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Home>About NHGRI >About the Institute: A History and Timeline


About the Institute:
A History and Timeline

The National Human Genome Research Institute began as the National Center for Human Genome Research (NCHGR), which was established in 1989 to carry out the role of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the International Human Genome Project (HGP). The HGP was developed in collaboration with the United States Department of Energy and begun in 1990 to map the human genome. In 1993, NCHGR expanded its role on the NIH campus by establishing the Division of Intramural Research to apply genome technologies to the study of specific diseases. In 1996, the Center for Inherited Disease Research (CIDR) was also established (co-funded by eight NIH institutes and centers) to study the genetic components of complex disorders.

In 1997 the United States Department of Health and Human Services renamed NCHGR the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), officially elevating it to the status of research institute - one of 27 institutes and centers that make up the NIH.

Now, with the human genome sequence complete since April 2003, scientists around the world have access to a database that greatly facilitates and accelerates the pace of biomedical research. The history of the HGP, the history of genomics, and the history of NHGRI, are inextricably intertwined.

Timeline: Important Events in NHGRI History

1988 1993 1998 2003 2008
1989 1994 1999 2004  
1990 1995 2000 2005  
1991 1996 2001 2006  
1992 1997 2002 2007  

1988

February 29-March 1, 1988: National Institutes of Health Director James Wyngaarden assembles scientists, administrators and science policy experts in Reston, Va., to lay out a plan for the Human Genome Project.

August 15, 1988: A program advisory committee on the human genome is established to advise the National Institutes of Health on all aspects of research in the area of genomic analysis.

October 1, 1988: The Office for Human Genome Research is created within the Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health. Also, NIH and the Department of Energy sign a memorandum of understanding to "coordinate research and technical activities related to the human genome."

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1989

January 3-4, 1989: The program advisory committee on the human genome holds its first meeting in Bethesda, Md.

October 1, 1989: The National Center for Human Genome Research is established to carry out the National Institutes of Health's component of the United States Human Genome Project. The center's first director is James D. Watson, co-discoverer with Francis Crick of the double-helical structure of DNA.

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1990

April 1990: A five-year plan with specific goals for the project is published.

May 8, 1990: The National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research is established.

July 1, 1990: The Genome Research Review Committee is created so the National Center for Human Genome Research can conduct appropriate peer review of human genome grant applications.

October 1, 1990: The Human Genome Project officially begins.

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1991

January 22, 1991: The National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research meets for the first time in Bethesda, MD.

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1992

April 10, 1992: James Watson resigns as first director of the National Center for Human Genome Research. Michael Gottesman is appointed acting NCHGR director.

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1993

February 1993: The Division of Intramural Research within the National Center for Human Genome Research is established.

April 4, 1993: Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. is appointed director of the National Center for Human Genome Research.

October 1, 1993: The United States Human Genome Project revises its five-year goals through September 1998.

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1994

September 30, 1994: Human genetic mapping goal achieved one year ahead of schedule.

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1995

November 15, 1995: National Center for Human Genome Research celebrates its 5th anniversary. James D. Watson Lecture is established.

April 1995: The Task Force on Genetic Testing is established as a subgroup of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)/Department of Energy Ethical, Legal and Social Implications Working Group.

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1996

April 11, 1996: Human DNA sequencing begins with pilot studies at six universities in the United States.

April 24, 1996: An international team completes the DNA sequence of the first eukaryotic genome, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or common brewer's yeast.

September 1996: The Center for Inherited Disease Research [cidr.jhmi.edu] (CIDR), a project co-funded by eight National Institutes of Health (NIH) institutes and centers to study the genetic components of complex disorders, is established on the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center campus in Baltimore.

October 1996: Scientists from government, university and commercial laboratories around the world reveal a map that pinpoints the locations of over 16,000 genes in human DNA.

November 1996: National Center for Human Genome Research and other researchers identify the location of the first gene associated with Parkinson's disease.

November 1996: National Center for Human Genome Research and other researchers identify the location of the first major gene that predisposes men to prostate cancer.

December 1996: ELSI Report is issued by the Joint National Institutes of Health/Department of Energy Committee evaluating the Ethical, Legal and Social Imlications program of the Human Genome Project.

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1997

January 1997: Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Donna E. Shalala signs documents giving National Center for Human Genome Research a new name and new "status" among other research institutes at the National Institutes of Health. The new name, the National Human Genome Research Institute, more accurately reflects its growth and accomplishments. As an institute, NHGRI can more appropriately interact with other federal agencies and share equal standing with other institutes at NIH.

