Episode notes
The Day Science Found Out We're All Basically the Same
April 3rd, 2001: The smartest people on the planet realized we're genetically the same as a fruit fly. And it changed medicine forever.
The Human Genome Project had just dropped the "Book of Life." But the results were shocking: humans only have about 20,000 genes—the same as a mouse. Where was our genetic complexity?
Scientists realized they'd been looking at the wrong thing. The 98% of "junk" DNA they'd been ignoring? That was actually the control room. On this day 25 years ago, researchers announced they'd mapped 1.4 million SNPs—tiny genetic switches hidden in that "junk."
These weren't random typos. They were the master switches controlling everything: your disease risk, how you metabolize medication, your biological destiny.
This discovery ...