By Nick Grimm.
Medical researchers are on the hunt for 13 lucky people who have what they have dubbed “superhero DNA”.
Key points:
Hundreds of thousands of people from around the world donated their DNA to the study.
Researchers focused on the healthy, instead of the sick.
They discovered 13 people who are resistant to genetic diseases.
The lucky 13 cannot be recontacted.
An international team of scientists studied the DNA of close to 600,000 people, zeroing in on individuals who carried damaging genetic mutations.
But rather than focusing on those who succumbed to illness, they looked at an even smaller sub-group who beat the odds and remained healthy.
These people were born with a genetic predisposition towards developing serious and debilitating conditions such as cystic fibrosis, but something in their genomes caused them to still be resistant to the illnesses.
The researchers found 13 individuals who they believed could hold the answer to beating a range of illnesses.
But they were not able to contact the unnamed people because of consent rules signed by the study participants.
Professor Stephen Friend from the Mount Sinai Hospital’s Icahn School of Medicine launched the project in 2014 with a global crowd-sourcing appeal for access to people’s DNA samples.
How Do #Genetic #Superheroes Overcome Their Bad DNA? https://t.co/ZERMYnylhN @RobSteinnews @NPR #ResilienceProject pic.twitter.com/70H1p1tjoC
— Icahn Institute (@IcahnInstitute) April 12, 2016