23andMe scientists receive approximately $1.4 million in funding from National Institutes of Health

Posted: July 30, 2014 at 6:41 am

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

29-Jul-2014

Contact: Catherine Afarian cafarian@23andme.com 23andMe Inc.

23andMe, the leading personal genetics company, has received from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) a grant totaling $1,367,504 for a two-year project to support the further development of 23andMe's web-based database and research engine for genetic discovery.

Specifically, the grant supports four areas of development:

"23andMe is building a platform to connect researchers and consumers that will enable discoveries to happen faster," said Anne Wojcicki, co-founder and CEO of 23andMe. "This grant from the NIH recognizes the ability of 23andMe to create a unique, web-based platform that engages consumers and enables researchers from around the world to make genetic discoveries."

The grant will enable 23andMe to refine current survey questions, release 15 new questionnaires, and discover novel associations between health conditions and genetic variants. The company will publish new discoveries in peer-reviewed scientific journals.

The grant also supports improvements to survey infrastructure and the creation of new tools for collection of phenotypic data. This will improve the usability of surveys, including an updatable health profile where participants can keep track of known health conditions and add simple interactive cognitive tests to the 23andMe website.

The grant also supports 23andMe's efforts to utilize available whole-genome sequence data and imputation in order to discover rare variants associated with disease. 23andMe will impute genotypes using data from large public and internal sequencing projects, thus providing increased power to detect many novel associations, including rare variants with large effects. This type of analysis represents a model for how previous investments in genome-wide association studies will be utilized in the next generation of genetics research.

The grant's final area of support is the company's efforts to collaborate with academic and commercial partners to test and refine the Research Accelerator. The Research Accelerator provides access to aggregate de-identified genotype and phenotype data from 23andMe customers who have consented to participate in the company's research program. 23andMe will give a limited set of partners early access to the Research Accelerator and will create reports and tools so that partners are able to see which single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are associated with conditions of interest; to find conditions associated with variants in individual genes; and to view other aggregate data. By providing access to the de-identified aggregate data, individual-level information remains protected while researchers from around the world have an opportunity to use genetic and phenotypic data from 23andMe to make discoveries.

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23andMe scientists receive approximately $1.4 million in funding from National Institutes of Health


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