New_Scientist_3_08_2019

(Darren Dugan) #1
14 | New Scientist | 3 August 2019

THREE of the biggest home
DNA testing companies have
been the subject of complaints
to the UK’s data watchdog,
figures released under freedom
of information rules show.
Since January last year, the
Information Commissioner’s
Office (ICO) received a total of 16
complaints about AncestryDNA,
23andMe and MyHeritage. The
cases seem to have been relatively
low level, but several necessitated
action by the firms involved and
required the ICO to raise concerns
and advise on compliance with
data protection rules.
Direct-to-consumer DNA
testing companies are growing in
popularity, with 4.7 million people
in the UK estimated to have used a
home DNA testing kit. Members
of the UK parliament are probing
what safeguards should be put in
place to protect people who take
such tests, some of which can tell
people their risk of developing
conditions such as type 2 diabetes.
Influential scientific groups
have already told MPs that steps
need to be taken to avoid negative
outcomes, such as any anxiety

caused when people receive their
results. The groups also said that
new laws may be required to make
sure genetic data isn’t sold on to
third parties like insurance firms.
Of the complaints made to the
ICO, 10 were about AncestryDNA,
two about 23andMe and four
about MyHeritage – the first two
firms are based in the US and the
last in Israel. They covered issues

such as security, the use and
disclosure of data and the right
to prevent the processing of data.
The details of the cases
weren’t disclosed in the freedom
of information release to
New Scientist. But they probably
involve isolated incidents of
human error, rather than failures
of procedures. That might be
sending an email to the wrong
person, or the loss or accidental
destruction of small volumes
of personal data, for example.
Since new European Union

privacy legislation took effect
in May last year, known as the
General Data Protection
Regulation (GDPR), biometric
data has been designated as

special category data, meaning it
has additional legal protections.
GDPR probably raised
awareness that you can complain
about the use of genetic data,
says Debbie Kennett at University
College London.
It is likely that many more
complaints are being made
directly to companies, but those
figures aren’t published. The
number of complaints seems
low given the number of people
estimated to have taken a DNA
test in the UK, says Kennett.
“It’s quite reassuring that the
ICO is actually working as it should
do, and there is this channel where
people can submit complaints
and have them investigated,”
she says.  ❚

4.7million
People in the UK have used
home DNA testing kits

Genetic privacy

Adam Vaughan

ERIC BARADAT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

News


DNA home testing worries


UK’s data watchdog receives complaints about DNA testing firms


Primates

New monkey species
already threatened
by deforestation

IT IS time to welcome another
species to the primate family tree –
but the Munduruku marmoset
may already be under threat from
deforestation in the Amazon.
Rodrigo Costa Araújo at the
National Institute of Amazonian
Research, Brazil, discovered the
species in 2015. It has a distinctive
white tail that sets it apart from
most other Amazonian marmosets.
“I thought, ‘Oh my God, they are

different, they are really, really
different’, ” says Araújo.
To entice monkeys out of
the trees, he and his colleagues
played an MP3 recording of other
marmoset calls over a speaker while
trekking through the rainforest.
During subsequent expeditions
over the next three years, Araújo
and his colleagues found that the
patch of forest where they first
found the white-tailed marmosets
is home to clusters of the monkeys.
In order to prove that the
monkeys represent a new species,
the researchers killed five individuals
for analysis under a permit provided

by the Chico Mendes Institute
for Biodiversity Conservation, the
administrative arm of the Brazilian
Ministry of the Environment. The
monkeys’ markings were the first
thing that set them apart, but the
team also examined their DNA.
Their genomes were all closely

related but distinct from those
of other known marmosets in
the Amazon. This evidence,
combined with data showing
their unique distribution across
a 55,000-square-kilometre area,
helped to prove this was a new
species. It has been named Mico
munduruku (PeerJ, doi.org/c8vd).
The Amazon currently faces high
levels of deforestation and urban
development. Araújo warns that
such practices threaten the
monkeys’ habitat. Mining and
farming activity may also be a
problem for the species.  ❚
Chris Baraniuk

The Munduruku
marmoset has
a distinctive
white tail

STEPHEN NASH


23andMe is one of
a number of home
DNA testing services

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