Google Wants to Index Your DNA

The Web search giant’s investment in Navigenics is further proof it wants an early stake in direct-to-consumer genetic screening

Your DNA falls into the realm of “the world’s information,” and it seems that Google (GOOG), as part of its corporate mission, is making a play to organize that, too. The Internet giant received heavy press in 2007 when it invested at least $4.4 million (BusinessWeek.com, 11/29/07) in a genetic screening company, 23andMe, that was started by Anne Wojcicki, the wife of Google co-founder Sergey Brin, and her business partner.

Google’s interest in DNA doesn’t end there. It is also putting money into a second Silicon Valley DNA-screening startup, Navigenics. The company is also backed by star venture capital firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers. For a spit of saliva and $2,500, your genetic test results are securely delivered to your computer screen with your genetic likelihood for 18 medical conditions, from Alzheimer’s to rheumatoid arthritis to several types of cancer. Navigenics aims to boost disease prevention by providing customers reports on their DNA that they can share with their doctors. The company addresses privacy concerns by encrypting customer identities, and screens only for conditions it deems to have scientifically sound genetic studies. The company also offers genetic counseling.

Much in the way it invested in 23andMe, Google wants to plant an early stake in a potentially large new market around genetic data. “We are interested in supporting companies and making investments in companies that [bolster] our mission statement, which is organizing the world’s information and making it universally accessible and useful,” Google spokesman Andrew Pederson says.

Size of Investment Not Disclosed
Calling 23andMe an example of a company “generating a whole new batch of information of interest to a broad range of people,” Pederson says Google wants to extend its search capabilities into genetic testing. The precise path and business contours of the emerging gene-testing market remain unclear, but if Navigenics succeeds it “will generate a lot of a very new type of information with potentially far-reaching value,” says Pederson. “We felt it was important to get involved now, at the early stage, to better understand the information generated by this fast-moving field.”

If genetic screening proves popular, the nascent technology also stands to benefit Affymetrix (AFFX), which not only invested in Navigenics but also makes the GeneChip system used in the testing and runs the lab Navigenics uses to analyze customers’ DNA. Other Affymetrix alumni hold key positions at both gene-testing startups: Sean George is chief operating officer and Stephen Moore is chief counsel at Navigenics; Linda Avey co-leads 23andMe. A former Affymetrix president, Sue Siegel, is also on Navigenics’ board.

Google’s interest in the company seems to be purely financial. Both Navigenics and Google refused to disclose the size of Google’s investment. “While Google is a financial investor in Navigenics, they don’t have access to our data; we do not serve ads,” says Amy DuRoss, head of policy and business affairs at Redwood Shores (Calif.)-based Navigenics.
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