March 1997: A government-citizen group suggests policies to limit genetic discrimination in the workplace.

May 1997: The National Human Genome Research Institute and other scientists show that three specific alterations in the breast cancer genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 are associated with an increased risk of breast, ovarian and prostate cancers.

June 1997: The National Human Genome Research Institute scientists precisely identify a gene abnormality that causes some cases of Parkinson's disease.

July 1997: A map of human chromosome 7 is completed.

December 1997: The National Human Genome Research Institute and other researchers identify an altered gene that causes Pendred Syndrome, a inherited form of deafness.

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1998

March 1998: Vice President Al Gore announces that the Clinton administration is calling for legislation to bar employers from discriminating against workers in hiring or promotion because of their genetic makeup.

September 1998: At a meeting of the main advisory body for the Human Genome Project (HGP), project planners present a new plan to produce a "finished" version of the DNA sequence of the human genome by the end of 2003, two years ahead of its original schedule. The HGP plans to generate a "working draft" in 2001 that, together with the finished sequence, will cover at least 90 percent of the genome. The working draft will be immediately valuable to researchers and will form the basis for a high-quality, finished genome sequence.

September 1998: A major international collaborative research study finds the site of a gene for susceptibility to prostate cancer on the X chromosome. This is the first time a gene for a common type of cancer is mapped to the X chromosome.

October 1998: The National Institutes of Health and the Department of Energy develop a new five-year plan for the Human Genome Project. This plan, published in the October 23 issue of the journal Science [scienceonline.org], is designed to carry the project forward for the next five years, fiscal years 1999 through 2003.

December 1998: The genome of the tiny roundworm (Caenorhabditis elegans) is sequenced by researchers from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) and other Human Genome Project (HGP)-funded scientists.

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1999

March 1999: Large-scale sequencing of the human genome begins.

September 1999: Human Genome Project scientists confirm they are on schedule to produce the working draft of the genetic blueprint of humankind by Spring 2000.

October 1999: President Clinton and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton host the eighth Millennium Evening at the White House. The program is titled "Informatics Meets Genomics."

November 12, 1999: The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) hosts the first annual "Consumer Day" conference to inform patients, families and health care providers about the impact of the Human Genome Project.

November 1999: The National Human Genome Research Institute, Department of Energy and the Wellcome Trust hold a celebration of the completion and deposition into GenBank of one billion base pairs of the human genome DNA sequence.

December 1999: The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) and other Human Genome Project (HGP)-funded scientists unravel for the first time the genetic code of an entire human chromosome. The findings are reported in the December 2 issue of Nature [nature.com].

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2000

February 2000: President Clinton signs Executive Order to prevent genetic discrimination in any federal workplace.

March 2000: A public consortium of scientists and a private company release a substantially complete genome sequence of the fruitfly (Drosophila melanogaster). The findings are reported in the March 24 issue of Science [scienceonline.org].

April 3-6, 2000: The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Rare Disease Research, and the Don and Linda Carter Foundation sponsor the first NIH Conference on Holoprosencephaly.

May 2000: Scientists in Japan and Germany report in the May 18 issue of Nature [nature.com] that they have unraveled the genetic code of human chromosome 21, already known to be involved with Down syndrome, Alzheimer's disease, Usher syndrome and Lou Gehrig's disease.

June 2000: The Human Genome Project consortium announces a major milestone: It has assembled 85 percent of the sequence of the human genome - the genetic blueprint for a human being.

August 2000: Scientists discover a genetic "signature" that may help explain how malignant melanoma - a deadly form of skin cancer - can spread to other parts of the body. Findings are reported in the August 3 issue of Nature. [nature.com]

October 2000: The National Institutes of Health, the Wellcome Trust, and three private companies collaborate to form the Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium (MGSC) to accelerate the determination of the DNA sequence of the mouse genome.

October 2000: The Human Genome Project is the recipient of the American Society of Human Genetics' Allan Award to honor the hundreds of scientists involved in deciphering the human genetic code.

November 9, 2000: The National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) hosts the second annual "Consumer Day."

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2001

January 16-18, 2001: The Ethical, Legal and Social Implications (ELSI) Research Programs of The National Human Genome Research Institute and the Department of Energy sponsor a conference to celebrate a decade of research and consider its impact on genetic research, health and policy.

