IU team maps likely bipolar genes News Sentinel, IN - But identifying someone early who is at risk of the illness only does someone good if there is effective treatment,? he said. Niculescu said the landmark ...
Genes and Diabetes Increase Heart Problems Ivanhoe, FL - Participants in both studies were tested for a gene variation of chromosome 9p21 and characterized by their long-term glycemic control. ...
Family history ups breast cancer risk even without BRCA gene The Punch, Nigeria - Nov 28, 2008 ... the BRCA gene, a new study finds. And in women younger than age 40 without the BRCA mutations, but with a very strong family history, the risk is about ...
? Scientists Link Fast Food to Alzheimer's Consumer Affairs - The team studied a gene variant called apoE4 which has been shown to increase the risk of Alzheimer's. The gene plays a role in the movement of cholesterol ...
Gene test hope ChronicleLive, UK - ... could identify cystic fibrosis, beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease. The only checks currently available carry a high risk of miscarriage. ...
Doctors, researchers on quest for a cure News-Herald.com, OH - Nov 28, 2008 In addition to refining old treatments, cell and gene therapy have opened a lot of possibilities in cancer treatment. By manipulating genes or cells, ...
Genetic tests rise and staff struggle Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - ... microbes to identify infections were not surveyed; nor were non-medical uses like paternity tests. Gene analysis of cancers was rising, said Dr Suthers, ...
Researchers Identify Gene That Regulates Glucose Levels LA Downtown News Online, CA - Aug 4, 2008 To understand how genes work, a collaborative study that includes USC researchers has identified a gene that regulates glucose levels. ...
Molecular Basis Of Alcohol Oneindia, India - miR-9 blocks the expression of BK gene variants that contain a specific binding site for the molecule, while sparing those that lack a miR-9 binding site. ...
Cheating athletes turn to gene doping Palm Beach Post, United States - ... Project was launched to identify the 20000 to 25000 genes in human DNA and determine what, if anything, could be done if a defective gene were isolated. ...
US researchers identify possible sleep gene Xinhua, China - Jul 29, 2008 WASHINGTON, July 29 (Xinhua) -- Researchers at University of Pennsylvania reported on Tuesday that they identified a gene that controls sleep of fruit flies ...
Genetic testing brings new hopes, hard choices Boston Globe, United States - Aug 3, 2008 A simple blood test based on new gene science enabled him to discover that he carried the same gene defect that probably doomed his father and brother. ...
Source: Google News
[PDF]SPATIO-TEMPORAL POINT PATTERN ANALYSIS USING GENETIC ALGORITHMS - Y PHOTIS, Y Grekousis - ersa.org ... a new genetic algorithm is proposed identifying correspondence among ... Each gene g
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[BOOK] Language in a Plural Society PB Pandit - 1977 - Dev Raj Chanana Memorial Committee: Distributed by Manohar Book …
[BOOK] Antarctic Fish and Fisheries - KH Kock - 1992 - books.google.com ... 20 4.2 Species, subspecies and population identity 23 5Geographical and bathymetric
distribution of the fish fauna 33 5.1 Geographical distribution 33 ...
- T Carney - Psychiatry Psychol. & L., 2003 - HeinOnline ... a document sanitised to remove identifying information about ... Indeed, as gene mapping
develops, perhaps even for ... efings/mental healthl/newsid 472000/472797.stm ...
[PDF]NATURA 2000 AND FORESTS ?CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES? I GUIDE - homepage.mac.com ... s policy of openness and transparency, it recommends identifying the measures ... losses
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[DOC]1. Executive Summary - BDB Directive, CCE des Proprietaires Forestiers, H … - kp.org.pl ... The report recommends identifying the necessary measures to protect and maintain
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197 Au M?ssbauer Study of Bimetallic Nanoparticles Prepared by Sonochemical Technique SMAO YASUHIRO KOBAYASHI, S MAKOTO, H TAKATANI, M … - Icame 2003, 2004 - books.google.com Page 82. 0 HyperfineInteractions 156/157: 75?79, 2004. 75 ? 2004
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Scientists Identify an Inherited Gene That Strongly Affects Risk for the Most Common Form of Melanoma
Researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, have identified a link between inherited and acquired genetic factors that dramatically increase the chance of developing a very common type of melanoma. This finding appears in an online version of Science* on June 29, 2006, and was a collaborative effort led by scientists at NCI and the University of California San Francisco. Also involved in the study were researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Bufalini Hospital in Cesena, Italy**.
