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Environmental health and genomics: visions and implications

The relationship between genes and the environment can be compared to a loaded gun and its trigger. A loaded gun by itself causes no harm; it is only when the trigger is pulled that the potential for harm is released. Genetic susceptibility creates an analogous situation, where the loaded gun is one or a combination of susceptibility genes (alleles) and the trigger is an environmental exposure. The key objective of the Environmental Genome Project is to identify alleles that confer susceptibility to the adverse effects of environmental agents. Here we discuss the goals of the Environmental Genome Project, its implications and, in particular, its potential effect on our ability to assess human disease risk in the future.

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Figure 1: The environmental exposure–disease model.

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Correspondence to Kenneth Olden.

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EGP

SNP catalogue

Center for Environmental Health Sciences

Coriell Institute for Medical Research

NHGRI

NIGMS

CDC

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Olden, K., Wilson, S. Environmental health and genomics: visions and implications. Nat Rev Genet 1, 149–153 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1038/35038586

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