http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/01/business/yourmoney/01frame.html

"THE $73.5 billion global biotech business may soon have to grapple 
with a discovery that calls into question the scientific principles 
on which it was founded.

Last month, a consortium of scientists published findings that 
challenge the traditional view of how genes function. The exhaustive 
four-year effort was organized by the United States National Human 
Genome Research Institute and carried out by 35 groups from 80 
organizations around the world. To their surprise, researchers found 
that the human genome might not be a "tidy collection of independent 
genes" after all, with each sequence of DNA linked to a single 
function, such as a predisposition to diabetes or heart disease.

Instead, genes appear to operate in a complex network, and interact 
and overlap with one another and with other components in ways not 
yet fully understood. According to the institute, these findings will 
challenge scientists "to rethink some long-held views about what 
genes are and what they do." 

Biologists have recorded these network effects for many years in 
other organisms. But in the world of science, discoveries often do 
not become part of mainstream thought until they are linked to humans.

With that link now in place, the report is likely to have 
repercussions far beyond the laboratory. The presumption that genes 
operate independently has been institutionalized since 1976, when the 
first biotech company was founded. In fact, it is the economic and 
regulatory foundation on which the entire biotechnology industry is 
built. 



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