“Knowing who is at greater risk for melanoma due to heredity, and understanding the pathways leading to cancer, are important steps in addressing a disease which is expected to be diagnosed in over 62,000 Americans in 2006,” said National Institutes of Health Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. People with fair skin are generally at increased risk of developing melanoma. Differences in skin color, or pigmentation, are due largely to the melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1R) gene. Everyone has two copies of MC1R; one inherited from the mother and one from the father, and either can be the standard form or a variant. Some variant forms of MC1R are responsible for traits such as fair skin, freckling, and red hair. But MC1R may do much more than influence pigmentation.
“We previously observed that subjects who inherit one or two variant forms of the MC1R gene had a modest increase in risk of developing melanoma, even if they have darker pigmentation,” said Maria Teresa Landi, M.D., Ph.D., lead study investigator at NCI. “We have now discovered that MC1R dramatically predisposes individuals with no excessive sun exposure and variable pigmentation to developing a particular type of melanoma.”
Melanomas, which are tumors that arise from cells which produce skin pigment, can occur on all parts of the body where these cells are present. Caucasians have a much higher chance than other populations of developing these tumors on skin areas that are exposed to the sun. Sun exposure has many effects on skin, including causing chronic sun damage, with wrinkling on areas subject to high exposure over a lifetime. Sun exposure may also lead to mutations in cancer-causing genes, such as BRAF, which are frequent in melanoma.
According to Boris Bastian, M.D., University of California, San Francisco, “The relationship between BRAF mutations in melanoma and sun exposure is complex and intriguing. On the one hand, sun exposure appears necessary for development of BRAF mutations; melanomas on areas such as the soles of feet and palms of hands, which have low exposure, have low mutation frequencies compared to the approximately 60 percent mutation frequency in sun-induced melanomas on skin without chronic sun damage. On the other hand, melanomas developing in older subjects with sufficient accumulated sun exposure to produce chronic damage also exhibit lower BRAF mutation frequencies.”
Because melanomas on skin areas with few signs of chronic sun-induced damage occur in younger people and exhibit frequent mutations in BRAF, the researchers hypothesized that there were inherited genetic factor(s) that predispose to the development of these melanomas with BRAF mutations. An interesting candidate for this genetic risk factor was the MC1R gene.
To determine if there was an association between inherited variant forms of MC1R and the development of BRAF-mutant melanoma, the researchers studied the skin surrounding the melanomas in 85 patients from the Bufalini Hospital of Cesena, Italy, and 112 patients from the Department of Dermatology at the University of California, San Francisco, and identified subjects with no or little signs of chronic sun damage. They then sequenced MC1R genes in normal cells and BRAF in tumor cells and found that BRAF mutations were more frequent in non-chronic sun-induced melanoma cases with hereditary genetic variant forms of MC1R.
Landi MT, Bauer J, Pfeiffer RM, Elder DE, Hulley B, Minghetti P, Calista D, Kanetsky PA, Pinkel D, Bastian BC. MCIR Germline Variants Confer Risk for BRAF-Mutant Melanoma. Science, online edition, June 29, 2006.
** Departments of Dermatology and Pathology and Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco; Department of Dermatology, Eberhard Karls University, Tübingen, Germany; Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pa.; Department of Dermatology, M. Bufalini Hospital, Cesena, Italy; Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of California, San Francisco; Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pa.
By categorizing patients into two groups, those with no variant forms of MC1R versus those who had at least one variant, the scientists found that BRAF mutations were six to 13 times more frequent in those with at least one MC1R variant form. Looking more closely, the investigators found that the risk for melanoma with BRAF mutations rose with increasing number of MC1R variant forms. Comparing data from melanoma patients and healthy controls, the risk for melanomas with BRAF mutations increased from seven times for individuals with one MC1R variant form, to 17 times for those with two variant forms, when compared with individuals with the standard MC1R.
The study results show that normal variations in the MC1R gene in Caucasians have a very specific effect on melanoma susceptibility. Additional inherited factors that affect susceptibility may also be present, but they have yet to be discovered. “The mechanism by which variant forms of the MC1R gene facilitate development of melanomas with BRAF mutations is currently unknown,” said Landi. “One possibility is that people with MC1R variant forms and variable pigmentation generate more reactive chemicals in their cells as a result of the ultraviolet exposure in sunlight. These reactive chemicals can induce mutations, like those in the BRAF gene, which may lead to cancer.”
Clinical trials for melanoma using pharmaceutical drugs directed against the BRAF gene are ongoing. Knowledge of predisposing factors in the development of BRAF mutations, such as MC1R, might aid prevention and therapeutic strategies in the future.
For more information about cancer, please visit the NCI Web site at http://www.cancer.gov, or call NCI’s Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's Medical Research Agency — includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.