Biohacker claims to have sequenced their own genome at the kitchen table with M3 Ultra Mac Studio, Claude, and a $3,200 sequencer — DIY project requires 100GB of data storage per run, oodles of RAM

Mac Studio
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

A tinkerer says they have sequenced their own genome at home. This wasn’t a simple feat, nor a revolutionary, cheap new process, but they managed it armed with their Mac Studio and a few lab-grade but consumer-accessible biotech gadgets such as the Oxford Nanopore MinION. A family history featuring an autoimmune disease was the DIYer's major driving force behind this project.

To be clear, the blogger at iwantosequencemygenomeathome.com admits no medical advice is intended, and a kitchen genome sequencing test doesn’t match the accuracy or rigor of a clinical diagnosis.

As per the intro, the medical research DIYer has a “high risk of autoimmune disease” due to family background. This disease has already impacted an under-40 sibling, badly.

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Our hero would use the device’s adaptive sampling functionality and an LLM (Claude in this case) to generate a BED file - chromosome, start, end for each gene – to concentrate on specific genes relevant to the family history of autoimmune disease.

MinION Mk1D: A powerful, palm-sized sequencer for anyone, anywhere - YouTube MinION Mk1D: A powerful, palm-sized sequencer for anyone, anywhere - YouTube
Watch On

Oxford Nanopore’s MinION explainer video is embedded above

Want to sequence your own genome?

A large part of the blog post is about how the home genome sequencing was completed. The blog includes a bill of materials with the aforementioned MinION Mk1D sequencer, at $3,200, being the biggest ticket item on the shopping list. Another considerable expense is the R10.4.1 flow cell, which at $900, and as a single-use consumable, contributes the most considerable expense in repeat genome sequencing runs.

(Image credit: iwantosequencemygenomeathome.com)

While an M3 Ultra Mac Studio was used for the computing tasks, and inspired DIYers should “budget 100GB free per run” of the sequencer, they suggest “a recent Apple Silicon Mac (M3 or later, with enough RAM) is sufficient.” However, an Nvidia DGX Spark could do the processing up to 5x faster.

It isn’t revealed what the intrepid DIYer learned from their own process – perhaps it is too personal, but they insist that “the things you can do with this [mapped genome] file are vast.” One suggestion for potential followers is to run results through DeepMind's AlphaGenome. The DIYer even ends by saying they’re happy to help fellow genome-curious folks, bringing their MinION along, depending on location. A contact form is provided to reach out.

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Mark Tyson
News Editor

Mark Tyson is a news editor at Tom's Hardware. He enjoys covering the full breadth of PC tech; from business and semiconductor design to products approaching the edge of reason.

  • scottsoapbox
    So how much is professional sequencing?

    5 grand isn’t cheap for less accurate measurement.
    Reply
  • mikettt
    scottsoapbox said:
    So how much is professional sequencing?

    5 grand isn’t cheap for less accurate measurement.
    Whole Genome sequencing (WGS) is $300 from Tellmegen. This is interesting but he did this for fun, not to save money.
    Reply
  • ackza
    Even if fair it's still cool and should still be funded cuz I bet u can still do it for real for like $30k
    Reply
  • Hooda Thunkett
    scottsoapbox said:
    So how much is professional sequencing?

    5 grand isn’t cheap for less accurate measurement.
    True, but then someone else has your most personal data. Assuming you want to know something specific about your genes, it might be worth $5k to keep it out of corporate hands.
    Reply
  • Dalek-Kaan
    What was that movie ? Gataca ? laws passed to protect people from exactly this kind of thing mean nothing when a simple search could turn up bio data about your FUTURE health ...and large corporations would do it without any doubt...
    Reply