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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: alteration + gene + called  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 14 for alteration gene called. (0.39 seconds) 
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A genetic pathway to language disorders
Science News - Nov 5, 2008
A gene called FOXP2 communicates with another gene, contactin-associated protein-like 2, or contactin for short. That process hampers contactin?s ability to ...
Cancer Survivor
WYTV, OH - Nov 28, 2008
Further tests showed JoAnn's tumors were HER-2 positive, an alteration, or over expression of the HER-2 gene we all carry in our bodies. ...
Does Hormone Treatment Predispose Patients To Breast Cancer?
Science Daily (press release) - Nov 21, 2008
The cell then behaves as if it had no BRCA1 gene, without involving a mutation (unlike hereditary forms, where the BRCA1 gene undergoes an alteration). ...
Myriad Genetics 2008 - A Retrospective
Trading Markets (press release), CA - Nov 12, 2008
Any alteration in a BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene, may make a person more susceptible to breast and ovarian cancer. A person may inherit such altered genes from ...MYGN
Researchers At IRB Barcelona Produce More Data On Key Genes In ...
Medical News Today (press release), UK - Nov 21, 2008
Now, for the first time, a study has shown that another gene, called Mitofusin 2 (Mfn2), which is decreased in diabetic patients, is also controlled by ...
Can We Create New Life?
San Diego Reader, CA - Nov 25, 2008
Or is the tremendous potential of genetic alteration simply too great to leave untapped? Whatever happens, People?s will be there to offer an alternative, ...
Genetic Links to Male Birth Defect
Ivanhoe, FL - Nov 20, 2008
Boys with persistent cryptorchidism (since before birth) were 17 times more likely to have a genetic alteration than those without the condition, ...
Home > News > Findings > Epigenetics: The Key to Good Health and a ...
Science Now, DC - Nov 17, 2008
In a nutshell, epigenetics means altering gene expression without messing with DNA sequences. It includes DNA methylation, a chemical alteration to DNA that ...
Subversion of the Constitution and Canons of the Episcopal Church:
Virtue Online, PA - Nov 22, 2008
An action of this sort would be unconstitutional because TEC's constitution does not provide for canonical alteration of its terms. ...
The Astrobiologists
Scoop.co.nz, New Zealand - Nov 24, 2008
And then you go through periods of aqueous alteration. And then these planetismals get larger. You get up to about 250 different minerals. ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: gene + 0.33 + web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

"But there are a lot of other poor retarded children who don't have anyone. I say John is lucky, but actually we've been the fortunate ones"
Aug 5, 2008  Dallas Morning News  (5 occurrences)
Researchers compile West Nile gene 'dictionary'
Reuters -
"It comprises a dictionary of all of these genes that are critical for West Nile virus infection of a cell," said Dr. Erol Fikrig of Yale University in New ...
Researchers Identify Hundreds of Human Genes that Impact West Nile ... Howard Hughes Medical Institute
all 32 news articles »

Palluxo! - Mac Dose of All Things Apple
Gene Munster: New iPods in Sept; No MacBook Touch, Yet.
BusinessWeek -
Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster has a note out today predicting a special Apple event in September focusing on new iPod and MacBook models. ...
Apple: Piper Sees Sept. Event With New Macs, New iPods Barron's Blogs
Piper Analyst Predicts New Apple iPods in September eFluxMedia
New iPods and Mac Notebooks to Be Released during Anticipated ... HULIQ (press release)
PC Pro - PC Retail
all 21 news articles »
Novel Method Quickens Discovery Of Gene Function
Science Daily (press release) -
"E. coli has more than four thousand genes, and the functions of one-fourth of these remain unknown," says Dr. Deborah Siegele, a biology professor at Texas ...
Embryonic-like Stem Cells Can Be Created Without Cancer-causing Gene
Science Daily (press release) -
6, 2008) ? A drug-like molecule called Wnt can be substituted for the cancer gene c-Myc, one of four genes added to adult cells to reprogram them to an ...

Oneindia
New Gene Mutation Implicated
Oneindia, India - Aug 6, 2008
Scientists at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation have identified a gene mutation that may cause the immune system to remain active even after fighting ...

