‘Headed down the wrong road’: The quest for precision medicine distracts us from what already works – Genetic Literacy Project

Human health and biomedical science have been transformed in tandem over the past two centuries. From around 1850 to 1920, better nutrition and prevention of epidemic infections were the main contributors to massive improvements in life expectancy and reductions in infant and maternal mortality. These challenges have now receded for much of the world. Chronic diseases have become the principal threats to a healthy lifespan, and in the past half century we have seen a second wave of improved health, above all from enormous gains in control of cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Whereas the increase in life expectancy in the industrialized world from about 50 years in 1900 to nearly 70 years in 1950 is well-known, the addition of nearly a decade in life expectancy since 1970 is far less appreciated. But a rich body of theoretical and practical experience on what drove this more recent wave of success yields a clear set of principles that are securely established as foundational concepts in biomedical and related sciences.

What does transformational progress in reducing the burden of chronic disease look like and how did it happen? What can it tell us about the most promising pathways for future population-wide advances in health?

About two-thirds of all deaths in the United States and most industrialized countries are caused by cardiovascular disease (CVD) or cancer. Although the burden and character of both these disease categories have evolved dramatically in recent decades, for CVD the magnitude of the reduction in incidence (occurrence of new cases, both fatal or nonfatal), prevalence (proportion of the population living with a chronic condition), and death toll in the past 60 years is not widely appreciated. Mortality rates from coronary heart disease (CHD), the most common form of CVD, in the United States peaked in 1968, and have declined by 2%-3% every year since, until the past two years. The total reduction, after adjusting for changes in the age structure of the population, is now over 75%. Though CVD of course remains common, there are at least six hundred thousand fewer CVD deaths per year in the United States as result of this decline, and the total number of deaths averted since 1968 is on the order of twenty million. This unprecedented success in reducing the burden of the leading cause of death in industrialized countries was achieved not by any single intervention, but through advances along multiple pathways: the development of a clear understanding of the etiologic process; determined efforts to create public awareness, especially about the role of diet and physical activity; successful policy interventions to promote such things as low-fat dairy products and removal of trans fats from food items; introduction of safe, cheap, and effective medications to treat causal risk factors such as high cholesterol and blood pressure; and improved treatment of acute cases and advanced disease of the coronary arteries. Rapid declines in mortality from stroke, the other component of CVD, have been even larger than the declines from CHD, and are continuing as well.

Although the magnitude is considerably smaller, progress has now been made in lowering cancer death rates. Age-adjusted total cancer mortalityhas declined over 30%in the past 25 years in the United States. Reduction in tobacco use is the most important factor, and for men accounts for 40%-50% of the overall decline in all cancer deaths. Male smoking prevalence rates have dropped from 65% to 20% in the past 70 years. Lung cancer mortality has declined 50% in men since 1991; colon cancer deaths fell by 50% for both sexes; breast cancer deaths in women are now 40% lower. Cervical cancer death rates have declined by 60% since 1975, and prostate cancer mortality has declined by more than 50% since 1994.

Cancer, of course, is a composite of a wide range of tumors, each with distinct causes, natural histories, and challenges to prevention, detection, and treatment. Nonetheless, the main drivers can be identified. The great decline in smoking is responsible for reductions in lung cancer in both sexes and for fewer deaths from laryngeal and likely bladder cancer. Widespread adoption of technologies that permit early diagnosis (for breast and prostate cancer) or detection of premalignant states (cervix and colon) appear to have been the largest contributors to the reductions in mortality of these cancers, but improved surgical techniques and treatment options have probably played a role as well.

Thus modern biomedicine, especially the component focused on prevention, has brought transformational change not only to infectious diseases but to chronic diseases that less than five decades ago posed hopeless challenges. In the course of this transformation, we have accumulated a rich knowledge base of what research, what tools, and what implementation strategies work in reducing the burden of disease and death.

Throughout most of this remarkable period of improved public health, the field of genetics functioned within well-defined subdisciplines in such diverse areas as selective breeding of animals and improvement of crop yields, statistical modeling of heredity, and experimental work to understand monogenic disorders. One of the most significant accomplishments early on in genetics was the clear demonstration that most common or complex traits were highly polygenicthat is, they resulted from the combined small effects of many genes. Characterization of the double helix structure of DNA in 1953 and parsing how genes are expressed in terms of molecular function ushered in a new era of intense focus on the molecular pathways that shape the growth and maturation of the organism. In the 1980s the advent of faster, more efficient gene sequencing technology ignited an explosion of new research opportunities, and eventually the transformation of genetics, a reasonably discrete scientific discipline, into genomics, a vastly more open-ended project with its sights set on establishing a precise, mechanistic description of the fundamental rules of biologynot only of intergenerational transfer of information via germline DNA, the traditional focus of genetic research, but of the causal sequence underlying virtually all disease processes. The launching pad for this new era was the Human Genome Project, led in its first phase by James Watson, codiscoverer of the double helix. At a projected cost of $3 billion, only the federal government, primarily the National Institutes of Health, could afford such a large and focused endeavor.

This massive project encouraged people in the genomics community to see themselves as transformational actors in all forms of medical research, and to promise equally transformative benefits for health. As NIH proclaims in its mission statement the goal of NIH research is to acquire new knowledge to help prevent, detect, diagnose, and treat disease and disability. Genomics became key to that mission. In June 2000, at the ceremony hosted by President Bill Clinton announcing the completion of the Human Genome Project, the world was offered the hope that genome science will revolutionize the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of most, if not all, human diseases. Twenty years on, the scale of investment, the dynamism within the field, and the far-reaching claims for transformational impact on health and medicine have only accelerated.

Genomics has further matured since 2000, and broadened into an open-ended pursuit spanning domains from how cells regulate metabolic activity to the impact of all environmental exposures that individuals encounter over their lifetime. As a consequence, an enormous growth in resources devoted to research, training, technology development, and implementation, including a substantial de facto reallocation of resources that had been used in traditional biomedical disciplines, has been directed to genomics-oriented biomedicine. NIH, with its $39 billion annual budget, has aggressively promoted this agenda, and currently invests roughly half its resources in genomics-related research. In parallel, NIH spends less and less on research into prevention and public health. In pursuit of the goal to make genomics the basis for a new era of precision medicine, NIH Director Francis Collins has launched the All of Us research program, with a goal of recruiting one million Americans to have their whole genome sequenced, at a total cost of about $1 billion. NIH continues to advance an undiminished message of promise for this science, as Collins declared in May 2018: We would expect to see more effective prevention of many diseases, fewer diagnoses of serious illness, and an extension in health span. Genomics science is now being offered as the foundation for a population-based medicine of the future.

We thus appear to be in the early stages of a decisive transition between the multifaceted approach that has yielded such progress over the past two centuries, and the emerging new model driven by genomic sciences and captured by the term precision medicine. What, then, should we expect from genomics and personalized medicine in meeting the enormous chronic health challenges that remain, such as diabetes, dementia, arthritis, renal failureand, of course, CVD and cancer? And what about the huge challenges presented by violence and suicide? Based on well-established principles, drawn from the history of biomedicine and public health, are the promissory notes issued by genomics likely to be cashed for value? Does the evidence of success from the first two decades of the genomics era justify the original and continued predictions of transformational progress in population health?

The current undeniable crisis within the health care delivery system notwithstanding, we now stand on a massive edifice of technology and basic biology. We can muster a vast array of effective pharmacologic agents, transplant many solid organs, and perform extraordinarily complex surgical procedures; we can detect and treat many conditions in their earliest stages; we have developed many ways of preventing disease before it starts, especially with the weapons of social policy. At the core of these advances lies a set of principles about what causes disease and how large-scale population-level improvements are achieved.

In the middle of the nineteenth century, the great German pathologist and public health advocate Rudolf Virchow declared mass disease means society is out of joint. A more contemporary framing of that principle would emphasize that like the rest of the animal and plant kingdom, humans long evolutionary lineage has left us well adapted to life on this planet. As a corollary, the vast majority of health risk, certainly more than 90%, is derived from deleterious environmental exposure over our life course, not information encoded in our DNA. Human genetic adaptability is no match for newly emerging threats to health, as the history of epidemics shows. When a new agent appears on the scene, whether cholera, a new flu virus variant, cigarette smoking, or a huge increase in animal fat consumption, the human genome is unable to prevent the premature deaths of millions of humans. In other words, the human genome does not express itself as a dominant or primary cause of mass disease.

Occasionally, evolutionary forces have conferred new protective adaptations to region-specific epidemicsthe role of sickle-cell disease and thalassemia in reducing risk of severe malaria among some African populations is the paradigmatic example here. But the genetic repertoire of our species leaves us susceptible to many noxious exposures that vary with time and place too rapidly for evolutionary forces to react to. Mass disease with a global scopeillnesses that occur in at least 5%-10% of the worlds populationalmost always occur because of widespread insults that arise external to the organism, whether it be the sanitary conditions in medieval cities that gave rise to plague, or the conditions of trench warfare that contributed to the 1918 flu pandemic. Mass diseases are products of the societies in which we live.

In earlier periods, both insufficient total calories and inadequate sources of specific nutrients were the primary drivers of risk. In the modern era, all too often excessive exposure to substances that are inhaled, ingested, or absorbed through the skin are the fundamental causes of common disease. The transformational events in our progress against chronic disease have been driven by mitigation of those exposures through a familiar litany of interventions such as vaccination, improved diet, and altered behavior. What we have learned about disease, medicine, and population health over the past two centuries tells us that the primary domain of interest for disease prevention consists of external factors, which are products of sick societies, rather than heritable factors that modify individual-level risk. From this perspective, the prediction that precision genomic medicine will lead to population-wide health demands a sharp break from the source of such benefits in the past.

The introduction of genomics into the mainstream of biomedical research violates another historical precedent. Though technology has clearly played a key role in helping build the current medical armamentariumfrom imaging to clinical chemistry to drug developmentwith rare exception those technological advances emerged from focused research on a disease challenge (vaccines), had self-evident utility at the moment of discovery (the Roentgenogram), or were imported from outside the medical enterprise (lasers, fiber optics). Scientific advances that have led to improved health have nearly always been the result of research that matched technologies to specific human health problems and their clinical solution.

The grand theory of human molecular genetics is that the gene is a code that needs only to be deciphered in order to solve the problem of human disease. This theory arose in the 1950s simultaneously with, and reinforced by, the development of modern computer science, with coding of programs at its root. A few decades later, as we have noted, genomics developed as a laboratory-based technology, erupting into widespread use with the development of rapid and accurate sequencing methods. Only then was genomics injected into mainstream biomedicine, and retrofitted to address problems beyond its inherent scope. As applied to clinical medicine, DNA sequencing technology is first and foremost a tool to study germline errors in the code, preeminently Mendelian (single-gene) traits. The ethos of genetic determinism, and the irresistible allure of technological solutions, have opened the door for the adoption of genomics for the study of conditions where it has no or minimal relevancenamely most, if not all, human diseases. Sequencing (and the rapid acceleration of its throughput) was quickly promoted as a tool for gene mapping, and thereby attracted much broader research interest. The current wave of large-scale gene-mapping projects has been justified through an appeal to genetic determinismmore causal knowledge self-evidently must lead to solutions. This new causal knowledge would come, in ways we could not foresee, from as-yet-unexplored domains.

When tested, however, these hypotheses have not, to date, been adequately verified. Likewise, the effect of individual genetic variants being sought have been grossly overestimated, in clear contradiction of the established theory of the supposed polygenic inheritance of complex traits. The outcome was almost preordainedgenomic theory emerged without feedback from the clinical or any other empirical setting, and it advanced and captured increasing swaths of biomedical science without evidence of improved population-wide medical advance. Indeed, the more we learn about the genome, the more distant it seems to be from a role as a causative agent in most widespread diseases. We have every reason to believe that the same will be true for those diseases where the etiology remains obscure.

