Fast Company

THE DOUBLE BIND

Genetics company Helix wants to create a world of products just for you. All it needs is your DNA.

Before his death from pancreatic cancer in 2011, Steve Jobs paid $100,000 to have his DNA sequenced. It was a rare and expensive move that, according to biographer Walter Isaacson, provided insight into potential treatments and allowed doctors to customize his drug regimen. Five years after Jobs’s death, that same kind of sequencing is widely available and costs just a few thousand dollars—or less.

The company most responsible for revolutionizing access to DNA isn’t a household name. Illumina is a $20 billion–plus genomics power-house whose supercomputers have sequenced some 90% of all the DNA data ever processed. Its machines have helped make genomics a compelling tool, used to treat diseases, predict drug responses, and identify which genetic mutations increase our risk of serious illness. They’ve also made it affordable for companies such

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fast Company

Fast Company1 min read
27 Mill Industries
A MAJOR CLImate change culprit is hiding in your kitchen: food scraps. Apple cores, carrot tops, and uneaten bits of dinner are a surprisingly potent source of emissions, spewing methane as they decompose in landfills. Mill, a stylish garbage bin (re
Fast Company2 min read
13 usafacts
FACTS ARE CRUCIAL to effective government. How can voters assess the efficacy of lawmakers if they don't have reliable data? How can representatives understand what their constituents need if they don't know the details of, say, those citizens' stand
Fast Company12 min read
08 for Whom The Bell Tolls
FOR SHOWING THE WORLD THAT TACOS ARE A STATE OF MIND NO ONE REALLY KNOWS who first came up with the idea of Taco Tuesday. One of the earliest references can be found in a newspaper ad for El Paso, Texas's White Star Cafeteria from Monday, October 16,

Related Books & Audiobooks