For those who have their genome sequencing done, I have discovered this week a free and interesting site where you can use tools to analyze your genome results:
https://geneticgenie.org/ They offer an overall analysis of your SNPs, with their GenVue Discovery application, at
https://genvue.geneticgenie.org/ They also offer two panels, for now: Methylation, and Detox. The Methylation Panel contains information on every SNP tested in the panel. The Detox panel is less developed in terms of interpretation info, only listing your results, but with a minimum of research, you will know what it means.
It is free to use but you can make a donation if you want.
The max size of the file you can upload there is 1 GB. If you have a Whole Genome Sequencing, which is about 40 GB in size, the best file to upload there instead is a file with your SNPs only, that is, only the positions where your alleles are different from the reference genome ( that reference may be hg19/GRCh37 or hg38/GRCh38). For example, my VCF file containing my SNPs is about 225 MB in size. The VCF file format ( Variant Call Format) is only one kind of format, there are others that you may have your data in, and most are accepted by this website ( 23andMe, AncestryDNA, ...)
The general report ( Variant Report) is very interesting. In the first tab, 'Genetic Conditions', it shows your SNPs for which there are expert reviews, meaning that the potential effects of those SNPs are better known. However, the fact of having such a variant does not necessarily mean one has or carries a condition or disease - it only means that you have a predisposition of developing this condition. Since we have about 25 000 genes, you may have other genes that have blocked or compensate for the effect of a particular SNP, so you do not have this condition at all.
In the Variant Report, you also have a tab for SNPs about potential unusual drug responses to specific drugs. You also have tabs where are listed your rare mutations of less than 1% frequency listed in ClinVar ( having a rare mutation may be more significant than having a common variant). Being listed in ClinVar means that some information is known about these SNPs. There is also a tab for uncommon mutation of between 1% and 5% frequency, that are reported in ClinVar ( more frequent, but still relatively rare).
For each SNP list in your report, you have an abstract concerning this SNP, tags concerning its degree of pathogenicity and clinical significance, and links to many databases ( LitVar, SNPedia, OMIM, dbSNP) having a specific page for this SNP, so you save a lot of time and easily find information on this on this specific SNP.
Doing the same report next year will produce a different report, with more data, and updated information. In 5 years, it would be a quite different report, far more complete and descriptive ( information on more SNPs, more complete information on already known mutations, and so on). I am very enthusiastic about this new developing science!
Let me know if you try the tools geneticgenie.org !
P.S. I saw that Rollercoaster used this website for the reports he posted in this thread