Beyond an appeal to principles, we now have the accumulated experience of some 25 years of genomic research, with a few projects reaching back as far as the 1970s. Anything approaching a broad summary of this rapidly evolving science is clearly beyond our scope here. However, an empirical basis for our concerns is required, and several conclusions have now achieved general consensus in the academic community. First, however, it is necessary to reaffirm what no one disputesthat adequate support for all branches of science is an essential investment in the infrastructure of modern society. Nor can those investments be limited to science that promises near-term benefits. For genomics at the present, this trade-off was articulated by former National Cancer Institute director Harold Varmuss sentiment that genomics is a way to do science, not medicine. Second, the advent of genomic technology has already generated a huge array of new tools beyond DNA sequencing that have transformed many lab sciences, and advanced public health, for example contributing crucially to our understanding of the spread of viruses in epidemics and the evolution of drug resistance in microorganisms, to new diagnostic assays, and to immunotherapy for cancer.

Major changes in population health, and extension of healthy years of life, however, belong to a dimension far removed from these incremental, niche advances, as beneficial as they are for many patients.

Enthusiasm for genomics and precision medicine builds on expectations for major scientific and medical progress in at least five major areas.

1. Enabling disease prediction.Although thousands of familial, genetic syndromes had been catalogued in the pre-genomic era, it is now possible to define the DNA sequence variations in great detail, and early success with cystic fibrosis, the so-called BRCA complex related to breast cancer, and Huntingtons disease offered the promise of much wider translational success for genomics. As noted, however, for most diseases the impacts for specific genetic factors are small, and studies of unprecedented size were required. Many of these have now been completedat enormous cost, needless to sayand a robust literature exists for common disorders such as CHD, diabetes, hypertension, obesity, and other metabolic traits.

Focusing on two pressing public health concerns of the moment, CHD and diabetes, we have conclusive evidence regarding risk prediction from DNA markers. Collectively representing cohorts of almost half a million patients, four major studies have now published virtually identical results. As is well known, the odds of dying from CHD is driven by four major risk factors: elevated cholesterol, cigarette smoking, high blood pressure, and diabetes. After accounting for these easily measured traits, DNA markers offer trivial additional information, perhaps identifying 2%-3% of individuals who might be reclassified as low or high risk. The sole response to this information would be adjustment of the dose of a cholesterol-reducing statin at a younger age. Roughly 80%-90% of the risk of the common adult form of diabetes, type 2 diabetes, can be determined from body mass index (BMI; a simple ratio of height to weight), and randomized trials have shown that in almost half of patients type 2 diabetes can be prevented, and indeed normal glucose control restored, with weight loss. Regular fitness activity and cessation of smoking also modify risk. The very large studies already completed demonstrate that virtually no additive predictive information can be derived from more genome-wide searches for additional risk variants. Similar knowledge has emerged for hypertension, stroke, dementia, and numerous other conditions.

Genetic prediction of cancers similarly struggles with predictors that are too weak in most cases to be useful in clinical practice. For example, in a very large European database in which the average lifetime risk of breast cancer is 5.1%, the risk for women in the top 5% of gene scores is 12%, and in the bottom 25% it was 2.4%. These results have no impact on clinical practice: preemptive invasive procedures cannot be justified for a group of women whose likelihood of not getting breast cancer is 88%, and 2.4% risk is still too high to abandon screening.

2.Providing critical new insights into molecular pathways.The rise of genomics has encouraged the view that once the DNA mutations underlying a trait have been identified, no matter how small, downstream metabolic consequences would be revealed and, along with them, targets for clinical intervention. Efforts to define cell-based pathways using molecular technology have in fact met with some success. We now know, for example, much more about immune function, control of fetal hemoglobin, and lipid regulatory mechanisms, in large part through application of genetic and molecular technology. However, most metabolic networks are so intricate, redundant, and multidimensional that following Ariadnes thread is mere childs play compared with an attempt to move from identifying a mutation to tracing that mutation to a specific physiological outcome. Complexity involved in inference from genotype to organism has been evident for years. In sickle cell anemia, for example, an apparently simple genetic changethe single nucleotide substitution of adenine for thymine in the hemoglobin geneproduces strokes, pulmonary hemorrhage, painful bony crises, and enhanced susceptibility to the pneumococcus bacteria. The linkage of genetic change to clinical manifestation is sufficiently complex that six decades after the underlying molecular basis of the disorder was discovered, we still have no specific therapy for the condition.

A technique that will knock out altogether the action of a gene almost invariably does not lead to the expected observable consequence in the organism, and there is as yet little evidence that genome-wide association studies that statistically link multiple genetic sites to risk markers for diseases are leading to significant improvement in understanding pathophysiologic processes. The rare successes that have been achieved (for example, identification of an allelic variant in the genetic locus PCSK9 that influences cholesterol metabolism) are still being derived from study populations where the link between risk and genetics (for example, in high-risk families) was already long-established. Living organisms are simply too complex to yield up a set of fundamental laws, and instead reveal more and more intricate processes and networks that wriggle and squirm across time and space, refusing to cast a fixed image.

3. Isolating genetic mutations that predispose patients to severe adverse drug reactions.Pharmaceutical agents are essentially foreign bodies, as far as our species is concerned, that evolution has never been called on to protect us from. It should be unsurprising, then, that many drugs have side effects, as well as some variation in absorption, metabolism, or effect depending on the individual. Genetic predisposition therefore can play a role in modulating person-level response. Some important successes have been achieved, especially in the identification of people at risk for severe adverse reactions. Early in the experience of so-called pharmacogenomic testing, variation in the efficacy of drugs used to prevent blood clots was identified. The added value of characterizing the relevant genes has now been studied in clinical trials. The most important examples are warfarin and clopidogrel, drugs that inhibit clotting by modifying platelet function. Both have significant side effects. Clopidogrel requires further metabolic conversion in the liver to make the active compound, and person-level variation in enzyme function produces the genetic effect. The original molecule was reformulated to avoid this variability in response; the most recent agent to become available, ticagrelor, avoids the between-person variability seen with clopidogrel, and thereby obviates the need for gene testing. Clearly drug companies have great incentive to market their drugs to the widest possible sales base to maximize profits, and want to avoid the step of gene testing if possible. Additional new drugsthe so-called non-vitamin K oral anticoagulantsare now showing promise for patients experiencing serious side effects from warfarin, further limiting the role of gene testing for that drug.

Current use of the new anticoagulants, however, requires conventional assays of platelet function. This return to traditional practiceomitting gene prediction and measuring the physiologic variables that are the direct target of the treatment (e.g., serum lipids, blood pressure, blood sugar)reaffirms our assertion that decision-making for individual patients will continue to be based on biochemical or other basic parameters. The complexities along the pathway from gene to physiologic outcomes are almost always influenced by too many other factors for us to be able to make clinically useful decisions from genetic information.

For other classes of common drugs, even these modest successes have rarely been seen. For example, a very extensive, long-running NIH-funded project on medications used for high blood pressure resulted in genetic scores that at best predicted 1-2 mmHg difference in response between individuals after testing; as above, they merely confirmed that direct measurement of blood pressure after you prescribe the drug will remain the basis of clinical practice. A vast array of other minor findings has been reported, but over time the scenarios we outline here have been repeated: either new agents replaced drugs that required gene testing (including a drug for hepatitis C), or the genetic effect was trivial. Pharmacogenomics overall has therefore not lived up to early expectations. Additional efforts face a stiff challenge to success, for reasons that should now be familiar: links between genomic makeup and patient response to drugs are too complex to have much clinical value, and actual measurement of physiological end points are almost always more informative.

4. Identifying targets for new drugs.At the very earliest stages of the genomic revolution, the pharmaceutical industry and innumerable start-up companies invested heavily in the search for novel targets that could be identified through DNA association studies. Though some new agents discovered from genetic research are in clinical trials (for example, a protein inhibitor for elevated triglycerides and an RNAi blocker for fatty liver disease), these efforts have yielded surprisingly little. In fact, a crisis has emerged with a drastic reduction in new drugs coming to market in the past two decades. An important exception relates to drugs influencing immune response, including autoimmune diseases. And there may well be drugs in the pharmaceutical pipeline based on genomic research that could yet translate into useful products.

5. Unlocking at long last the secrets of cancer, which after all, according to the current dominant theory, is a genetic disorder.Despite years of intense, well-funded research, progress toward effective treatment, let alone cure, of most cancers remains an elusive goal. To oversimplify the general proposition, harmful DNA mutations at least at some stage may drive the growth of tumor cells, and ultimately the metastases that prove fatal. Identifying driver mutations and blocking their effects could thus possibly offer cures. Unfortunately, the results across all these hope-filled propositions have, in sum, been dismal. From a historical perspective genomics is a young science, and the unexpected will occur with time. However, for some hypotheses, accumulating research is asymptotically approaching a null result.

The dominant theory in cancer biology remains gene-centric: either somatic mutations, occurring in the absence of known external cause, allow a clone of cells to escape from normal control of cell replication and death, or pathologic mutations in some less-defined way act at the earliest stages to drive growth and metastasis of tumor cells. Whereas it is incontrovertible that carcinogenic agents of diverse types, including viruses, ionizing radiation, and aromatic hydrocarbons, do cause pathologic mutations, a vigorous debate continues within oncology as to whether this is actually the process that triggers and sustains cancer development. For example, recent work demonstrates that normal tissue adjoining tumors harbors the same mutations as the tumors themselves; conversely, tumors transplanted from one model organism to another usually do not survive. In other words, the mutations themselves are clearly not the sole actors, or perhaps not even the causal driver, of tumor growth. Thus, a complementary field theory has been proposed that emphasizes tissue-level factors, particularly cell-to-cell communication. Recent experimental evidence now conclusively shows that at least some of these abnormal functional states, which cannot be explained in terms of mutations, must exist for tumors to propagate locally and, more importantly, to metastasize. Though this brief summary hardly does justice to a complex, rapidly evolving field, we hope it begins to communicate why large-scale sequencing projects of tumors have not delineated clear causal pathways, and more importantly why agents developed to block driver mutations have usually not met expectations, or, if they succeed, seem to act through entirely unexpected and independent mechanisms.

Despite these unresolved questions, substantial success has been achieved with several classes of new antitumor drugs. The drug imatinib mesylate, marketed as Gleevec, has been widely celebrated in this regard. Although it is the sole example in current use of target-selective therapy, it has led to lasting remission for some two thousand patients in the United States per year with chronic leukemia, without the debilitating side effects of chemotherapy. But Gleevecs success may be (and so far has been) hard to repeat: it works on a specific causal chromosomal abnormality of the sort that is uncommon in most cancers. Moreover, life-long therapy is required at an approximate average cost of $1 million per patient.

Biomarker-driven molecular research, leading to development of antibodies on the cell surface of individual tumors, has also met with substantial success. For example, a panel of genetic tests for individual tumors that allows better matches for drug therapy has entered the clinical arena. Immunotherapy, an important example of the transition from molecular research to translationespecially the so-called check point inhibitorscan specifically target solid tumors in about 15% of patients, although these are not genetic targets. An increasing, but small, proportion of patients with melanomas have attained durable long-term remission with a combination of new genetic/immunotherapies.

But the central theory of cancer as a genetic disorder, with its corollary that the ability to identify unique driver mutations will lead to therapies that can block their action, has not been verified. Instead, it has become a piece of a much more complex puzzle. Whereas any research toward safe, effective antitumor drugs is of enormous value, when entered onto the balance sheet of factors that account for the 30% decline in cancer rates achieved in the past several decades, the contribution of new curative agents developed through molecular techniques to improvements in health on a scale measurable in population-level statistics remains, at best, somewhere in the range of 2% or less. New knowledge will increase this contribution, yet predictions of a truly transformative role for treatment of advanced cancer lack empirical justification. Most invasive solid tumors have remained stubbornly resistant to curative or durable palliative therapy. At the same time, two new immunizing agents against viruses established to cause cancer in the past few decadesthe human papilloma virus that causes cervical cancer, and the hepatitis B virus that underlies most cases of hepatocellular carcinomapromise, if widely used, to virtually eradicate these two cancers without regard to genomic variability, potentially saving more than a million lives a year worldwide.

