i believe he also was the human genome project, he arranged to have one of the samples be him

Craig Venter had his genome sequenced in 2007. It was the first individual human genome that was sequenced and released publicly.

The human reference genome is ~70% from a man with African and European ancestry who lived somewhere around Buffalo, NY. Most of the rest is from ~20 other individuals in the same area. They were supposed to sequence the samples more evenly, but apparently there were some technical reasons that made them prioritize a single sample.

"RP11" is that man from Buffalo who comprises 74% of the human reference genome [1].

[1] https://undark.org/2024/07/09/informed-consent-human-genome-...

I worked on this back in the 90s and there multiple data sets being used. We had one that was Mennonite family with like 5 living generations and 100ish individuals.

You are confused by the human genome project vs the celera genome project. No, the human genome project didn't include his sample.

It gets a little fuzzy when talking about Celera and the human genome project. The two efforts were very much competitors, but there was a lot of crossover (mainly from Celera pulling in the public data).

But, Venter claimed that he was the a good chunk of the genome that Celera sequenced, so I think it's fair to say he was one of the people included in the draft human genome (at least the Celera version of it).

> After leaving Celera in 2002, Venter announced that much of the genome that had been sequenced there was his own. [1]

[1] https://www.technologyreview.com/2007/09/04/223919/craig-ven...

I am not sure what is "the draft human genome" you are talking about. Two separate human genomes were published in 2001: the HGP genome and the celera genome. The HGP genome then didn't use Venter DNA. It evolved into the current human reference genome. The celera genome contained Venter DNA but it has been completely forgotten nowadays.

Yes. For folks looking for more:

* Celera genome, first published 2004: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/datasets/genome/GCF_000002115.1...

* Human reference genome, first published 2001 and most recently updated in 2022: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/datasets/genome/GCF_000001405.4...

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Yes, his was the first complete genome ever sequenced (by a private entity).

This reminds me of the interesting fact that

> Linnaeus is designated as the type specimen for the human species, Homo sapiens.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Linnaeus