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editorial
. 2001 Oct;52(4):345–347. doi: 10.1046/j.0306-5251.2001.01498.x

Table 1.

Historical overview of pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics

Year Individual(s) Landmark
510 bc Pythagoras Recognition of the dangers of ingesting fava beans, later characterized to be due to deficiency of G6PD [1]
1866 Mendel Establishment of the rules of heredity [11]
1906 Garrod Publication of ‘Inborn Errors of Metabolism’ [12]
1932 Snyder Characterization of the ‘phenylthiourea nontaster’ as an autosomal recessive trait [13]
1956 Carson et al. Discovery of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency [14]
1957 Motulsky Further refined the concept that inherited defects of metabolism may explain individual differences in drug response [15]
1957 Kalow & Genest Characterization of serum cholinesterase deficiency [16]
1957 Vogel Coined the term pharmacogenetics [17]
1960 Price Evans Characterization of acetylator polymorphism [18]
1962 Kalow Publication of ‘Pharmacogenetics – Heredity and the Response to Drugs’ [19]
1977/79 Mahgoub et al. and Eichelbaum et al. Discovery of the polymorphism in debrisoquine hydroxylase sparteine oxidase [20, 21]
1988 Gonzalez et al. Characterization of the genetic defect in debrisoquine hydroxylase, later termed CYP2D6 [22]
1988–2000 Various Identification of specific polymorphisms in various phase I and phase II drug metabolizing enzymes, and latterly in drug transporters
2000 Public-private partnership Completion of the first draft of the human genome [23, 24]
2000 The International SNP Map Working Group Completion of map of human genome sequence variation containing 1.42 million SNPs [5]