Many observers will no doubt find this account overly pessimistic. Numerous success stories have been omitted. The advances enabled by the advent of genomic technology are far-reaching and of great scientific importance. Whole subdisciplines, from human evolutionary history to epidemic surveillance and vaccine preparation for conditions such as Ebola and influenza, have indeed been transformed. But a key distinction is that these advances are due to the power of genomics when applied toagentsof human disease, not to the diseasehost. Many infectious organisms must take advantage of molecular targets on the surface of cells or be targets for killer white cells. Thus an understanding of species-specific susceptibility to bacteria or virusesfor example, pneumococcus or Ebolacan be very informative in vaccine preparation. Distinguishing molecular signatures of pathogens within a species has made outbreak investigation much more precise. Buthumangenomics and precision medicine have not transformed human health. Nor, in our view, is there a basis from which to argue that they will do socertainly not in any foreseeable future.

Meanwhile, the opportunity costs are enormous. To help bring them into focus, we offer a somber, indeed heart-breaking story that has played out in one of the oldestand thereby most matureexperiments to employ genomics as a tool to improve human health. The Pima Indians of the Sonoran Desert in central Arizona were deprived of irrigation water from the Gila River around 1900 when it was diverted upstream by commercial farmers. Isolated, and confronted with famine, they became dependent on food subsidies from the US Department of Agriculture, and adopted a diet low in nutritional value but high in calories. In the following decades an epidemic of obesity of unprecedented magnitude swept the reservation. The prevalence of type 2 diabetes rose to 50%, and even adolescents with the disease have now required dialysis for renal failure. In the 1970s, NIH established a research institute in nearby Phoenix to search for the unique genetic factors that predisposed the Pima to this crippling disease and use this knowledge to cure or prevent the disease. Despite five decades of research no important genetic mutations were identified, and the sum of available evidence showed that those susceptibility loci that could be isolated were no different, and no more common, in the Pima than in the majority US population.

The depths of the intellectual poverty of this long-running experiment can be summarized by the following quotation, posted as a research advance by the Phoenix group on the website of the director of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) in 2016: In a prospective study conducted between 1965 and 2007, NIDDK investigators followed children from Arizonas Gila River Indian Community for development of type 2 diabetes. They found that BMI and impaired glucose tolerance were strong predictors of type 2 diabetes, but other components of the metabolic syndrome were not. It should be noted here that the scientific observations highlighted in this advance was known to the Ayurvedic medical tradition in India in the fifth century BCE, and was certainly common knowledge in the modern era by the seventeenth century. Yet even today this genomic research continues along the line explored for so many years among Pima populations. The rationale for an NIDDK project started in 2015 states: When it comes to kidney disease years of exposure to diabetes may change the way the body reads its DNA, increasing the risk of kidney disease being exposed to high blood sugars or high blood pressure may cause people who have a genetic susceptibility to have kidney disease in the future.

About 10 years ago the Gila community broke off collaboration with NIDDK and mounted its own preventive campaigns based on weight control and increasing physical activity. The risk of hyperbole notwithstanding, this unhappy saga ranks with the Tuskegee Experiment as another egregious project where the natural history of a fatal illness in a vulnerable population was allowed to run its course, under the careful observation of government-funded scientists, in pursuit of a narrow, unjustified hypothesis, built on notions of genetic determinism and race-based susceptibility, while available preventive or curative alternative interventions were ignored or actively shunned.

We wonder if the story of the Gila River Indian Community, writ large, will be the outcome of the headlong rush toward precision medicine across the entire spectrum of biomedicine. In the cancer realm, for example, consider that fatty liver from obesity is now becoming a major cause of liver cancer in some countriesyet another widespread example of sick societies. Or pancreatic cancer, whose etiology has been an enigma, and for which early detection and effective treatment remain elusive goalsyet very recent evidence suggests fungal infection from the gut could play a major role. A similar causal pathway emerged between the Helicobacter pylori bacterium and stomach cancer, and treatment of this type of bacteria has had an important impact on peptic ulcer disease, and may yet influence the risk of stomach cancer. Preventive interventions for more cancers are almost certainly possible. The search for environmental causes of cancer proceeds apace, but the effort remains modest compared with the work expended on searching for genomic correlates. We have learned the importance of radiation, microorganisms, toxic chemicals, and lifestyle factors such as obesity, and (for breast cancer) age at first birth, but we still have much to learn about the nongenetic causes of cancer. Implementation of modalities to prevent and detect premalignant lesionsas with colonoscopycould achieve much less costly and more rapid downturns in cancer mortality than are likely to result from the long road to curative therapies derived from molecular research, which are often applied near the end-stage of disease.

Progress is also being observed in two other significant chronic disease challenges. There is a growing awareness that vascular disease has been underappreciated as a cause of dementia, and improving heart health is now accompanied by a welcome decline in incidence of dementia in the elderly. Type 2 diabetes is a major global threat to health, moving rapidly to nonindustrialized countries. As noted, whereas obesity accounts for 70%-80% of risk, and reversing the obesity epidemic has thus far proven difficult, type 2 diabetes incidence rates appear to have leveled off or declined in many countries. Randomized trials have demonstrated that weight loss of as little as 15 pounds can lead to a 40% reduction in onset of type 2 diabetes in high-risk patients, and return 40% of patients with recent onset of the disease to nondiabetic status. Policy to influence food production and sales, as well as eating patterns, is in its infancy and can boast only modest success, but that is clearly the only solution to the challenge of obesity and type 2 diabetes. It goes without saying that the opioid epidemic in the United States, which has cost 770,000 lives since 1999 and reduced overall life expectancy, is a poster child of a social disease whose amelioration will not be driven by precision genomic medicine.

We do not believe genomics and precision medicine will transform biomedicine and population health. Though the history of science will have the final word on this era, we believe that large segments of the biomedical community, supported by tens of billions of public dollars, are in effect headed down the wrong road, if not into a cul-de-sac. To understand this assertion, it is essential to recognize the distinction between transformational change and widespread niche advances. The concern that we have addressed here lies singularly with population health, with benefits accruing to millions. Scientific understanding of both the reasons for enormous gains in population-wide health, and the origins of disease, are being largely displaced by a reductionist, technology- and theory- (and career- and profit-) driven approach to health and medicine that remains largely unproven (and wildly expensive). Of course we want to explore and pursue many new research avenues, but the powerful legacy of genetic determinism and the devotion to technological solutions have narrowed the scope of research aimed at improving population health, and thus narrowed and reduced the benefits that biomedical science could and should be providing, right now.

Ironically, two decades into the genomics revolution life expectancy in the United States has declined for three consecutive years, the reduction in cardiovascular disease rates has leveled off, and a surge of opioid deaths has devastated many communities. These adverse events have no direct relationship to genomics or precision medicine, but just as clearly we have not observed the promised bonus of more effective prevention of many diseases, fewer diagnoses of serious illness, and an extension in health span. We could, of course, be accused of making a grossly premature judgment. Two decades is a reasonable interval, however, in which at a minimum to demonstrate proof-of-concept, and we see no evidence of that modest milestone having been reached. More to the point, we argue that genes as a cause and precision medicine as the cure violate basic precepts of health and medicine. Biomedical science should be reoriented and reprioritized to expand its scope in accord with what we actually know about health and disease, and to expand the benefits of science for all.

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'Headed down the wrong road': The quest for precision medicine distracts us from what already works - Genetic Literacy Project

NIH Director: Were on an Exponential Curve – The Atlantic

Collins later met a Methodist pastor, Sam MacMillan, who was a very willing partner for me, tolerating my blasphemous questions and assuring me that if God was real there would be answers. It was MacMillan who introduced Collins to the work of C.S. Lewis, starting with Mere Christianity.

I realized in the very first two or three pages of that book that most of my objections against faith were utterly simplistic. They were arguments from a schoolboy. Here was an Oxford intellectual giant who had traveled the same path from atheism to faith, and had a way of describing why that made sense that was utterly disarming. It was also very upsetting. It was not the answer I was looking for. But it was, for Collins, the answer he eventually found, and at age 27, he became a Christian.

The embrace of that faith transformed not only his relationship with God, but also how he viewed other people, and himself. They are all, as Lewis said, angels around you. And the notion therefore that it is okay to put yourself in the driver's seat in every way regardless of what effect that has on others, it's simply indefensible. I think it did take what had been for me a pretty strong ambitious driving approach and moderate it, not to say that I didn't retain a fair amount of that, but maybe in a somewhat more loving, forgiving approach.

When I asked him how he sees faith now, in his late 60s, compared to how he saw things in his late 20s, he told me, I think I've also arrived at a place where my faith has become a really strong support for dealing with life's struggles. It took me awhile, I thinkthat sense that God is sufficient and that I don't have to be strong in every circumstance.

I found that striking, particularly in this moment. One of my great puzzles when I first became a Christian is that verse, My grace is sufficient for you, because My strength is made perfect in your weakness, he told me. That was so completely upside down for me. Weakness? And now I embrace that with the fullness of everything around me when I'm realizing that my strength is inadequate, whether it's coronavirus or some family crisis, God's strength is always sufficient. That is a such a great comfort, but it took me a long time to get to the point of really owning that one.

Collins was the founder and creative force behind BioLogos, an organization that invites the church and the world to see the harmony between science and biblical faith. (BioLogos was launched at the time Collins was asked by President Obama to become the director of NIH, in April 2009, which required him having no other affiliations with any other organizations.)

I asked Collins what he hopes more Christians would understand about science and what he hopes more scientists would understand about faith.

To Christians I would say, think of science as a gift from the creator. The curiosity that we have been instilled with to understand how the universe works can inspire even greater awe of the creator. This gift could hardly be a threat to God, the author of it all. Celebrate what science can teach us. Think of science as a form of worship.

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NIH Director: Were on an Exponential Curve - The Atlantic

Weekly pick of brain tumour research news from around the world – Brain Tumour Research

The first symposium of the South West Brain Tumour Centre was held on Thursday at Derriford Hospital in Plymouth. During a fascinating and very well attended event, topics covered included the mechanism of tumour development, new drug targets, new biomarkers and brain tumour imaging. The South West Brain Tumour centre is of course one of the UK Centres of Excellence funded by Brain Tumour Research.

A really big cancer wide story this week is here Immune discovery 'may treat all cancer' applicable to some solid tumours but not yet brain it really shows the direction of travel toward immunotherapy I have recommended this book before but if interested please do read The Breakthrough by Charles Graeber it is available on Amazon and you can read reviews here - http://www.charlesgraeber.com.Researchers uncover novel drug target for glioblastoma by revealing a cellular pathway that appears to contribute to glioma stem cell spread and proliferation. This pathway shows that glioma stem cells ability to access key nutrients in their surrounding microenvironment is integral for their maintenance and spread. Finding a way to interrupt this feedback loop will be important for treating glioblastoma.

An intelligent molecule could significantly extend the lives of patients with glioblastoma, research finds. The molecule, called ZR2002, which can be administered orally and is capable of penetrating the blood-brain barrier, could delay the multiplication of glioblastoma stem cells resistant to standard treatment. According to scientists in the Metabolic Disorders and Complications Program at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) the ZR2002 molecule is designed to kill two birds with one stone: on top of attacking the tumour, it destroys its defence system.

Researchers find clues to drug resistance in medulloblastoma subtype.US scientists have identified specific types of cells that cause targeted treatment to fail in a subtype of medulloblastoma. They found while the majority of cells responded to treatment, diverse populations within the tumour continue to grow leadingto treatment resistance. They concluded that the diversity of cells within tumours allow them to become rapidly resistant to precisely targeted treatments," and that due to this tumour cell diversity, molecularly precise therapies should be used in combinations to be effective."

