Knowing the general shape of DNA is good, but until scientists could read the code, they couldn’t make a lot of progress in understanding how our genes affect our health and lives. At first, it was slow. One of the first published DNA sequences was just 24 base pairs long and took the team two full years in the 1970s. But by the late 1980s, computers could read 1000 base pairs a day. Once they could read the sequence of a gene, scientists still had to figure out what it does.
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Similar ideas to 1970s: Cracking the Code
Scientists identified 3.055 billion base pairs (“letters”) of our DNA code as they made the data public. However, the wait has been over two decades since the first draft was released in 2001. Scientists have known for decades that genes were spread across 23 pairs of chromosomes...
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