human genome

sequence

Venter and his team built the genome of a bacterium from scratch and put it

into a cell to make a synthetic life form

He has had his own DNA sequence decoded

Dr Jonathan Rothberg, a geneticist and entrepreneur, said the DNA of 100

centenarians is a good start towards finding "the fountains of youth".

He told BBC News: "One hundred people will give you a hint. One thousand will

make you reasonably sure. Ten thousand will let you say, 'Hey, these are the

genes involved in cancer or heart disease'".

Dr Craig Venter is the originator of the prize and one of the main players in

the race to sequence the first human genome, which was completed in 2003.

He said he could never have imagined that genome sequencing would come this far

in so little time.

He told the BBC: "I can't emphasise [enough] how impressed I am with the

progress of technology and the dropping of the cost.

"If they can do a human genome in two hours with one little machine, it's just

stunning. We have come a long way."

The X Prize Foundation offers awards for solutions to modern scientific

challenges, from space to the human genome.

Any data gleaned from the X Prize will be shared with other scientists in the

field, to aid the quest for insights into ageing.