Nanoparticles deliver 'suicide gene' therapy to paediatric brain tumours growing in mice So-called "suicide genes" have been studied and used in cancer treatments for more than 25 years. Researchers report here that a type of biodegradable, lab-engineered nanoparticle they fashioned can successfully deliver a ''suicide gene'' to paediatric brain tumour cells implanted in the brains of mice.

According to a study that uncovers an unexpected connection between gliomas and neurodegenerative diseases a protein typically associated with neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimers might help scientists explore how gliomas become so aggressive. The new study, in mouse models and human brain tumour tissues, was published in Science Translational Medicine and found a significant expression of the protein TAU in glioma cells, especially in those patients with better prognoses. Patients with glioma are given a better prognosis when their tumour expresses a mutation in a gene called isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1). In this international collaborative study led by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III-UFIEC in Madrid, Spain, those IDHI mutations stimulated the expression of TAU. Then, the presence of TAU acted as a brake for the formation of new blood vessels, which are necessary for the aggressive behaviour of the tumours.

'Innovative research award' helps Colorado scientists block brain cancer escape routes Cancers used to be defined by where they grow in the body - lung cancer, skin cancer, brain cancer, etc. But work in recent decades has shown that cancers sharing specific genetic changes may have more in common than cancers that happen to grow in an area of the body. For example, lung cancers, skin cancers, and brain cancers may all be caused by mutation in a gene called BRAF. Drugs targeting BRAF have changed the treatment landscape for melanoma, an aggressive form of skin cancer, and are also in use against lung cancers and brain cancers with BRAF mutations. It is really worth clicking through to read more on this and the ultimate goal of identifying new potential targets for combination therapy and new agents that could be added to BRAF inhibiting drugs in brain cancer to keep the cancer from developing resistance.

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Genes Previously Linked to Heart Condition Disputed – Clinical OMICs News

A new analysis of available data has convinced a panel genomic experts that nine genes previously believed to be associated with a rare, genetic heart conditionlong QT syndromewere an erroneously linked to the condition, as revealed in a new study funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), a division of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Geneticists and heart specialists around the world had previously reported 17 genes to cause long QT syndrome. However, the Clinical Genome Resources (ClinGen) expert panel has critically reevaluated the scientific evidence for all 17 reported genes, and has concluded at least nine of the genes cannot be linked to the disease, and only three of the genes can be definitively associated with the most common form of the disease.

Long QT syndrome is caused by mutations in genes that regulate the hearts electrical activity. These mutations can cause the heart to have sudden, irregular heart rhythms, or arrhythmias. People with long QT syndrome can have arrythmias that are both unprovoked or as a result of stress and exercise. These arrythmias can be fatal.

Many people with long QT syndrome may be unaware they have the condition, unless they get an unrelated electrocardiogram, know their family history, and have undergone genetic testing.

Ever since the syndrome was described in 1957, researchers have engaged in a genetic race to identify the genes associated with it, which currently includes the 17 genes. By using such a standardized, evidence-based framework, the international ClinGen panel experts on long QT syndrome were able to classify the 17 genes into specific groups.

Three genes, KCNQ1, KCNH2 and SCN5A, had sufficient evidence to be implicated as definitive genetic causes for typical long QT syndrome. Four other genes had strong or definitive evidence supporting their role in causing atypical forms of long QT syndrome, particularly if they presented in the newborn period with associated heart block, seizures or delays in development.

The remaining ten genes were deemed to not have sufficient evidence to support a causal role in the syndrome. In fact, nine of these 10 remaining genes were placed in the limited or disputed category. The study authors suggest that these genes not be routinely tested in clinical settings when evaluating patients and families with long QT syndrome, because they lack sufficient scientific evidence as a cause for the condition.

This removal of genes from the testing list impacts genetic testing providers, who use research papers to determine which genes to include in their testing panels for diagnostic reporting to physicians. Published papers reporting gene-disease associations vary widely in their study design and strength of evidence to support their conclusions. Until recently, standard guidelines that can differentiate between genes found with strong and valid scientific approaches versus those with insufficient evidence did not exist. Clearly, this is a problematic approach, and led to several studies drawing early conclusions.

ClinGens expert panels include researchers, clinicians, and genetic counselors who apply an evidence-based framework in evaluating the available data from research papers to place gene-disease relationships into definitive, strong, moderate, limited, disputed, or refuted categories.

ClinGen is an impressive community effort. With over 1,000 researchers and clinicians from 30 countries volunteering their time and expertise, ClinGen is providing much needed clarity for the clinical genomics community regarding which gene-disease pairs have sufficient evidence to be used clinically, said Erin Ramos, Ph.D., project scientist for ClinGen and program director in the Division of Genomic Medicine at NHGRI.

Our study highlights the need to take a step back and to critically evaluate the level of evidence for all reported gene-disease associations, especially when applying genetic testing for diagnostic purposes in our patients. Testing genes with insufficient evidence to support disease causation only creates a risk of inappropriately interpreting the genetic information and leading to patient harm, says Michael Gollob, M.D., senior author of the paper and researcher at the Toronto General Hospital Research Institute.

Moreover, testing for genes not definitively associated with long QT syndrome can result in inappropriate and costly medical interventions such as implanting of a cardioverter-defibrillator.

This is not the first time a team at ClinGen has clarified published research for clinicians. The same team of researchers published a similar study in 2018, covering another heart condition called Brugada syndrome. In 2019, the American Society of Human Genetics considered the paper as one of the top 10 advances in genomic medicine.

ClinGen is an NHGRI-funded resource created to define the clinical relevance and validity of genes associated with various genetic disorders. It comprises more than 20 expert panels working on a variety of genetically influenced diseases, ensuring the reliability of gene-disease linkage. This work is also instrumental in determining which specific genes should be targeted for further study in precision medicine and research.

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Genes Previously Linked to Heart Condition Disputed - Clinical OMICs News

CRISPR Used to Silence Crucial Hepatitis B Gene – Medscape

The CRISPR gene-editing tool can be used to silence an important hepatitisB virus gene, a proof-of-concept invitro study suggests.

"It's the first time we've seen CRISPR editing done in a hepatitisB model," said Douglas Dieterich, MD, director of the Institute of Liver Medicine and professor of medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

HepatitisB can lead to liver disease and is the primary cause of hepatocellular carcinoma. In 2015, more than 250million people around the world were infected with the virus, according to the World Health Organization.

For their study, investigator Hao Zhou, from The First Hospital of Jilin University in China and the Department of Medicine at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, and colleagues targeted the Sgene. Zhou presented the findings at the Liver Meeting 2019 in Boston.

The Sgene gives rise to the hepatitisB surface antigen, the presence of which indicates that a person is infected with the virus. "The question is whether it's the right target," Dieterich told Medscape Medical News.

Reducing the amount of the hepatitisB surface antigen is a "good idea" because that's what is believed to inhibit the immune system from clearing the virus. Doing so might help the immune system recover and clear the virus, "with a little help from some antivirals," explained Dieterich, who was not involved in the study.

However, "the surface is not the only DNA that's integrated into the host genome," he pointed out. "I think maybe a broader application might be necessary to actually get the hepatitisB genome out of the hepatocytes."

Zhou's team used a newer CRISPR approach, called CRISPR-STOP, for their gene-editing procedure.

"The idea is that CRISPR-STOP can be as efficient as standard CRISPR editing, but it's safer," said Kiran Musunuru, MD, PhD, associate professor of cardiovascular medicine and genetics at Penn Medicine in Philadelphia, who was not involved in the study. Musunuru is cofounder of and senior scientific advisor at Verve Therapeutics, a company using gene editing to prevent cardiovascular disease.

The standard CRISPR-Cas9 approach requires a double-strand break in the genome, and the problem with that is it introduces the possibility for "mischief," he explained. "If you have more than one double-strand break occurring in the human genome at the same time, you have the potential for different parts of different chromosomes coming together in the wrong ways and then causing problems."

Instead of creating a double-strand break, CRISPR-STOP uses a base editor to chemically modify the DNA base from one base to another and introduce a stop codon into the target gene sequence, effectively hamstringing the ability of the target gene to produce a functional protein.

This is a very nice, clean way to turn off a gene effectively.

"This is a very nice, clean way to turn off a gene effectively," Musunuru told Medscape Medical News.

For their CRISPR-STOP procedure, Zhou's team first transduced liver cells infected with the hepatitisB virus using a base editor called AncBE4max. Next, to activate the base editor so that gene editing could begin, they transduced the cells with one of two lentivectors: one encoded for single-guide RNA that targets the Sgene; and an empty one, which served as the control.

With the gene-editing approach, 71% of the liver cells that expressed the base editor gained the desired stop codon in the target gene.

"That's a very robust number," said Musunuru.

In addition, hepatitisB surface antigen secretion was reduced by 92% with the gene-editing approach.

The investigators report a high degree of conservativity for hepatitisB genotypesB, C, F, and H. Specifically, 94% of the Sgene sequence was conserved for genotypeB, 92% for genotypeC, 91% for genotypeF, and 71% for genotypeH.

The Liver Meeting 2019: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD): Abstract86. Presented November10, 2019.

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CRISPR Used to Silence Crucial Hepatitis B Gene - Medscape

MaxQ AI Partners with Arterys to Further Expand Global Access to the Company’s Innovative Intracranial Hemorrhage (ICH) Detection Solutions – BioSpace

Radiologists and care providers around the world will have access to MaxQ AIs ACCIPIO ICH and Stroke Platform through Arterys cloud-native medical imaging platform.

Tel Aviv, Israel and San Francisco, CA November 13, 2019 MaxQ AI, the industry-leading medical diagnostic AI company, today announced a new partnership agreement with Arterys, the leader in web-based, AI-powered medical image analysis platform. As part of the agreement, MaxQ AIs ACCIPIO ICH and Stroke Platform, which utilizes deep learning technologies to analyze medical imaging data such as non-contrast head CT images, will be available on the Arterys Marketplace. An internet-based medical imaging AI platform for radiology, care providers will have easy access to both MaxQ AIs FDA Cleared and CE Approved Accipio Ix and Accipio Ax intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) detection software through the Arterys Marketplace along with future solutions in development for investigational use.

The Arterys Marketplace further expands access to our extensive suite of AI-powered solutions to radiologists through a user-friendly and collaborative platform, said Gene Saragnese, CEO of MaxQ AI. This collaboration will help meet the growing demand for AI-powered diagnostic solutions that augment radiologists in acute care settings worldwide. Our Accipio ICH detection solutions for stroke, TBI, and head trauma hold great promise for healthcare through significant quality, clinical, and economic advancement in supporting care providers to make the correct minutes matter call.

MaxQ AIs ACCIPIO ICH and Stroke Platform provide deep clinical insight and actionable data in minutes that will enable physicians across the world to make faster assessments of stroke, traumatic brain injury, and head trauma in any location, at any time. Accipio Ix enables automatic identification and prioritization of non-contrast head CT images with suspected ICH. Accipio Ax provides automatic slice-level annotation of suspected ICH. Both Accipio Ix and Ax are FDA Cleared and CE Approved. The Accipio platform is comprised of Class II and Class III medical devices with significant clinical evidence.

The Arterys Marketplace provides radiologists with high-performance medical imaging viewing, AI-based analysis for interpretation, and collaborative case sharing all through a web browser. The Marketplace also enables AI software developers and innovators to seamlessly distribute both FDA-cleared clinical applications and earlier-stage AI innovations (for research use only) to clinical environments. The Marketplace offers clinical applications for the analysis of cardiac MR, lung CT, and chest x-ray images and now non-contrast head CT images due to the partnership with MaxQ AI. Arterys is compliant with patient data privacy regulations and standards, ensuring security in the cloud, and its products are cleared for commercial sale in over 100 countries.