February 2001: The International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium publishes a series of scientific papers in the February 15 issue of Nature [nature.com], providing the first analysis of the human genome sequence that describes how it is organized and how it evolved. One significant discovery reveals that there are only 30,000 to 40,000 genes, not 100,000 as previously thought.

February 2001: National Human Genome Research Institute scientists use microarray technology to develop a gene test that differentiates hereditary from sporadic types of breast cancer. Findings are reported in the February 22 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine [nejm.org].

March 2001: National Human Genome Research Institute and Human Genome Project-funded scientists find a new tumor suppressor gene involved in breast, prostate and other cancers on human chromosome 7. A single post-doc, using the "working draft" sequence data, is able to pin down the gene within weeks; before, the same work took several years and the work of many scientists. Findings are reported in the April issue of Nature Genetics [nature.com].

May 2001: The Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium announces it has achieved three-fold coverage of the mouse DNA sequence. The data, representing 95 percent of the mouse sequence, are publicly available [trace.ensembl.org] and will be an important tool for discovering human genes when comparing the genomes of the mouse and human.

May 2001: The National Human Genome Research Institute and scientists at Sweden's Lund University develop a method of accurately diagnosing four complex, hard-to-distinguish childhood cancers using microarray technology and artificial neural networks (ANN). Findings are published in the June issue of Nature [nature.com].

September 2001: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces the first Centers of Excellence in Genomic Science Award, a research program that supports multi-investigator, interdisciplinary teams who develop innovative genomic approaches that address important biological and biomedical research problems and seek to change the way genomics is done and used in biomedicine.

November 9-11, 2001: The National Human Genome Research Institute co-sponsors The Human Genome Project Conference: The Challenges and Impact of Human Genome Research for Minority Communities, with the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority National Education Foundation, the National Human Genome Center at Howard University, and the Family Life Center Foundation at Shiloh Baptist Church.

December 12-14, 2001: The National Human Genome Research Institute holds the planning conference, Beyond the Beginning: The Future of Genomics at the Airlie Conference Center in Warrenton, Virginia, to develop a broad vision of the future of genomics research that will lay the foundation for a bold new plan for NHGRI.

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2002

January 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute and other scientists find a gene on chromosome 1 associated with an inherited form of prostate cancer in some families. The findings are published in the February issue of Nature Genetics [nature.com].

February 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute and the NIH Office of Rare Diseases launch the Genetics and Rare Diseases Information Center, delivering free and accurate information to patients and their families about genetic and rare diseases.

May 2002: The Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium announces a 96 percent complete working draft of the mouse genome freely available in public databases [ensembl.org]. The methods to sequence the mouse genome set a new standard for speed and accuracy.

June 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute launches a new Web site, www.genome.gov, that provides improved usability and easy access to new content for a wide range of users.

September 2002: Alan Edward Guttmacher, M.D. is named as the second deputy director of the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI). Vence L. Bonham, Jr., J.D., is appointed as NHGRI's Senior Consultant to the Director on Health Disparities.

September 2002: Gene discovery by an international team of researchers led by the National Human Genome Research Institute, reveals the cause for a rare form of microcephaly, a devastating brain disorder.

October 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute launches the International HapMap Project, this new venture is aimed at speeding the discovery of genes related to common illnesses such as asthma, cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

October 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute, in cooperation with five other institutes and centers at the National Institutes of Health, awards a three-year, $15-million grant to combine three of the world's current protein sequence databases into a single global resource.

November 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute selects Eric D. Green, M.D., Ph.D., as the new scientific director for the NHGRI.

November 2002: The National Human Genome Research Institute names William A. Gahl, M.D., Ph.D., as its new intramural clinical director.

December 2002: The international Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium announces the publication of a high-quality draft sequence of the mouse genome - the genetic blueprint of a mouse.

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2003

February 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute and the Department of Energy announce April 2003 events to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the discovery of the DNA double helix, the completion of the human genome sequence and the publication of the vision plan for NHGRI.

March 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces a new project - the ENCODE Project - with the long-term goal of creating a comprehensive encyclopedia of functional elements encoded in the human DNA.

April 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute celebrates the completion of the human genome sequence, the 50th anniversary of the description of the DNA double helix and the publication of the vision document for the future of genomics research.

April 2003: National Human Genome Research Institute researchers identify the gene that causes the premature aging disorder progeria. The findings were released online in the journal Nature [nature.com].

June 2003: National Human Genome Research Institute study findings, reported in the June 13 issue of Science [scienceonline.org], will aid researchers in discovering safer methods of gene therapy.

