The stylish OutKast rapper designed the look himself in collaboration with Burberry.
Regeneron will acquire nearly all of 23andMe's assets,Its subsidiary Lemonaid Health will be wound down under the agreement.
23andMe will continue to operate as a wholly-owned unit unit of Regeneron, which said it would use the firm's data for drug development."We are pleased to have reached a transaction that maximizes the value of the business and enables the mission of 23andMe to live on, while maintaining critical protections around customer privacy, choice and consent with respect to their genetic data," said 23andMe's board chairman Mark Jensen.The deal was made through auction last week as part of the company's bankruptcy proceedings.
The company declined to comment further when approached by the BBC.Regeneron has different aims from the ones 23andMe presented to consumers, according to Dr Jennifer King, privacy and data policy Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence.
Dr. King, who has interviewed multiple 23andMe users for her research, said the company "always led with the non-profit 'we're helping humanity' side which helped obscure its for-profit mission".
But she added a profit-driven mission was likely to be clearer to customersLawler said: "Both Martin and I have been going out to clubs since the early '80s and the '90s were the pinnacle of our clubbing years and where we draw all our inspiration from, so a lot of the exhibitions we do are all born in those clubs, from that culture.
"The photographs are all pre-internet, pre mobile phones, so no-one was taking pictures apart from a few club photographers, they were the only people recording it, so I think it's quite exciting for a young audience to see these photographs."The show includes photography and video by Marc Vallée, Jon Shard, Donald Milne, David Swindells and a film by Tim Brunsden.
Green said the 90s were "a very exciting time for me" when he opened his own club, Smashing "for all the misfits and the oddballs who didn't really fit in anywhere and through that club people like Jarvis Cocker and Blur and Oasis would come and hang out and then they started having huge hits and suddenly our scene exploded"."Once upon a time there were cities where squats were legal, rents affordable and old nightclubs sat empty," the pair said.