We are excited to have MaxQ AI join the Arterys Marketplace, which was created to expand access to and drive AI-powered innovations in healthcare, said John Axerio-Cilies, Chief Technology Officer & Founder of Arterys. MaxQ AI shares our commitment to advance healthcare for everyone, and its powerful and proven Accipio solutions and algorithms will further expand our offerings to the latest cutting-edge AI-driven solutions that are designed to reduce variability and subjectivity in clinical diagnoses and alleviate the burden of growing workloads faced by radiologists.

MaxQ AI will demonstrate the companys full suite of Accipio solutions during the upcoming Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) 2019 Annual Meeting in Chicago (Booth 8345 in the North Hall). MaxQ AI will be highlighted as an Arterys partner at the Arterys exhibit in the AI Showcase (Booth 10918 in the North Hall Level 2).

About MaxQ AI, Ltd.

MaxQ AI is at the forefront of Medical Diagnostic AI. We are transforming healthcare by empowering physicians to provide smarter care with artificial intelligence (AI) clinical insights. Based in Tel Aviv, Israel and Andover, MA, USA, our team of deep learning and machine vision experts develop innovative software that uses AI to interpret medical images and surrounding patient data. Working with world-class clinical and industry partners, our software enables physicians to make faster, more accurate decisions when diagnosing stroke, traumatic brain injury, and other serious conditions. To learn more, visit http://www.maxq.ai or follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

About Arterys, Inc.

Arterys was founded in 2011 to facilitate the global advancement of healthcare and enable insight-driven medicine by leveraging cloud computation and artificial intelligence. Its first major milestone was the first-ever clearance of cloud-based deep learning software for clinical use. Arterys offers a suite of applications for clinicians on the Arterys network via its cloud-based, web-enabled AI medical imaging platform. The Arterys enterprise imaging platform enables use and interaction with deep learning algorithms in real-time, augmenting the clinician workflow, and expediting image interpretation.

The companys mission is to reduce variability and subjectivity in clinical diagnoses and alleviate the enormous workloads radiologists face. With AI, the company is improving the accuracy and consistency in imaging interpretation across practices. Arterys is now leveraging its medical imaging cloud platform to make medical imaging vastly more automated, quantitative and useful. Learn more at https://www.arterys.com/ or follow Arterys on Twitter @ArterysInc and LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/arterys/.

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MaxQ AI Partners with Arterys to Further Expand Global Access to the Company's Innovative Intracranial Hemorrhage (ICH) Detection Solutions - BioSpace

Stoke Therapeutics to Present New Preclinical Data on STK-001 at the American Epilepsy Society Annual Meeting – Business Wire

BEDFORD, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Stoke Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: STOK), a biotechnology company pioneering a new way to treat the underlying cause of severe genetic diseases by precisely upregulating protein expression, today announced that it will present new preclinical data on STK-001, a potential new disease-modifying medicine for the treatment of Dravet syndrome, at the American Epilepsy Society (AES) Annual Meeting, taking place December 6-10, 2019 in Baltimore.

Data will be presented from preclinical studies demonstrating the effects of STK-001, a proprietary antisense oligonucleotide (ASO), in the Scn1a-linked Dravet syndrome mouse model and in non-human primates. New results of EEG recordings used to measure the frequency of seizures in Dravet syndrome mice treated with STK-001 compared to placebo will be presented, as well as data on STK-001 biodistribution, target engagement, pharmacodynamics, safety and tolerability in non-human primates.

Dravet syndrome is a severe and progressive form of genetic epilepsy that affects approximately 35,000 people in the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, France and the United Kingdom. Approximately 85% of Dravet syndrome cases are caused by spontaneous, heterozygous loss of function mutations in the SCN1A gene, resulting in 50% Nav1.1 protein expression.

These data support our belief that by restoring the Nav1.1 protein to physiological levels, STK-001 has the potential to provide a gene-specific, disease-modifying therapy for people living with Dravet syndrome, said Edward M. Kaye, M.D., Chief Executive Officer of Stoke Therapeutics. We look forward to continuing to advance STK-001 toward the clinic and, in the meantime, to sharing and discussing these important new data with the Dravet community at AES.

Details on the presentations are as follows:

Presentation Title: Targeted Augmentation of Nuclear Gene Output (TANGO) of SCN1A Prevents SUDEP in a Mouse Model of Dravet SyndromeSession Date & Time: Saturday, December 7, 2019, 12:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. ETSession Title: Poster Session 1Presenter: Lori Isom, Ph.D., Maurice H. Seevers Professor and Chair of Pharmacology, University of Michigan Medical SchoolPoster Number: 1.116Location: The Baltimore Convention Center, Hall E

Presentation Title: TANGO Oligonucleotides for the Treatment of Dravet Syndrome: Safety, Biodistribution and Pharmacology in the Non-Human PrimateSession Date & Time: Sunday, December 8, 2019, 10:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. ETSession Title: Poster Session 2Presenter: Anne Christiansen, Ph.D., Associate Director, Neuroscience, Stoke TherapeuticsPoster Number: 2.195Location: The Baltimore Convention Center, Hall E

The abstracts for these presentations are now available online on the Events and Presentations section of Stokes website at https://investor.stoketherapeutics.com/ or through the AES 2019 Annual Meeting mobile application.

About STK-001

STK-001 is an investigational new medicine for the treatment of Dravet syndrome. Stoke believes that STK-001, a proprietary antisense oligonucleotide (ASO), has the potential to be the first disease-modifying therapy to address the genetic cause of Dravet syndrome. STK-001 is designed to upregulate NaV1.1 protein expression by leveraging the non-mutant (wild-type) copy of the SCN1A gene to restore physiological NaV1.1 levels, thereby reducing both occurrence of seizures and significant non-seizure comorbidities. Stoke has generated preclinical data demonstrating proof-of-mechanism for STK-001. STK-001 has been granted orphan drug designation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a potential new treatment for Dravet syndrome.

About Dravet Syndrome

Dravet syndrome is a severe and progressive genetic epilepsy characterized by frequent, prolonged and refractory seizures, beginning within the first year of life. Dravet syndrome is difficult to treat and has a poor long-term prognosis. Complications of the disease often contribute to a poor quality of life for patients and their caregivers. The effects of the disease go beyond seizures and often include cognitive regression or developmental stagnation, ataxia, speech impairment and sleep disturbances. Compared with the general epilepsy population, people living with Dravet syndrome have a higher risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, or SUDEP. Dravet syndrome affects approximately 35,000 people in the United States, Canada, Japan, Germany, France and the United Kingdom, and it is not concentrated in a particular geographic area or ethnic group.

About Stoke Therapeutics

Stoke Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: STOK), is a biotechnology company pioneering a new way to treat the underlying causes of severe genetic diseases by precisely upregulating protein expression to restore target proteins to near normal levels. Stoke aims to develop the first precision medicine platform to target the underlying cause of a broad spectrum of genetic diseases in which the patient has one healthy copy of a gene and one mutated copy that fails to produce a protein essential to health. These diseases, in which loss of approximately 50% of normal protein expression causes disease, are called autosomal dominant haploinsufficiencies. The companys lead investigational new medicine is STK-001, a proprietary antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) that has the potential to be the first disease-modifying therapy to address the genetic cause of Dravet syndrome, a severe and progressive genetic epilepsy. Stoke is headquartered in Bedford, Massachusetts with offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts. For more information, visit https://www.stoketherapeutics.com/ or follow the company on Twitter at @StokeTx.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including, but not limited to: Stokes ability to use study data to advance the development of STK-001; the ability of STK-001 to treat the underlying causes of Dravet syndrome; and the ability of TANGO to design medicines to increase protein production. Statements including words such as plan, continue, expect, or ongoing and statements in the future tense are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions, which, if they do not fully materialize or prove incorrect, could cause our results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause Stokes actual activities or results to differ significantly from those expressed in any forward-looking statement, including risks and uncertainties related to the companys ability to develop, obtain regulatory approval for and commercialize STK-001 and its future product candidates, the timing and results of preclinical studies and clinical trials, the companys ability to protect intellectual property; and other risks set forth in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the risks set forth in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter and nine months ended September 30, 2019. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof and Stoke specifically disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements or reasons why actual results might differ, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.

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Stoke Therapeutics to Present New Preclinical Data on STK-001 at the American Epilepsy Society Annual Meeting - Business Wire

What is ‘IndiGen’ project that is sequencing Indian genes? – The Hindu

The story so far: The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) recently announced the conclusion of a six-month exercise (from April 2019) of conducting a whole-genome sequence of a 1,008 Indians. The project is part of a programme called IndiGen and is also seen as a precursor to a much larger exercise involving other government departments to map a larger swathe of the population in the country. Project proponents say this will widen public understanding in India about genomes and the information that genes hide about ones susceptibility to disease.

A genome is the DNA, or sequence of genes, in a cell. Most of the DNA is in the nucleus and intricately coiled into a structure called the chromosome. The rest is in the mitochondria, the cells powerhouse. Every human cell contains a pair of chromosomes, each of which has three billion base pairs or one of four molecules that pair in precise ways. The order of base pairs and varying lengths of these sequences constitute the genes, which are responsible for making amino acids, proteins and, thereby, everything that is necessary for the body to function. It is when these genes are altered or mutated that proteins sometimes do not function as intended, leading to disease.

Sequencing a genome means deciphering the exact order of base pairs in an individual. This deciphering or reading of the genome is what sequencing is all about. Costs of sequencing differ based on the methods employed to do the reading or the accuracy stressed upon in decoding the genome. Since an initial rough draft of the human genome was made available in 2000, the cost of generating a fairly accurate draft of any individual genome has fallen to a tenth, or to a ball park figure of around $1,000 (70,000 approximately). It has been known that the portion of the genes responsible for making proteins called the exome occupies about 1% of the actual gene. Rather than sequence the whole gene, many geneticists rely on exome maps (that is the order of exomes necessary to make proteins). However, it has been established that the non-exome portions also affect the functioning of the genes and that, ideally, to know which genes of a persons DNA are mutated the genome has to be mapped in its entirety. While India, led by the CSIR, first sequenced an Indian genome in 2009, it is only now that the organisations laboratories have been able to scale up whole-genome sequencing and offer them to the public.

Under IndiGen, the CSIR drafted about 1,000 youth from across India by organising camps in several colleges and educating attendees on genomics and the role of genes in disease. Some students and participants donated blood samples from where their DNA sequences were collected.

Globally, many countries have undertaken genome sequencing of a sample of their citizens to determine unique genetic traits, susceptibility (and resilience) to disease. This is the first time that such a large sample of Indians will be recruited for a detailed study. The project ties in with a much larger programme funded by the Department of Biotechnology to sequence at least 10,000 Indian genomes. The CSIRs IndiGen project, as it is called, selected the 1,000-odd from a pool of about 5,000 and sought to include representatives from every State and diverse ethnicities. Every person whose genomes are sequenced would be given a report. The participants would be informed if they carry gene variants that make them less responsive to certain classes of medicines. For instance, having a certain gene makes some people less responsive to clopidogrel, a key drug that prevents strokes and heart attack. The project involved the Hyderabad-based Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), the CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB), and cost 18 crore.

Anyone looking for a free mapping of their entire genome can sign up for IndiGen. Those who get their genes mapped will get a card and access to an app which will allow them and doctors to access information on whether they harbour gene variants that are reliably known to correlate with genomes with diseases. However, there is no guarantee of a slot, as the scientists involved in the exercise say there is already a backlog. The project is free in so far as the CSIR scientists have a certain amount of money at their disposal. The driving motive of the project is to understand the extent of genetic variation in Indians, and learn why some genes linked to certain diseases based on publications in international literature do not always translate into disease. Once such knowledge is established, the CSIR expects to tie up with several pathology laboratories who can offer commercial gene testing services.

