Abstract
This review commemorates the 40th anniversary of DNA sequencing, a period in which we have already witnessed multiple technological revolutions and a growth in scale from a few kilobases to the first human genome, and now to millions of human and a myriad of other genomes. DNA sequencing has been extensively and creatively repurposed, including as a ‘counter’ for a vast range of molecular phenomena. We predict that in the long view of history, the impact of DNA sequencing will be on a par with that of the microscope.
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Acknowledgements
This is a large topic to cover in a single review. We apologize to colleagues whose work we were unable to discuss or failed to cite owing to space constraints. We thank L. Starita, C. Trapnell and A. McKenna for suggestions, and T. Tolpa and M. Gillies for extensive assistance with preparing the manuscript.
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J.S. is a compensated advisor of Bellwether Bio, Nanostring, Cambridge Epigenetix, Phase Genomics, GenePeeks, Adaptive Biotechnologies, Stratos Genomics. S.B. is a founder, advisor and shareholder of Cambridge Epigenetix Ltd. G.M.C. declares competing interests, see http://arep.med.harvard.edu/gmc/tech.html; W.G. is a director of Myriad Genetics and Amylyx. The other authors (J.R., J.A.S. and R.H.W.) declare no competing interests.
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Shendure, J., Balasubramanian, S., Church, G. et al. DNA sequencing at 40: past, present and future. Nature 550, 345–353 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature24286
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature24286
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