June 2003: A detailed analysis of the just-completed sequence of the human Y chromosome - a study published in the June issue of Nature [nature.com], and funded in large part by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) - shows the Y chromosome appears to exchange genes between the two copies of repeated sequences that lie near to each other as mirror images.

July 2003: A detailed analysis of the reference sequence of chromosome 7, carried out by a multinational team of scientists led by the Washington University School of Medicine, uncovers structural features that appear to promote genetic changes that can cause disease. The findings were reported in the July 10 issue of the journal Nature [nature.com]. National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) Scientific Director Eric Green co-authored the study.

August 2003: A team of researchers led by the National Human Genome Research Institute reports findings on the comparison of 13 vertebrate genomes. Results, published in the August 14 issue of Nature [nature.com], suggested that comparison of a wide variety of species' genomes will not only illuminate genomic evolution but help identify functional elements in the human genome.

October 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute announced the first grants in a three-year, $36 million scientific reconnaissance mission - called ENCODE - aimed at discovering all parts of the human genome that are crucial to biological function.

October 14, 2003: The U.S. Senate passes the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2003 (S. 1053) [thomas.loc.gov] by a vote of 95-0, the first time the Senate has passed a bipartisan, genetic nondiscrimination bill. The bill prevents health insurers and employers from using genetic information to determine eligibility, set premiums, or hire and fire people. The bill faces approval in the House of Representatives and from the President.

November 7, 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces the selection of five centers to carry out a new generation of large-scale sequencing projects designed to maximize the promise of the Human Genome Project and dramatically expand our understanding of human health and disease.

December 5, 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces the formation of a new branch - the Social and Behavioral Research Branch - within its Division of Intramural Research.

December 10, 2003: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces the first draft version of the chimpanzee genome sequence and its alignment with the human genome.

December 17, 2003: The International HapMap Consortium publishes a paper that sets forth the scientific rationale and strategy behind its effort to create a map of human genetic variation.

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2004

January 7, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces that the first draft version of the honey bee genome sequence has been deposited into free public databases.

January 26, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute and other scientists successfully create transgenic animals using sperm genetically modified and grown in a laboratory dish, an achievement with implications for wide ranging research, from developmental biology to gene therapy. The study [pnas.org] was published in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

February 3, 2004: The Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center established by the National Human Genome Research Institute and NIH Office of Rare Diseases, announces it has expanded its efforts to enable healthcare workers, patients and families who speak Spanish to take advantage of its free services.

February 25, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute's Large-Scale Sequencing Research Network announces it will begin sequencing the genome of the first marsupial, the gray short-tailed South American opossum, and more than a dozen other model organisms to further advance our understanding of the human genome.

March 1, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces that the first draft version of the chicken genome sequence has been deposited into free public databases.

March 11, 2004: National Human Genome Research Institute and other scientists find variants in a gene that may predispose people to type 2 diabetes, the most common form of the disease.

March 24, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces that the International Sequencing Consortium has launched a free online resource, where scientists and the public can view the latest information on sequencing projects for animal, plant and eukaryotic genomes.

March 31, 2004: The International Rat Genome Sequencing Project Consortium announces the publication of a high-quality draft sequence of the rat genome.

June 8, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute and the Melbourne-based Australian Genome Research Facility, Ltd. announce a partnership to sequence the genome of the tammar wallaby, a member of the kangaroo family.

June 28, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces it has established two new Centers of Excellence in Genomic Science (CEGS) at Harvard Medical School in Boston and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.

July 14, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces that the first draft version of the dog genome sequence has been deposited into free public databases.

July 19, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute launches the NHGRI Policy and Legislative Database, an online resource that will enable researchers, health professionals and the general public to more easily locate information on laws and policies related to a wide array of genetic issues

July 26, 2004: National Human Genome Research Institute scientists and an interdisciplinary consortium of researchers from 11 universities and institutions discover a possible inherited component for lung cancer, a disease normally associated with external causes, such as cigarette smoking.

August 4, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute's Large-Scale Sequencing Research Network announces a comprehensive strategic plan to sequence 18 additional organisms, including the African savannah elephant, domestic cat and orangutan, to help interpret the human genome.

August 31, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute launches four interdisciplinary Centers for Excellence in Ethical, Legal and Social Implications Research to address some of the most pressing ethical, legal and social questions raised by recent advances in genetic and genomic research.

October 6, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces that the first draft version of the bovine genome sequence has been deposited into free public databases.