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What is 'IndiGen' project that is sequencing Indian genes? - The Hindu

The Europe next generation sequencing market is expected to reach US$ 7,685.4 Mn in 2025 from US$ 1,633.4 Mn in 2017 – GlobeNewswire

New York, Nov. 12, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Europe Next Generation Sequencing Market to 2025 - Regional Analysis and Forecasts by Product; Service; Application; & End User, and Country" - https://www.reportlinker.com/p05794719/?utm_source=GNW However, nonexistence of skilled professionals and high risks associated with genetic data.

On the other hand, an extensive use of genomics for medical applications is likely to have a positive impact on the growth of the Europe next generation sequencing market in the coming years.The genomics is comprised of various technologies such next generation sequencing (NGS), genome editing, gene synthesis and more.These technologies have been utilized for achieving various discoveries for the betterment of the health conditions across the living organisms.

The next generation sequencing is widely used in the field of the medical to understand the genetic composition of the patients.The use of NGS has been utilized for the alteration of plants and animals for the desired physical and genetic changes.

The technology is used to produce biomarkers.The biomarkers are widely used in clinical research and clinical practice.

NGS is among the important developments in genomic technologies, the technology is used for the discovery of oncogenic biomarker and diagnostics. NGS enables in discovery of biomarker and identifying the genetic diseases. In addition, the NGS is used for the developing precision medicine for individuals genomic information to offer targeted treatment to the individual. NGS have capability of sequencing large sections of a persons genome in very short period of time and can also aid in formulation of precision medicine. Next generation sequencing technology is among the major driver of precision medicine and has improved its accuracy, speed, and cost. Developments in whole genome sequencing has enabled the identification of genes required in the large number of diseases, and biomarkers that indicate disease severity to treatment are gradually being characterized. Therefore, the use of the NGS for the discovery of biomarker have benefited for the early diagnosis and differentiating in disease types. Likewise, precision medicine enables in treatment of the diseases NGS plays significant role for both the application by creating an array of opportunities in future.In 2017, the consumables segment held a largest market share of 64.0% of the next generation sequencing market, by product. The segment is growing due to the consumables offered by various companies are widely accepted by the consumers and it provides accuracy and precision in the preparation of the NGS. Furthermore, the similar segment is anticipated to witness the fastest growth rate during the forecast period, 2018 to 2025.In 2017, the resequencing segment held a largest market share of 66.0% of the next generation sequencing market, by technology. This segment is also expected to dominate the market in 2025 as the rising funding by various government bodies and usage of NGS in the resequencing and targeted sequencing. Furthermore, the genome sequencing segment is anticipated to witness the fastest growth rate during the forecast period, 2018 to 2025.Diagnostics segment is anticipated to grow at a CAGR of 22.0% during the forecast period owing to the growth of the technological advancements such as sequencing machines in the developed and developing regions. Moreover, the similar segment held the largest market share of 34.0% for the application segment in the next generation sequencing market and is likely to dominate the market in coming forecast period.In 2017, the academic & research institutes segment held a largest market share of 45.2% of the next generation sequencing market, by end user. This segment is also expected to dominate the market in 2025. Moreover, the similar segment is anticipated to witness the fastest growth rate of 21.9% during the forecast period, 2017 to 2025. This higher growth rate of the segment owing to the providing the references for further researches are likely to propel the growth of the research centers segment in the coming future.Some of the major primary and secondary sources for next generation sequencing included in the report are, Non-Invasive Prenatal Testing (NIPT), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Developing an European - American NGS Network (DEANN), Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and among others.Read the full report: https://www.reportlinker.com/p05794719/?utm_source=GNW

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The Europe next generation sequencing market is expected to reach US$ 7,685.4 Mn in 2025 from US$ 1,633.4 Mn in 2017 - GlobeNewswire

Your hatred of heart-healthy veggies could be genetic – WTVR CBS 6 News

If certain vegetables have always made you gag, you may be more than a picky eater. Instead, you might be what scientists call a super-taster: a person with a genetic predisposition to taste food differently.

Unfortunately, being a super-taster doesnt make everything taste better. In fact, it can do the opposite.

Super-tasters are extremely sensitive to bitterness, a common characteristic of many dark green, leafy veggies such as broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage and Brussels sprouts, to name a few.

The person who has that genetic propensity gets more of the sulfur flavor of, say, Brussels sprouts, especially if theyve been overcooked, said University of Connecticut professor Valerie Duffy, an expert in the study of food taste, preference and consumption.

So that [bitter] vegetable is disliked, and because people generalize, soon all vegetables are disliked, Duffy said. If you ask people, Do you like vegetables? They dont usually say, Oh yeah, I dont like this, but I like these others. People tend to either like vegetables or not.

In fact, people with the bitter gene are 2.6 times more likely to eat fewer vegetables than people who do not have that gene, according to a new study presented Monday at the annual meeting of the American Heart Association.

We wanted to know if genetics affected the ability of people who need to eat heart-healthy foods from eating them, said study author Jennifer Smith, a registered nurse who is a postdoc in cardiovascular science at the University of Kentucky School of Medicine.

While we didnt see results in gene type for sodium, sugar or saturated fat, we did see a difference in vegetables, Smith said, adding that people with the gene tasted a ruin-your-day level of bitterness.

Our sense of taste relies on much more than a gene or two. Receptors on our taste buds are primed to respond to five basic flavors: salty, sweet, sour, bitter and umami, which is a savory flavor created by an amino acid called glutamate (think of mushrooms, soy sauce, broth and aged cheeses).

But its also smelling through the mouth and the touch, texture and temperature of the food, Duffy said. Its very difficult to separate out taste from the rest. So when any of us say the food tastes good, its a composite sensation that were reacting to.

Even our saliva can enter the mix, creating unique ways to experience food.

When we come to the table, we dont perceive the food flavor or the taste of food equally, Duffy said. Some people live in a pastel food world versus others who might live in a more vibrant, neon food world. It could explain some of the differences in our food preference.

While there are more than 25 different taste receptors in our mouth, one in particular has been highly researched: the TAS2R38, which has two variants called AVI and PAV.

About 50% of us inherent one of each, and while we can taste bitter and sweet, we are not especially sensitive to bitter foods.

Another 25% of us are called non-tasters because we received two copies of AVI. Non-tasters arent at all sensitive to bitterness; in fact food might actually be perceived as a bit sweeter.

The last 25% of us have two copies of PAV, which creates the extreme sensitivity to the bitterness some plants develop to keep animals from eating them.

When it comes to bitterness in the veggie family, the worst offenders tend to be cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli, kale, bok choy, arugula, watercress, collards and cauliflower.

Thats too bad, because they are also full of fiber, low in calories and are nutrient powerhouses. Theyre packed with vitamins A and C and whats called phytonutrients, which are compounds that may help to lower inflammation.

Rejecting cruciferous or any type of vegetable is a problem for the growing waistline and health of America.

As we age as a population, vegetables are very important for helping us maintain our weight, providing all those wonderful nutrients to help us maintain our immune system and lower inflammation to prevent cancer, heart disease and more, Duffy said.

Food scientists are trying to develop ways to reduce the bitterness in veggies, in the hopes we can keep another generation of super-tasters from rejecting vegetables.

Theres been some success. In fact, the Brussels sprouts we eat today are much sweeter than those our parents or grandparents ate. Dutch growers in the 90s searched their seed archives for older, less bitter varieties, then cross-pollinated them with todays higher-yielding varieties.

People who already reject vegetables might try to use various cooking methods that can mask the bitter taste.

Just because somebody carries the two copies of the bitter gene doesnt mean that they cant enjoy vegetables, Duffy said. Cooking techniques such as adding a little fat, a little bit of sweetness, strong flavors like garlic or roasting them in the oven, which brings out natural sweetness, can all enhance the overall flavor or taste of the vegetable and block the bitterness.

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Your hatred of heart-healthy veggies could be genetic - WTVR CBS 6 News

Gene Genie | The blog carnival of genes and genetic conditions

February 2, 2009 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 43rd edition is up at Pharmamotion. A great compilation of articles and blogposts about human genetics and personalized medicine. Thank you, Flavio Guzman, for hosting Gene Genie.

Dont forget to submit your articles via e-mail (berci.mesko at gmail.com).

Let me know if you would like to host an edition.

Posted in Gene Genie | 11 Comments

January 19, 2009 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 42nd edition is up at Genetic Future. A great compilation of articles and blogposts about human genetics and personalized medicine. Thank you, Daniel MacArthur, for hosting Gene Genie.

Dont forget to submit your articles via e-mail (berci.mesko at gmail.com).

Let me know if you would like to host an edition.

Posted in Gene Genie | 4 Comments

December 14, 2008 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 41st edition is up at Scienceroll under the edition name Carnivalome. Check out the latest news and blogposts about clinical genetics and personalized medicine.

If you want to host an issue of Gene Genie in 2009, let me know (berci.mesko [at] gmail.com). Dont forget to submit your articles (berci.mesko [at] gmail.com).

Posted in Gene Genie | 1 Comment

November 19, 2008 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 40th edition is up at Human Genetics Disorders. A great compilation of articles and blogposts about human genetics and personalized medicine. Thank you, Chavonne Jones, for hosting Gene Genie.

Posted in Gene Genie | 1 Comment

October 28, 2008 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 39th edition is up at Genetics & Health. A great compilation of articles and blogposts about human genetics and personalized medicine. Thank you, Grace Ibay, for hosting Gene Genie.

Posted in Gene Genie | 2 Comments

October 12, 2008 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 38th edition is up at Scienceroll. Check out the latest news and blogposts about clinical genetics and personalized medicine.

Posted in Gene Genie | Leave a Comment

September 16, 2008 by Dr. Bertalan Mesk

The 37th edition is up at The Genetic Genealogist. A great compilation of articles and blogposts about human genetics and personalized medicine. Thank you, Blaine Bettinger, for hosting Gene Genie.

Posted in Gene Genie | 2 Comments

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Gene Genie | The blog carnival of genes and genetic conditions

MTHFR gene – Genetics Home Reference

Bhargava S, Ali A, Parakh R, Saxena R, Srivastava LM. Higher incidence of C677T polymorphism of the MTHFR gene in North Indian patients with vascular disease. Vascular. 2012 Apr;20(2):88-95. doi: 10.1258/vasc.2011.oa0320. Epub 2012 Feb 28.

Botto LD, Yang Q. 5,10-Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene variants and congenital anomalies: a HuGE review. Am J Epidemiol. 2000 May 1;151(9):862-77. Review.

Khandanpour N, Willis G, Meyer FJ, Armon MP, Loke YK, Wright AJ, Finglas PM, Jennings BA. Peripheral arterial disease and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) C677T mutations: A case-control study and meta-analysis. J Vasc Surg. 2009 Mar;49(3):711-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2008.10.004. Epub 2009 Jan 21. Review.

Kumar A, Kumar P, Prasad M, Sagar R, Yadav AK, Pandit AK, Jali VP, Pathak A. Association of C677T polymorphism in the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene (MTHFR gene) with ischemic stroke: a meta-analysis. Neurol Res. 2015 Jul;37(7):568-77. doi: 10.1179/1743132815Y.0000000008. Epub 2015 Jan 16.

Moll S, Varga EA. Homocysteine and MTHFR Mutations. Circulation. 2015 Jul 7;132(1):e6-9. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.114.013311. Review.

Sibani S, Christensen B, O'Ferrall E, Saadi I, Hiou-Tim F, Rosenblatt DS, Rozen R. Characterization of six novel mutations in the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene in patients with homocystinuria. Hum Mutat. 2000;15(3):280-7.

Trabetti E. Homocysteine, MTHFR gene polymorphisms, and cardio-cerebrovascular risk. J Appl Genet. 2008;49(3):267-82. doi: 10.1007/BF03195624. Review.

