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JadeDragon
Nov 20th, 2004, 07:29 AM
New Study to Compare Genetic Make-Up of Asians

Fri Nov 19,10:10 AM ET Science - Reuters


By Fayen Wong

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Just how similar are the Japanese and Indonesians, apart from being Asians?

Although their physical appearences highlight a range of differences, their genetic makeup could reveal more similarities than their looks suggest, scientists said on Friday at the launch of an unprecedented study on the genetic profile of Asians.

The scientists, from a range of research institutes across the region, said the study could reveal Asia's migratory patterns and explain the susceptibility of different Asian societies to illnesses such as childhood leukemia and diabetes.

"If you look from Korea to Indonesia and India to Japan, you find huge human variations yet to be understood," said Edison Liu, executive director of the Genome Institute of Singapore.

"We don't have enough understanding of how different we are or how similar we are. And this initiative is to identify that and to refine future studies," Liu told Reuters in a phone interview.

Scientists said the latest initiative will improve the findings of the Human Genome Project (news - web sites) (HGP), a 13-year project completed last year, which first sequenced the complete human genome and found human DNA to be 99.9 percent identical, with the 0.1 percent variation accounting for all the differences between individuals.

"Although we know that the difference in our genetic makeup is only 0.1 percent, we know very little about the genetic factors that make us different," said Liu.

The Asian genome study, a project spanning populations in seventeen Asian countries, will also allow scientists to compare genetic maps and find out if people prone to certain illness have a common characteristic in their DNA set.


GENETIC MAP SOUGHT


"By looking at our genetic differences, it gives us a roadmap of where to examine in the genome, when we have a disease which we want to study," said Liu, who is one of the scientists speaking at the Human Genome Organization (HUGO) Asia-Pacific conference in Singapore.

Genetic mapping, widely seen as a major scientific milestone, has gained prominence in the medical field in the last few years as researchers uncover genetic links to various illnesses.

Findings so far have led drug manufacturers to look into personalised medicine, a new therapy that matches drugs to patient's genetic makeup, and customise treatments for various diseases.

"What we believe is that the differences between human beings provide a basis on how they have a disease and how they respond to therapies," said Liu.

toml
Nov 20th, 2004, 03:52 PM
Like every Chinese person knows, every Asian race originates from us. Your cultures are merely derivatives of ours. You are all our children :lol:


*ducks*

JadeDragon
Nov 21st, 2004, 12:39 AM
As Aphex Twin once proclaimed, "COME TO DADDY!!!!" :twisted:

Makulita
Dec 6th, 2004, 04:57 PM
>_>; Shut it!

o_o; So...did they list which countries are in the study?

KeJia Sista
Dec 7th, 2004, 12:21 AM
Like every Chinese person knows, every Asian race originates from us. Your cultures are merely derivatives of ours. You are all our children :lol:


*ducks*

:lol:

Seriously, someone posted on another board about this study showing a connection between Hakka and Japanese. I wonder how many people participated in the study; from what areas; and were they able to separate those who were fairly recent to an area (within 50 years or so) to those indigenous or with long histories of residing in an area (150+ years).

KeJia Sista

Taliesin Stormheller
Dec 10th, 2004, 11:09 PM
I think that it's great that Asian people are getting to know their own racial anthropology better. It's an awesome way to unite us, by learning that we are all brethren.

KeJia Sista
Dec 11th, 2004, 02:58 PM
I think that it's great that Asian people are getting to know their own racial anthropology better. It's an awesome way to unite us, by learning that we are all brethren.

I agree. Its just that since we have a thousands year history of travel within China and in the diaspora; I think it would take an extremely large and varied test group to validate the findings. For instance, because WWII and events like Nanjing and similar mass rapes in war torn countries (probably Iraq as we speak) I wonder if testing DNA a hundred years afterwards might lead to the conclusion of a link that was not an original link. Or countries like Vietnam. I'm not disputing the conclusions; I'm just wondering if they are attributing an ancient connection to what might be a more recent connection.

I'm also wary of this obsession with genetic testing and the theory that each disease has a genetic problem and not problems with what is happeing to our air, water, lifestyle and the food we eat. I understand its more profitable to create a genetic based medicine or therapy for every ill than to prevent the illness when we know the real causes.

I remember the original Human Genome Project which had a major focus on indigenous people of the world; and I didnt get the feeling that it was because there was such an interest in helping them; but that their genetic structure could somehow be a source used to heal others. Their bodies could become products in some way.

(Remember Tuskeegee, remember the Navajo.)
KeJia

The Ram
Dec 14th, 2004, 03:57 AM
I've always been fascinated with anthropology...

I've heard all kinds of crazy stuff like:

People from Shanghai resemble the Japanese because of a big
fleet from China which once landed in Japan....