Korean Genome Project


Korean Genome Project is the largest Korean Genome Project which currently includes 4,000 human genomes sequenced in Korea. KGP was originated from the national initiative of sequencing the reference Korean and whole population genomes in 2006 by KOBIC, KRIBB and NCSRD, KRISS, Daejeon in Korea. From 2009, KGP was supported by the Genome Research Foundation and TheragenEtex to build the Variome of Koreans as well as the Korean Reference Genome. Starting from KOREF, a consensus variome reference, providing information on millions of variants from 40 additional ethnically homogeneous genomes from the Korean Personal Genome Project was completed in 2017. Updating the technology an improved version of KOREF was then constructed using long-read sequencing data produced by Oxford Nanopore PromethION and PacBio technologies has been released showcasing newer assembly technologies and techniques. Since 2014, KGP has been supported by Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Clinomics, and Ulsan City, Ulsan, Korea. KGP released 1,094 Korean whole genome sequences on 27th May 2020 in Science Advances.
KGP consortium
The final Goal of KGP aims to sequence ~85,000,000 Koreans. I.e, every ethnic Korean on Earth.