The Baltic Course
Asper Biotech expands sales of breast cancer gene chip to ...
The Baltic Course, Latvia -
Asper Biotech is negotiating using the gene chip for discovering the risk of breast cancer on the Finnish market and is also hoping to expand its business ...
Gene G. Green, 83
Baltimore Sun, United States - Aug 6, 2008
By Frederick N. Rasmussen Gene G. Green, a homemaker and former longtime Roland Park resident, died July 29 of Alzheimer's disease at the Blakehurst ...
New Gene Therapy Kills Pancreatic Cancer Cells
Science Daily (press release) - Aug 5, 2008
In the July issue of Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, the researchers showed that combining a dietary agent with a gene-delivered cytokine effectively ...OTC:CTHP - BIT:MLM
Changes in the gene expression profile of Arabidopsis thaliana ...
7thSpace Interactive (press release), NY -
In this study, changes in gene expression of A. thaliana ecotype Ler infected with TEV have been explored using long-oligonucleotide arrays. ...
Natural born winners
ABC Science Online, Australia -
By Stephen Pincock Scientists have found a 'gene for speed' but does this guarantee elite performance? (Source: Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters) Whippet genes ...
Source: Google News

Influence of Life Stress on Depression: Moderation by a Polymorphism in the 5-HTT Gene -
A Caspi, K Sugden, TE Moffitt, A Taylor, IW Craig, … - Science, 2003 - sciencemag.org
... a browser that does not support current Web standards. ... was in the predicted direction
(b = ?0.33, SE = 0.16 ... showed that variations in the gene encoding the ...

Tumor Regression by Targeted Gene Delivery to the Neovasculature -
JD Hood, M Bednarski, R Frausto, S Guccione, RA … - Science, 2002 - sciencemag.org
... web browser does not support basic web standards ... an endothelial cell target for nonviral
gene delivery ... 5-mediated cell attachment to vitronectin (0.33 ?M versus ...

A Gene Expression Map for Caenorhabditis elegans -
SK Kim, J Lund, M Kiraly, K Duke, M Jiang, JM … - Science, 2001 - sciencemag.org
... 42, 6, 0.33. ... Then, to assess the stability of the gene expression terrain map, we
either ... a high degree of overlap between the various derived maps [Web Links 2 ...

… Insulin Sensitivity and Obesity Resistance in Mice Lacking the Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase-1B Gene -
M Elchebly, P Payette, E Michaliszyn, W Cromlish, … - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... using a browser that does not support current Web standards ... 1. Gene targeting of
the PTP-1B locus ... ml), 0.30 ? 0.02, 0.98 ? 0.32, ND, 0.97 ? 0.30, 0.33 ? 0.08, 0.45 ...

Linkage of Adhesion, Filamentous Growth, and Virulence in Candida albicans to a Single Gene, INT1 -
CA Gale, CM Bendel, M McClellan, M Hauser, JM … - Science, 1998 - sciencemag.org
... are using a browser that does not support current Web standards ... growth in C. albicans
is sensitive to gene dosage ... min in a total of 800 ?l of 0.33? RIPA buffer ...

… Hormone Resistance in Mice with Disruption of the Steroid Receptor Coactivator-1 (SRC-1) Gene -
J Xu, Y Qiu, FJ DeMayo, SY Tsai, MJ Tsai, BW O' … - Science, 1998 - sciencemag.org
... Search for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science (210) HighWire ... The position of
the HSV-TK gene is also indicated ... to the Cyc band were 0.20 (B), 0.33 (M), 0.41 ...

[PDF] A gene expression database for the molecular pharmacology of cancer -
U Scherf, DT Ross, M Waltham, LH Smith, JK Lee, L … - Nat Genet, 2000 - embnet.cl
... The gene-expression database (T ... molecular targets (T i ) is the product of experiments
in many different laboratories, as compiled at the DTP web site (http ...
-

Requirement of the Activation-Induced Deaminase (AID) Gene for Immunoglobulin Gene Conversion -
H Arakawa, J Hauschild, JM Buerstedde - Science, 2002 - sciencemag.org
... you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards ... suggests that
AID expression is essential for Ig gene conversion ... 0.05%, 5.65%, 0.29%, 0.33%, 3.05 ...