Trimmer EE. Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase: biochemical characterization and medical significance. Curr Pharm Des. 2013;19(14):2574-93. Review.

Urreizti R, Moya-Garca AA, Pino-ngeles A, Cozar M, Langkilde A, Fanhoe U, Esteves C, Arribas J, Vilaseca MA, Prez-Dueas B, Pineda M, Gonzlez V, Artuch R, Baldellou A, Vilarinho L, Fowler B, Ribes A, Snchez-Jimnez F, Grinberg D, Balcells S. Molecular characterization of five patients with homocystinuria due to severe methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase deficiency. Clin Genet. 2010 Nov;78(5):441-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-0004.2010.01391.x.

Xie SZ, Liu ZZ, Yu JH, Liu L, Wang W, Xie DL, Qin JB. Association between the MTHFR C677T polymorphism and risk of cancer: evidence from 446 case-control studies. Tumour Biol. 2015 Nov;36(11):8953-72. doi: 10.1007/s13277-015-3648-z. Epub 2015 Jun 17.

Yadav U, Kumar P, Yadav SK, Mishra OP, Rai V. "Polymorphisms in folate metabolism genes as maternal risk factor for neural tube defects: an updated meta-analysis". Metab Brain Dis. 2015 Feb;30(1):7-24. doi: 10.1007/s11011-014-9575-7. Epub 2014 Jul 9. Review.

Yan L, Zhao L, Long Y, Zou P, Ji G, Gu A, Zhao P. Association of the maternal MTHFR C677T polymorphism with susceptibility to neural tube defects in offsprings: evidence from 25 case-control studies. PLoS One. 2012;7(10):e41689. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0041689. Epub 2012 Oct 3.

Zhang T, Lou J, Zhong R, Wu J, Zou L, Sun Y, Lu X, Liu L, Miao X, Xiong G. Genetic variants in the folate pathway and the risk of neural tube defects: a meta-analysis of the published literature. PLoS One. 2013 Apr 4;8(4):e59570. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059570. Print 2013.

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MTHFR gene - Genetics Home Reference

Maryland scientists research gene linked to depression – The Spokesman-Review

BALTIMORE Although there are medications to treat depression, many scientists arent sure why theyre effective and why they dont work for everyone.

Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine believe they may have found a key to the puzzle of major depression that could lead to therapies for those who dont respond to medications already on the market.

A study by the researchers has identified the central role a gene known as Slc6a15 plays in either protecting from stress or contributing to depression, depending on its level of activity in a part of the brain associated with motivation, pleasure and reward seeking.

Published in the Journal of Neuroscience in July, the study is the first to illuminate in detail how the gene works in a kind of neuron that plays a key role in depression, the according to the medical school.

Specifically, the researchers found that mice with depression had reduced levels of the genes activity, while those with high levels of the genes activity handled chronic stress better.

Though senior researcher Mary Kay Lobos primary studies were done with mice, she also examined the brains of people who had committed suicide and found reduced levels of the genes activity, confirming a likely link.

She hopes now that drugs could be developed that would encourage the genes activity.

I thought it was fascinating we had this system in place that allows us to go after things or be motivated or have pleasure and I was interested in how it becomes dysfunctional in certain diseases like depression, Lobo said. I hope that we can identify molecules that could potentially be therapeutically treated or targeted to treat depression.

Lobo and her colleagues have been examining the gene for years. In 2006, they discovered that it was more common among specific neurons in the brain that they later learned were related to depression. Five years later, other researchers learned that the gene played a role in depression and Lobo and her research colleagues decided to investigate what that role is in those specific neurons.

About 15 million adults, or 6.7 percent of all U.S. adults, experience major depression in a given year, according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. It is the leading cause of disability for Americans ages 15 to 44. It is more prevalent in women and can develop at any age, but the median age of onset is 32.5.

David Dietz, an associate professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, said little was known previously about the biological basis of depression in the brain. Many drugs used to treat depression were discovered serendipitously, he said, and it wasnt clear why they worked.

Were starting to really get an idea of what does the depressed brain look like, Dietz said. When you put the whole puzzle together, you see where the problem is. For too long weve been throwing things at individual pieces. Its so complex and we have so little information that it was almost bound to be that way. For the first time this is one of those bigger pieces you can slide into the jigsaw puzzle.

Lobo said its not clear yet how Slc6a15 works in the brain, but she believes it may be transporting three types of amino acids into a subset of neurons called D2 neurons in a part of the brain called the nucleus accumbens. The nucleus accumbens and D2 neurons are known to play a role in pleasure, activating when one eats a delicious meal, has sex or drinks alcohol.

The amino acids would then be synthesized into neurotransmitters. Depression previously has been linked to imbalances of the neurotransmitters serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine.

So even though people may have proper levels of amino acids in their bodies, the neurons in their brains that need them may not be getting enough if the transporter is not working as it should.

This gene is critical for putting very specific amino acids in the right place so that neurotransmitters can be synthesized, said A.J. Robison, an assistant professor in the Department of Physiology at Michigan State University. Its the location, location, location idea. Its not the amino acids, its where theyre at and in which cells.

Robison said Lobos next step would be discovering more about how the transporter gene works.

The fact that this transporter seems to be important is what the paper shows and how it does it is not shown, and thats a challenge for her, he said. Figuring out the how of it is the next step and Dr. Lobo is particularly positioned to do it.

Lobos team was able to use gene therapy, a form of therapy in the early stages of being studied in humans, in the mice to boost the genes activity. The mice were exposed to larger, more aggressive mice, which usually causes depressive symptoms. But the gene therapy helped protect the mice against the stress, the team found. When the team reduced the genes activity in the mice, just one day of exposure to the aggressive mice was enough to cause symptoms of depression.

Gene therapy is starting to be used in the treatment of some types of cancers, but Lobo said science had not yet advanced to the point where it can be used for treating neurological issues in human patients. A more likely treatment would be a drug that targets the genes activity directly, she said.

I think this is a major step toward our understanding of the precise maladaptive changes that occur in response to stress, said Vanna Zachariou, an associate professor in the Department of Neuroscience at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. It can be a more efficient way to target depression because its not simply targeting monoamine receptors or dopamine but targeting molecular adaptations that occur. It doesnt act necessarily as the drugs we have available, so it might create an alternative avenue to treat depression.

Lobo said she wouldnt refer to Slc6a15 as a depression gene, saying the disease was complex and could have many factors.

I wouldnt say theres one depression gene she said. A number of things play a role, and also theres no depression neuron, theres multiple depression neurons.

There also may be different types of depression with different symptoms, she said. With the disease, some sufferers sleep a lot, while others sleep a lot less, for example.

With all these complex diseases, its hard to link it to something, she said. Like Huntingtons disease, we know theres a specific gene that causes Huntingtons disease. For depression we dont have that.

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Maryland scientists research gene linked to depression - The Spokesman-Review

Gene Editing Pioneers Receive Americas Most Distinguished …

Gene Editing Pioneers Selected to Receive Americas Most Distinguished Prize in Medicine

August 15, 2017 - Albany, NY

For their roles in the creation of a remarkable gene editing system that has been called the discovery of the century, five researchers have been announced as the recipients of the Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research for 2017. All five awardees have made important contributions to the development of CRISPR-Cas9, a gene engineering technology that harnesses a naturally occurring bacterial immune system process. The technology has revolutionized biomedical research and provided new hope for the treatment of genetic diseases and more. The awardees are:

The $500,000 award has been given annually since 2001 to those who have altered the course of medical research and is one of the largest prizes in medicine and science in the United States. It will be awarded on Wednesday, Sept. 27 during a celebration in Albany, New York.

The five recipients were chosen to receive the 2017 Albany Prize for their fundamental and complementary accomplishments related to CRISPR-Cas9. CRISPR is an acronym for clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats, a DNA sequence found in the immune system of simple bacterial organisms.

The discovery of these CRISPR sequences in bacteria in the laboratory was the key to the later development of gene editing technology called CRISPR-Cas9 that has allowed scientists to easily and efficiently edit genes by splicing out and replacing or altering sections of DNA in the cells of any organism, including humans (though most current research uses isolated human cells in labs and animal models only). The editing technique has been compared to cutting and pasting words in a computer program.

CRISPR-Cas9 has revolutionized biological research in tens of thousands of laboratories worldwide. Its potential future applications include the possible ability to cure genetic defects such as muscular dystrophy, eradicate cancer, and allow for pig organs to safely be transplanted into humans. Its uses are so varied that CRISPR is being used to alter butterfly wing patterns and it could also someday help make crops hardier.

Though it cannot be used as a drug in patients yet, it is making a significant impact in the clinical world by accelerating drug research. Additionally, in laboratory experiments, CRISPR-Cas9 is being used to try to modify genes to block the HIV virus, and to attempt to change the DNA of mosquitos that carry the Zika virus so that it cannot be passed to humans.

Rarely has such a recent discovery transformed an entire field of research, as CRISPR has in biological research. Its implications for biological processes, including human health and disease are promising and quite profound, said Vincent Verdile, M.D. 84, the Lynne and Mark Groban, M.D. 69, Distinguished Dean of Albany Medical College and chair of the Albany Prize National Selection Committee. The Albany Prize recognizes that such a significant development in science is brought forth by a community of scientists, and, therefore, we felt it was appropriate to name a larger number of recipients than in the past.

CRISPR is an example of how science in the 21st century often works; as a remarkable ensemble act, in which a cast comes together to produce something that not one of them could do alone.

While most studies focus on gene editing in somatic (non-germline) cells, due to the profound ethical implications of modifying genes and impacting our species and environment, many CRISPR scientists, government representatives, ethicists and the general public are actively debating how we as a society ethically use the technology.

According to Dr. Verdile, the CRISPR story is a testament to the importance of basic biomedical research as the gateway to medical and scientific breakthroughs. The discovery of the CRISPR defense mechanism inside bacteria by basic scientists directly led to the development of the CRISPR gene editing system, which has promise for the treatment of disease.

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2017 Albany Prize Recipients

Emmanuelle Charpentier, Ph.D. Director, Department of Regulation in Infection Biology, Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, BerlinVisiting Professor, Ume University, Sweden and Honorary Professor, Humboldt University

With her recent groundbreaking findings in the field of RNA-mediated regulation based on the CRISPR-Cas9 system, Dr. Charpentier laid the foundation for the development of the novel, highly versatile and precise genome engineering technology that has revolutionized life sciences research and opens new opportunities for the treatment of genetic disease.

She is co-inventor and co-owner of the fundamental intellectual property comprising the CRISPR-Cas9 technology, and co-founder of CRISPR Therapeutics and ERS Genomics, two companies that are developing the CRISPR-Cas9 genome engineering technology for biotechnological and biomedical applications.

Dr. Charpentier studied biochemistry, microbiology and genetics at the University Pierre and Marie Curie in Paris, and obtained her Ph.D. in microbiology for research performed at the Pasteur Institute in Paris. She continued her work at The Rockefeller University, New York University Langone Medical Center and the Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine, all in New York City, and at St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital in Memphis.

She returned to Europe to establish a research group at the University of Vienna in Austria as assistant and associate professor. She was then appointed associate professor at the Laboratory for Molecular Infection Medicine Sweden at Ume University in Sweden where she is still a visiting professor.

In 2013, she was awarded an Alexander von Humboldt Professorship. She served as the head of the Department of Regulation in Infection Biology at the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research in Braunschweig and professor at the Medical School of Hannover, Germany. In 2015, she was appointed scientific member of the Max Planck Society and director at the Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology in Berlin.

