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Your DNA.
Decoded for humans.

We read almost 720 thousand points in your DNA and used Google DeepMind's AI to find the things that actually matter for your health. No jargon. Just clarity.

719,991
Points scanned
7
Key findings
5
Keep an eye on
10+
All clear
This report is for learning and curiosity only. It is not a medical diagnosis. Please always talk to a real doctor before making health decisions based on genetic information.
01

The 7 things your DNA
wants you to know

Out of nearly 720,000 data points, an AI built by Google DeepMind found 7 changes worth paying attention to. Explained like you're telling a friend.

Important

Your body struggles to recycle Vitamin B12

One of the little machines that recycles Vitamin B12 inside your cells isn't working at full speed. B12 is huge for energy, brain function, and heart health.

This matters even more because you also have another vitamin-related finding (we'll get to it in the Vitamins section). It's like having two slow workers on the same assembly line — things still get done, but not as fast.

AI concern
84%
What you can do

Ask your doctor about methylcobalamin (the "ready-to-use" form of B12) instead of regular B12. Also worth getting a homocysteine blood test to check if this is causing issues.

MTRR gene • I49M change • You carry one copy • AI score: 0.8426 • rs1801394
Important

A tiny muscle protein has a spelling mistake

Deep inside your muscle cells, there's a small protein that helps muscles squeeze and relax. The AI gave it the highest concern score of all your results (99.7 out of 100).

The reassuring part? Scientists haven't linked this specific change to any known disease yet. But if you ever have unexplained muscle weakness or cramps, it's something your doctor should know about.

AI concern
99.7%
MYL5 gene • F88S change • One copy • AI score: 0.9974 • rs2228354
Important

Your "body glue" recipe has a tweak

Your DNA has a change in the recipe for Type III collagen — the glue that holds your body together (skin, blood vessels, gut, everywhere).

Lots of people carry changes like this and feel perfectly fine. But if you've ever noticed that you bruise super easily, your skin is very soft or stretchy, or your joints bend more than other people's, this might be why.

AI concern
76%
COL3A1 gene • G564A change • One copy • AI score: 0.7578 • rs193922176
Important

Your tissue repair crew is a bit short-staffed

The protein that acts as cement for your collagen has a change. Combined with the collagen finding above, two parts of your body's building system are slightly different.

This doesn't mean anything is broken — but it's a pattern your doctor might find interesting.

AI concern
88%
LOXL4 gene • D405A change • One copy • AI score: 0.8765 • rs1983864
Important

Your liver's delivery trucks work a little differently

Your liver has tiny "delivery trucks" that carry medications and hormones inside to be processed. This doesn't matter day-to-day, but becomes useful if you're ever prescribed cholesterol medication, thyroid pills, or certain cancer treatments.

AI concern
76%
SLCO1A2 gene • E172D change • One copy • AI score: 0.7565 • rs11568563
Carrier

You're a silent carrier of a rare condition

You have one changed copy of a gene that, if both copies were changed, could cause a rare type of seizures in babies (treatable with Vitamin B6). With just one copy, you are 100% healthy.

The only time this matters is if you're planning to have children and your partner happens to carry the same change.

AI concern
73%
ALDH7A1 gene • N195S change • One copy (carrier) • AI score: 0.7257 • rs372660425
Watch

Your brain's cleanup system could be more efficient

Your brain cells have a cleaning system that removes worn-out proteins. Research found a small link between this change and a slightly higher chance of Parkinson's disease later in life.

Most people with this change never develop any problems at all. Staying active, sleeping well, and eating colorful foods are the best things you can do.

AI concern
58%
TMEM175 gene • M341T change • One copy • AI score: 0.5751 • rs80114247
02

Your brain's risk profile

We checked the single most studied gene for Alzheimer's risk.

Moderate risk

You carry one copy of the Alzheimer's risk gene

You got one E3 (the most common) and one E4. E4 is the strongest genetic predictor of late-onset Alzheimer's. Having one copy means your risk is roughly 3 times higher than average.

But here's the crucial context: most people with your combination never get Alzheimer's. Genes load the gun, but lifestyle pulls the trigger.

Brain-boosting habits (backed by science)

Exercise (the #1 proven brain protector) • Quality sleep (7-9 hours) • Social connectionLearning new thingsMediterranean-style eating • Managing blood pressure and cholesterol

APOE type: E3/E4 • rs429358: TC (carries E4) • rs7412: CC (no E2)
03

Your vitamin factory needs a tune-up

This is probably the most actionable finding in your entire report.

Take action

Your body is slow at processing folic acid

Your body turns folic acid into its usable form about 70% slower than most people. You have two copies of this change, so both sides are running slow.

And remember: your B12 recycling is also slower. So you've got two parts of the same system running at reduced speed. The good news? There's a really simple fix.

AI concern
63%
The simple fix

1. Take methylfolate instead of regular folic acid — pre-activated form
2. Take methylcobalamin instead of regular B12
3. Ask your doctor for a homocysteine blood test
4. Eat your greens: spinach, lentils, avocado, broccoli

MTHFR gene • C677T change • Two copies (both sides affected) • AI score: 0.6324 • rs1801133
04

Weight, digestion, mood & more

Good to know

Your appetite dial is turned up a notch

You have two copies of the most studied "weight gene." It makes you feel hungrier and less satisfied after eating. People with your version tend to weigh about 3-4 kg more than average.

But exercise cuts this effect almost in half. Your genes suggest a tendency — your habits decide the outcome.

What helps

Regular movement (the #1 countermeasure) • Protein and fiber at each meal • Paying attention to portions

FTO gene • rs9939609: AA (both copies) • Diabetes risk genes: Normal
Fun fact

Milk isn't really your thing (genetically)

Your body stops making the enzyme that digests milk sugar in adulthood. This is actually the original human default — about 65% of adults worldwide have this.