Prevalence of CYP2D6 gene duplication and its repercussion on the oxidative phenotype in a white … -
JAG Ag?ndez, MC Ledesma, JM Ladero, J Ben?tez - Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics, 1995 - nature.com
... 95% confidence limits, 14.4 to 79.3); subjects with one functional gene, 2.14 (95 ...
0.88 to 2.14); and subjects with three functional genes, 0.33 (95% confidence ...

[PDF] 2 ForageValue
R Hathaway, G Pirelli - extension.oregonstate.edu
... Ron Hathaway and Gene Pirelli Page 2. ... Phone: 541-737-3431. Web: http://osu.orst.edu/
dept/animal-sciences/foraglib.htm Page 5. ... 93 53 12.4 0.33 0.21 Wheat hay ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Nanophthalmos caused by an alteration in a gene called MFRP

Johns Hopkins researchers at the Wilmer Eye Institute have discovered the first human gene mutation that causes extreme hyperopia.

The researchers report that nanophthalmos is a rare, potentially blinding disorder caused by an alteration in a gene called MFRP that helps control eye growth and regulates the organ's shape and focus.

The study is described in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

 
" The MFRP protein is only made in a tiny portion of the human eye, and it can alter eye refraction, or focus," said Olof Sundin, at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in the Wilmer Eye Institute.
" We hope this protein holds the key to unlocking not only nanophthalmos, but other forms of farsightedness and nearsightedness as well."

Hyperopia ( also called farsightedness ) and myopia ( nearsightedness ) -- the ability to see only distant or near objects clearly, respectively -- stems from the complex growth of the human eye.

All human eyes have a slight degree of farsightedness at birth. As the child grows and gains more visual experience, the eye adjusts its focus by growing, which changes the distance between the lens and the retina, the light-detecting layer of cells at the back of the eye.
Once the retina is the right distance from the lens for proper focus of images on the retina, a largely unknown mechanism that uses visual experience causes the eye to stop growing.

Due to natural genetic mutations, some eyes continue to grow beyond this point, causing nearsightedness.
Other mutations cause the eye to stop growing too soon, causing farsightedness.

In the case of nanophthalmos, a mutation in MFRP completely wipes out the function of the protein coded for by the gene.
In people with this condition, the retina is too close to the lens, but the lens and cornea, the eye's outermost layer, are of normal size and shape.

" Eyes with nanophthalmos still work quite well, despite these complications," said Sundin. " But the disease's secondary complications later in life, including glaucoma or detached retina, are far more severe and can lead to complete blindness."

One such patient with nanophthalmos, an Amish-Mennonite woman who was blind in one eye, came to the Wilmer Eye Institute in 1998 for treatment.
By reconstructing the woman's family tree, the researchers discovered that several living relatives also suffered from nanophthalmos, and four deceased relatives had been part of the classic Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health study in the 1970s that helped define the disease as genetic.

In Sundin's study, the researchers examined the woman's DNA for possible gene mutations causing nanophthalmos.

" Mutant MFRP was recently identified in mice as a cause of retinal degeneration, not extreme farsightedness," he said. "However, a mouse's eyes do not adjust their focus through growth like human eyes do, so MFRP has a completely different function in mice and was not assumed to alter eye refraction in humans," Sundin said.

The research team successfully mapped the MFRP gene mutation in humans and discovered that the protein was completely missing from nanophthalmos patients.

In a normal human eye, the MFRP protein is located on the surface of the retinal pigment epithelium ( RPE ), which is located beneath the retina and helps maintain photoreceptors, the eye's light-detecting cells. Blindness occurs when these cells die after detachment of the retina from the RPE.

Beneath the RPE are two layers of structural tissue that give the eye its shape. During childhood, these tissues stretch, like a balloon, as the eye grows. " The RPE is believed to be the key link in signaling these tissues to stretch," said Sundin. " And MFRP, located exclusively in the RPE and nowhere else in the body, is likely involved in that signaling process."

Source: Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, 2005
 
 
 
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