October 14, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute awards more than $38 million in grants to develop new sequencing technologies to accomplish the near-term goal of sequencing a mammalian-sized genome for $100,000 and the longer-term challenge of sequencing an individual human genome for $1,000 or less.

October 18, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces that two of its medical geneticists, Dr. Alan Guttmacher and Dr. Robert Nussbaum, are elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies.

October 21, 2004: The International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium, led in the United States by the National Human Genome Research Institute and the Department of Energy (DOE) publishes its scientific description of the finished human genome sequence, reducing the estimated number of human protein-coding genes from 35,000 to only 20,000-25,000, a surprisingly low number for our species.

October 22, 2004: The ENCODE Consortium publishes a paper in the October 22 issue of Science that sets forth the scientific rationale and strategy behind its quest to produce a comprehensive catalog of all parts of the human genome crucial to biological function.

November 8, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute partners with the Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of the Surgeon General to launch a free computer program, My Family Health Portrait, which the public can use to record important family health information that may identify common diseases that run in families.

December 8, 2004: The National Human Genome Research Institute and the International Chicken Genome Sequencing Consortium announces the publication of an analysis comparing the chicken and human genomes. It is the first bird to have its genome sequenced and analyzed.

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2005

February 11, 2005: NHGRI establishes Office of Ethics, appointing Barbara Fuller, J.D., as Deputy Ethics Counselor

March 16, 2005: As part of the Human Genome Project, the National Institutes of Health hails the first comprehensive analysis of the sequence of the human X chromosome, saying that this provides sweeping new insights into the evolution of sex chromosomes and the biological differences between males and females.

August 8, 2005: NHGRI announces it has awards grants totaling more than $32 million to advance the development of innovative sequencing technologies intended to reduce the cost of DNA sequencing and expand the use of genomics in biomedical research and health care.

August 29, 2005: In a surprising development, a research team led by NHGRI finds that a class of experimental anti-cancer drugs shows promise in laboratory studies for treating the fatal genetic disorder that causes premature aging.

August 31, 2005: The first comprehensive comparison of the genetic blueprints of humans and chimpanzees shows our closest living relatives share perfect identity with 96 percent of our DNA sequence.

October 5, 2005: The National Institutes of Health announces contracts that will give researchers unprecedented access to two private collections of knockout mice, providing valuable models for the study of human disease and laying the groundwork for a public, genome-wide library of knockout mice.

October 26, 2005: The International HapMap Consortium publishes a comprehensive catalog of human genetic variation, a landmark achievement that is already accelerating the search for genes involved in common diseases, such as asthma, diabetes, cancer and heart disease.

November 15, 2005: As part of the U.S. Surgeon General's Family Health Initiative, an updated version of the computerized tool designed to help families gather their health information is unveiled.

December 13, 2005: The National Cancer Institute and the National Human Genome Research Institute launches a comprehensive effort to accelerate understanding of the molecular basis of cancer through the application of genome analysis technologies, especially large-scale genome sequencing.

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2006

March 29, 2006: A multi-institution team of experts, coordinated by geneticists from the National Human Genome Research Institute supports efforts to identify more than 70 bodies still unidentified in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

July 24, 2006: Researchers at the National Institutes of Health Chemical Genomics Center (NCGC) - an NHGRI Affiliated Center - develop a new screening approach that can profile compounds in large chemical libraries more accurately and precisely than standard methods, speeding the production of data that can be used to probe biological activities and identify leads for drug discovery.

August 21, 2006: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces grants totaling $54 million over five years to establish one new Center of Excellence in Genomic Science and continue support for two existing centers.

September 13, 2006: The National Cancer Institute and the National Human Genome Research Institute announce the first three cancers that will be studied in the pilot phase of The Cancer Genome Atlas. The cancers to be studied in the TCGA Pilot Project are lung, brain (glioblastoma) and ovarian.

October 4, 2006: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces the latest round of grant awards totaling more than $13 million to speed the development of innovative sequencing technologies that reduce the cost of DNA sequencing and expand the use of genomics in medical research and health care.

October 16, 2006: The National Cancer Institute and the National Human Genome Research Institute announce another two of the components of The Cancer Genome Atlas Pilot Project, a three-year, $100 million collaboration to test the feasibility of using large-scale genome analysis technologies to identify important genetic changes involved in cancer.