If dairy gives you bloating, now you know why. Hard cheese, yogurt, and butter are usually fine — bacteria have already eaten the problematic sugar.

Easy solutions

Lactase pills before dairy • Lactose-free milk • Oat/almond/soy alternatives • Hard cheese and yogurt are usually fine

MCM6/LCT gene • rs4988235: GG (doesn't produce lactase in adulthood)
Personality

You're built for deep thinking (with a side of overthinking)

Your brain keeps dopamine active longer than most people's. Scientists call this the "Thinker" type.

The upside: Sharper focus, better memory, great performance on mental tasks. The flip side: More sensitivity to stress, anxiety, and caffeine. Think of it as a powerful engine that sometimes redlines.

Working with your wiring

Manage stress actively (walks, meditation, nature) • Go easy on caffeine • Build in recovery time after intense periods

COMT gene • Val158Met: Met/Met (slow dopamine breakdown) • Dopamine receptors: Normal
Tendency

Your body runs a bit "warm" on inflammation

Your DNA makes more "alarm" signals that trigger inflammation, and less "calm down" signals. Like a fire alarm that's too sensitive and a sprinkler system that's too slow.

What you eat and how you live has a massive impact on inflammation — probably more than your genes do.

Cool it down with

Omega-3 foods (salmon, walnuts, flaxseed) • Colorful fruits and vegetables • Regular exercise • Good sleep • Less processed food and sugar

IL-6 gene (rs1800795): CC • IL-10 gene (rs1800896): TT (lower calming signals)
05

How your body handles drugs

Your DNA affects how fast or slow you break down certain medications. This could be really useful for your doctor.

Tell your doctor

You process some common drugs slower than average

Your body's drug-processing machinery runs at about half speed for certain medications:

Blood thinners (clopidogrel) — might not work as well. Good alternatives exist.
Acid reflux pills (omeprazole, pantoprazole) — might need a different dose.
Some antidepressants (citalopram, escitalopram) — might need a lower starting dose.

Pro tip

If you're ever prescribed these drugs, just mention "I'm a CYP2C19 intermediate metabolizer" to your doctor or pharmacist. They'll know exactly what to do.

CYP2C19 gene: AG (intermediate) • CYP1A2 (caffeine): AC (intermediate) • rs4244285 • rs762551
06

Everything that came back all clear

Blood clotting
No risk of dangerous clots
Iron overload
Handles iron normally
Type 2 diabetes
Main risk genes normal
Skin cancer genes
MC1R gene standard
Hepatitis C treatment
Would respond well
Statin processing
Transporter is normal
07

What to do with all of this

Everything boiled down into three buckets.

Bring to your doctor

  • Vitamins: Switch to methylfolate + methylcobalamin. Get homocysteine tested.
  • Skin & joints: Mention collagen findings if you bruise easily or are very flexible.
  • Medications: Share that you're a slow metabolizer before starting new drugs.

Lifestyle tweaks

  • Brain care: Exercise, sleep well, stay social, keep learning.
  • Weight: Your appetite runs higher. Movement is your best friend.
  • Inflammation: Eat colorful, eat omega-3s, manage stress.
  • Dairy: You're lactose intolerant. Use pills or alternatives.

Relax about these

  • Blood clotting — totally normal
  • Iron levels — totally normal
  • Diabetes risk — no extra risk
  • Skin cancer genes — all standard
08

See your proteins in 3D

Google DeepMind's AI predicted the shapes of your affected proteins.

ProteinWhat it doesAI confidenceExplore
APOECarries fats around your brain75.5%Open 3D view →
COMTCleans up dopamine in your brain93.9%Open 3D view →
MTHFRActivates folic acid (B vitamin)88.6%Open 3D view →
09

Full technical details

98 DNA changes flagged by at least two AI tools as potentially important.

#IDGeneChangeSIFTPolyPhenType
1rs1983864LOXL4D/AharmfuldamagingTG
2rs193922176COL3A1G/AharmfuldamagingGC
3rs11568563SLCO1A2E/DharmfuldamagingTG
4rs372660425ALDH7A1N/SharmfuldamagingTC
5rs2228354MYL5F/SharmfuldamagingTC
6rs1801394MTRRI/MharmfuldamagingAG
7rs80114247TMEM175M/TharmfuldamagingTC
8rs117737960OR6J1L/PharmfuldamagingAG
9rs1131603TCN2L/SharmfuldamagingTC
10rs41267807LPAY/CharmfuldamagingTC
11rs3754334EPHA2I/MharmfuldamagingAG
12rs35574803CMTM6T/AharmfuldamagingTC
13rs2076742ATP10AW/CharmfuldamagingCG
14rs5361SELES/RharmfuldamagingTG
15rs41310927ASPMS/GharmfuldamagingTC
16rs2307492FMO2F/SharmfuldamagingTC
17rs2640738EXPH5R/GharmfuldamagingTC
18rs2075773ANGEL1F/CharmfuldamagingAC
19rs36024412CRYBG2S/FharmfuldamagingTG
20rs17585974KANSL1K/TharmfuldamagingTG
+ 78 more variants in the full CSV export
10

How this report was made

1

Scanning

719,991 markers sent to Ensembl VEP. 2,932 change a protein.

2

Two AI judges

Evolution analysis (SIFT) + 3D protein impact (PolyPhen-2).

3

DeepMind verdict

98 changes checked via AlphaMissense. 7 "likely important."

4

Medical databases

Key variants cross-referenced with ClinVar and PharmGKB.

5

3D structures

Protein shapes from AlphaFold database for visual exploration.

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