Unlocking the African bioeconomy and strengthening biodiversity conservation through genomics and bioinformatics
- PMID: 40730905
- PMCID: PMC12307939
- DOI: 10.1038/s44185-025-00102-9
Unlocking the African bioeconomy and strengthening biodiversity conservation through genomics and bioinformatics
Abstract
The African BioGenome Project (AfricaBP) is a Pan-African initiative aimed at improving food systems and biodiversity conservation through genomics while ensuring equitable data sharing and benefits. The Open Institute is the knowledge exchange platform of the AfricaBP, which aims to bridge local knowledge gaps in biodiversity genomics and bioinformatics and enable infrastructural developments. In 2024, the AfricaBP Open Institute advanced this mission by organizing 31 workshops that attracted more than 3500 registered attendees across 50 African countries, provided training to 401 African researchers in genomics, bioinformatics, molecular biology, sample collections and biobanking, and ethical considerations, across all five African geographical regions involving 40 African and non-African organizations. These workshops provide insights on applications of biodiversity genomics and bioinformatics to the African bioeconomy, as well as hands-on training in sample collection and processing, genomics, bioinformatics, molecular biology, and gene editing. Here, we provide the current understanding of the applications of biodiversity genomics and bioinformatics to the African bioeconomy through synthetic reviews and presentations, including descriptions of 31 workshops organized as well as three fellowship programs delivered or launched by the AfricaBP Open Institute in collaboration with African and international institutions and industry partners. We review the current national bioeconomy strategies across Africa and the economic impact of sequencing African genomes locally, illustrated by a case study on the proposed 1000 Moroccan Genome Project. Key recommendations include integrating biodiversity genomics and bioinformatics into national bioeconomy strategies, leveraging genomics for sustainable bioeconomy growth, and expanding capacity-building initiatives across Africa.
© 2025. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: P. Abechi, U. Modebelu, L. Hadjeras, M. Jha, and X. David are employees of Illumina. B. Andika, D.M. Kivuva, W.O. Nyakundi, and V.W. Wambua are employees of Inqaba Biotec East Africa Ltd. N. Ebuzoeme, M. Igoh, and M. Peter are employees of ISN Medical. S. Dede, S.L. Gillis-Harry, O.P. Elekima, and J.E. Ideozu are employees of MyAfroDNA. M. Kilian and J. Potgieter are employees of Separations. E.R. Kwasi and O. Olufowobi are employees of Inqaba Biotec West Africa. C. Mbarire, J. Orina, F. Parsimei, and K. Were are employees of Africa Biosystems Limited. O. Mbhele, S. Shabangu, and B.M. Wurdeman are employees of MGI. S.A.S.J. Ali is an employee of Eppendorf Middle East & Africa FZ-LLC.
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