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2007

April 26, 2007: National Human Genome Research Institute researchers identify new genetic risk factors for type 2 diabetes. In the most comprehensive look at genetic risk factors for type 2 diabetes to date, a U.S.- Finnish team, working in close collaboration with two other groups, has identified at least four new genetic variants associated with increased risk of diabetes and confirmed existence of another six.

May 4, 2007: The National Human Genome Research Institute and the National Cancer Institute, have teamed with Group Health Cooperative in Seattle and Henry Ford Health System in Detroit to launch the Multiplex Initiative, a study to investigate the interest level of healthy, young adults in receiving genetic testing for eight common conditions.

July 2, 2007: As part of The Cancer Genome Atlas pilot project, the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute and NHGRI award eight two-year grants totaling $3.4 million to support the development of innovative technologies for exploring the genomic underpinnings of cancer.

August 1, 2007: Looking ahead to a future in which each person's genome can be sequenced as a routine part of medical research and health care, the National Human Genome Research Institute awards more than $15 million in grants to support development of innovative technologies with the potential to dramatically reduce the cost of DNA sequencing.

August 2, 2007: The National Human Genome Research Institute establishes Genomic Healthcare Branch, headed by William Gregory Feero, M.D., Ph.D., to promote the effective integration of genomic discoveries into healthcare.

August 20, 2007: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces grants of $30 million to establish one, new Center of Excellence in Genomic Science at the Dana Farber-Cancer Institute and continue its support of the center at Stanford University.

August 22, 2007: The National Human Genome Research Institute establishes the Office of Population Genommics, headed by Teri Manolio, M.D., Ph.D.

October 9, 2007: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces grants totaling more than $80 million over the next four years to expand the ENCyclopedia Of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project, which in its pilot phase yielded provocative new insights into the organization and function of the human genome.

October 10, 2007: The National Human Genome Research Institute announces the establishment of two new centers to address the most critical ethical, legal and social questions faced by researchers and patients involved in genetic and genomic research.

October 16, 2007: The NIH Intramural Sequencing Center (NISC), an National Human Genome Research Institutes affiliated center, celebrates 10th anniversary with a day-long symposium.

November 4, 2007: An international team of scientists, supported in part by the National Human Genome Research Institute, announces that its systematic effort to map the genomic changes underlying lung cancer has uncovered a critical gene alteration not previously linked to any form of cancer.

November 5, 2007: In a White House Ceremony Video icon, NHGRI Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom .

December 19, 2007: To better understand the role the astounding assortment of bacteria, fungi and other microbes play in human health and disease, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announces the official launch of the Human Microbiome Project. The human microbiome is the collective genomes of all microorganisms present in or on the human body.

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2008

January 22, 2008: An international research consortium announces the 1000 Genomes Project, an ambitious effort that will involve sequencing the genomes of at least a thousand people from around the world to create the most detailed and medically useful picture to date of human genetic variation.

February 14, 2008: Testing the safety of chemicals ranging from pesticides to household cleaners will benefit from new technologies and a plan for collaboration, according to federal scientists from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), who announced a new toxicity testing agreement.

March 17, 2008: The National Institutes of Health (NIH) announces the establishment of the NIH Intramural Center for Genomics and Health Disparities (NICGHD), a new venue for research about the way populations are impacted by diseases, including obesity, diabetes and hypertension. NICGHD will employ a genomics approach, collecting and analyzing genetic, clinical, lifestyle and socio-economic data to study a range of clinical conditions that have puzzled and troubled public health experts for decades.

April 29, 2008: Research organizations from around the world announce they are launching the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC), a collaboration designed to generate high-quality genomic data on up to 50 types of cancer through efforts projected to take up to a decade.

May 7, 2008: The first analysis of the genome sequence of the duck-billed platypus is published in Nature by an international team of scientists, revealing clues about how genomes were organized during the early evolution of mammals. The research was supported in part by the National Human Genome Research Institute.

May 21, 2008: President Bush signs into law the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) that will protect Americans against discrimination based on their genetic information when it comes to health insurance and employment. The bill had passed the Senate unanimously and the House by a vote of 414 to 1.

May 28, 2008: Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., the director of the National Human Genome Research Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, announces his intention to step down on August 1 to explore writing projects and other professional opportunities.

August 2, 2008: Alan Edward Guttmacher, M.D., becomes Acting Director of NHGRI. He replaces Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., who stepped down after 15 years at the helm of NHGRI to pursue other professional opportunities.



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Last Updated: January 27, 2009




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See Also:

National Human Genome Research Institute: The Organization

Former NHGRI Directors

Long-Range Planning

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The National Institutes of Health Almanac



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