We have witnessed some of most striking technological and scientific innovations in humankind during the first decade of the new millennium. While such claims perhaps seem cliché in an age where the media constantly report on new findings that really do not warrant our full attention, several discoveries and innovations in the recent history of genomics were truly groundbreaking and will have long-lasting implications.
The expanding applications of genomic technology that will help us better understand causes and treatments of common human diseases, global warming, and hunger will become clear in the coming decades. The innovations most impressive to me in the past decade were those that have begun to shake many of the foundations upon which the life sciences and biomedical research have been built. Here are what I consider four of those more impressive discoveries:
1) The discovery that environmental stress can induce heritable DNA-based changes.
2) The maturation of highly parallel sequencing and genotyping technologies that have revolutionized our ability to associate changes in DNA with disease.
3) The discovery of whole new classes of RNA that do not carry out instructions from genes, yet are still critical to cellular and higher order biological processes.
4) The development of third-generation DNA sequencing that will lead to greater insights about underlying biology.
As our ability to capture data from entire genomes increases exponentially, this is creating a huge software and computing challenge. Life sciences and biomedical researchers will need novel solutions (a yet to come fifth innovation):
5) The translation of the deluge of data coming from the new discoveries and technologies into actionable results that can impact human wellbeing.
This will be a big trend to watch in the coming decade, but more on that later. First, I want to explain a little about why I’m singling out these four particular discoveries and technologies as groundbreaking:
1. Environmental stresses can induce heritable DNA-based changes.
In 2005 Michael Skinner, a professor at Washington State University, published a paper in Science demonstrating that in response to exposure to an endocrine disruptor (a common environmental toxin), DNA can be chemically modified in certain locations and that these modifications can affect the ability of the biological machinery within the cells in every bodily organ to read the modified DNA. Reading DNA is a necessary first step for cells to manufacture the proteins