Jennifer Doudna, Ph.D. Professor, Molecular and Cell Biology and Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley

As an internationally renowned professor of chemistry and molecular and cell biology at U.C. Berkeley, Dr. Doudna and her colleagues rocked the research world in 2012 by describing a simple way of editing the DNA of any organism using an RNA-guided protein found in bacteria. This technology, called CRISPR-Cas9, has opened the floodgates of possibility for human and non-human applications of gene editing, including assisting researchers in the fight against HIV, sickle cell disease and muscular dystrophy.

Dr. Doudna is an investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a member of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Medicine, the National Academy of Inventors and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is also a Foreign Member of the Royal Society, and has received many other honors including the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, the Heineken Prize, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award and the Japan Prize.

Dr. Doudna received her Ph.D. from Harvard University and was a postdoctoral research fellow in molecular biology at Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital. She was the Lucille P. Markey Scholar in Biomedical Science at the University of Colorado. She later served on the faculty at Yale University as the Henry Ford II Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry.

She is the co-author with Sam Sternberg of A Crack in Creation, a personal account of her research and the societal and ethical implications of gene editing.

Luciano A. Marraffini, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Laboratory of Bacteriology, The Rockefeller University, New York City

Dr. Marraffini made the seminal discovery that CRISPR-Cas works by cleaving DNA and was the first to propose that this system could be used for genome editing in heterologous systems. He then collaborated with Feng Zhang to perform the first successful editing experiment in eukaryotic (human) cells using CRISPR-Cas9. He continues to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the CRISPR-Cas immune response in bacteria, including how sequences of viral and plasmid origin are selected to be integrated into CRISPR arrays and how different CRISPR-Cas systems found in different strains of bacteria attack their targets.Dr. Marraffini received his undergraduate degree from the University of Rosario in Argentina and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He was a postdoctoral fellow at Northwestern University in the laboratory of Erik Sontheimer, after which he joined The Rockefeller University as assistant professor and the head of the Laboratory of Bacteriology in 2010. He was named a Howard Hughes Medical Institute-Simons Faculty Scholar in 2016. He is a recipient of the 2015 Hans Sigrist Prize and was named a finalist in the life sciences by the 2015 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists. In 2014, Cell named him one of its 40 Under 40. He is a 2012 Rita Allen Foundation Scholar and a 2011 Searle Scholar, and is the recipient of an NIH Directors New Innovator Award and an RNA Society Award.

Francisco J.M. Mojica, Ph.D.Associate Professor of Microbiology, Department of Physiology, Genetics and Microbiology, University of Alicante, SpainMember of the Multidisciplinary Institute for the Study of the Environment Ramn Margalef, Spain

Dr. Mojicas pioneering work on CRISPR and his fundamental contribution to the knowledge of these components of bacteria for more than two decades makes him a leading scholar on the subject. Thanks to the contributions of Dr. Mojica in this field, exceptional laboratory tools, known as CRISPR-Cas technology, have been developed that can be used for the genetic manipulation of any living being, including humans. This technology has greatly simplified research in biology and medicine, for example, to study complex genetic processes such as those involved in embryonic development, carcinogenesis or neurodegenerative disorders. It is postulated that CRISPR-Cas technology will allow, in the near future, to cure diseases that are not curable or very difficult to tackle.

He received his Ph.D. in Biotechnology from the University of Alicante. He later completed two postdoctoral fellowships in laboratories at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and Oxford University in Great Britain. In 1997, he became professor of microbiology at the University of Alicante, founding the research group in molecular microbiology to resume the study on CRISPR he had initiated during his Ph.D. thesis work. In the last few years, his investigation has focused on the CRISPR immunization process, to understand how bacteria acquire foreign genetic material that make them resistant to infecting agents.

He has received many honors including the Lilly Foundation Award for Preclinical Biomedical Research, the Rey Jaime I Prize for Basic Research, and the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award (biomedicine category).Feng Zhang, Ph.D.Core Member, Broad Institute of MIT and HarvardInvestigator at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MITThe James and Patricia Poitras Professor in Neuroscience and Associate Professor, Departments of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.

Dr. Zhang is a bioengineer developing and applying novel molecular technologies for studying the molecular and genetic basis of diseases and providing treatment. He played a seminal role in developing optogenetics, a powerful technology for dissecting neural circuits using light. Since joining the Broad and McGovern institutes in January 2011, Zhang has pioneered the development of genome editing tools for use in eukaryotic cells including human cells from natural microbial CRISPR systems.

Following his landmark demonstration that CRISPR-Cas9 could be harnessed for mammalian genome editing, his lab has continued to explore the CRISPR system and develop novel technologies for perturbing and editing the genome for disease research. He and his colleagues have successfully harnessed two additional CRISPR systems: CRISPR-Cpf1, which may allow simpler and more precise genome engineering, and CRISPR-Cas13a, a novel RNA-targeting system, which his team has adapted for use in rapid diagnostics.

Zhang leverages CRISPR and other methods to study the genetics and epigenetics of human diseases, especially complex disorders, such as psychiatric and neurological diseases, that are caused by multiple genetic and environmental risk factors and which are difficult to model using conventional methods. His labs tools, which he has made widely available, are also being used in the fields of immunology, clinical medicine, and cancer biology, among others. His long-term goal is to develop novel therapeutic strategies for disease treatment.He received his A.B. in chemistry and physics from Harvard College and his Ph.D. in chemistry from Stanford University.

***

The Albany Medical Center Prize was established in 2000 by the late Morris Marty Silverman, a New York City businessman and philanthropist who grew up in Troy, N.Y., to honor scientists whose work has demonstrated significant outcomes that offer medical value of national or international importance. A $50 million gift commitment from the Marty and Dorothy Silverman Foundation provides for the prize to be awarded annually for 100 years.

Three previous Nobel Prize winners have been among the ranks of researchers honored, and five Albany Prize recipients have gone on to win the Nobel Prize, including Shinya Yamanaka, M.D., Ph.D., a leading stem cell scientist; Elizabeth Blackburn, Ph.D., who discovered the molecular nature of telomeres; Bruce Beutler, M.D., and the late Ralph Steinman, M.D., for their discoveries regarding the detailed workings of the immune system; and Robert Lefkowitz, M.D., for his work on cell receptors.

For biographies and downloadable photos of the 2017 recipients, and more information on the Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research, visit: http://www.amc.edu/Academic/AlbanyPrize.

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Media Inquiries:

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Gene therapy | medicine | Britannica.com

Gene therapy, also called gene transfer therapy, introduction of a normal gene into an individuals genome in order to repair a mutation that causes a genetic disease. When a normal gene is inserted into the nucleus of a mutant cell, the gene most likely will integrate into a chromosomal site different from the defective allele; although that may repair the mutation, a new mutation may result if the normal gene integrates into another functional gene. If the normal gene replaces the mutant allele, there is a chance that the transformed cells will proliferate and produce enough normal gene product for the entire body to be restored to the undiseased phenotype.

Human gene therapy has been attempted on somatic (body) cells for diseases such as cystic fibrosis, adenosine deaminase deficiency, familial hypercholesterolemia, cancer, and severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) syndrome. Somatic cells cured by gene therapy may reverse the symptoms of disease in the treated individual, but the modification is not passed on to the next generation. Germline gene therapy aims to place corrected cells inside the germ line (e.g., cells of the ovary or testis). If that is achieved, those cells will undergo meiosis and provide a normal gametic contribution to the next generation. Germline gene therapy has been achieved experimentally in animals but not in humans.

Scientists have also explored the possibility of combining gene therapy with stem cell therapy. In a preliminary test of that approach, scientists collected skin cells from a patient with alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (an inherited disorder associated with certain types of lung and liver disease), reprogrammed the cells into stem cells, corrected the causative gene mutation, and then stimulated the cells to mature into liver cells. The reprogrammed, genetically corrected cells functioned normally.

Prerequisites for gene therapy include finding the best delivery system (often a virus, typically referred to as a viral vector) for the gene, demonstrating that the transferred gene can express itself in the host cell, and establishing that the procedure is safe. Few clinical trials of gene therapy in humans have satisfied all those conditions, often because the delivery system fails to reach cells or the genes are not expressed by cells. Improved gene therapy systems are being developed by using nanotechnology. A promising application of that research involves packaging genes into nanoparticles that are targeted to cancer cells, thereby killing cancer cells specifically and leaving healthy cells unharmed.

Some aspects of gene therapy, including genetic manipulation and selection, research on embryonic tissue, and experimentation on human subjects, have aroused ethical controversy and safety concerns. Some objections to gene therapy are based on the view that humans should not play God and interfere in the natural order. On the other hand, others have argued that genetic engineering may be justified where it is consistent with the purposes of God as creator. Some critics are particularly concerned about the safety of germline gene therapy, because any harm caused by such treatment could be passed to successive generations. Benefits, however, would also be passed on indefinitely. There also has been concern that the use of somatic gene therapy may affect germ cells.

Although the successful use of somatic gene therapy has been reported, clinical trials have revealed risks. In 1999 American teenager Jesse Gelsinger died after having taken part in a gene therapy trial. In 2000 researchers in France announced that they had successfully used gene therapy to treat infants who suffered from X-linked SCID (XSCID; an inherited disorder that affects males). The researchers treated 11 patients, two of whom later developed a leukemia-like illness. Those outcomes highlight the difficulties foreseen in the use of viral vectors in somatic gene therapy. Although the viruses that are used as vectors are disabled so that they cannot replicate, patients may suffer an immune response.

Another concern associated with gene therapy is that it represents a form of eugenics, which aims to improve future generations through the selection of desired traits. Some have argued that gene therapy is eugenic but that it is a treatment that can be adopted to avoid disability. To others, such a view of gene therapy legitimates the so-called medical model of disability (in which disability is seen as an individual problem to be fixed with medicine) and raises peoples hopes for new treatments that may never materialize.

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Gene therapy | medicine | Britannica.com

Covid-19: Why testing takes time and what to expect – Daily Maverick

This scanning electron microscope image shows SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, (round blue objects) emerging from the surface of cells cultured in the lab. SARS-CoV-2, also known as 2019-nCoV, is the virus that causes Covid-19. The virus shown was isolated from a patient in the U.S. Image by the US NIAID (CC BY 2.0)

First published by GroundUp

Are you wondering why you have to wait a few days for the results of the Covid-19 test? One reason is that laboratory technicians must take pains to avoid getting it wrong what are called false negatives, and less often, false positives.

The other reason is that the techniques they use are done in a specialised laboratory, working with very small, precise quantities of what are known as reagents.

The first step is to take a swab from you as shown in this video from the New England Journal of Medicine (the worlds leading medical journal):

It may be a little uncomfortable, but grin and bear it; its for your own good.

You could also provide a sputum sample from your lower respiratory tract if you have a cough. A health worker will decide based on your symptoms, and the guidelines issued by the National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD), which route to take.

Looking for the virus

Lab technicians need the swab to check if you have the virus. They do this using a diagnostic test called a real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR) test. To do a PCR diagnostic test, a laboratory technician isolates the genetic material of the virus from the sample you have provided. The PCR technique is well-developed and there is plenty of information about it online.

A virus is a small infectious agent that multiplies in living cells. Viruses contain nucleic acids, which are the building blocks of living organisms. DNA and RNA are the primary nucleic acids. Some viruses may contain single-stranded nucleic acids, others may contain double-stranded nucleic acids. A genome is the complete set of hereditary material in an organism. Some viruses have RNA genomes, while other viruses have DNA genomes. The genomes of some RNA viruses can be translated directly into viral proteins and they serve as a template for genome replication. They are described as positive-sense.

The coronavirus that emerged in late 2019 has a single-strand, positive-sense RNA genome.

PCR is a molecular biology tool that is used to amplify a gene segment from a very small sample of DNA. Many millions of copies are produced, which allows the gene sequence of interest to be studied further.

The first step involves transforming the RNA into DNA using an enzyme called reverse transcriptase. A small amount of DNA is amplified into larger quantities which will be more easily detected. In a standard PCR, the lab technician can only find out the result of the test once it is complete. In a real-time PCR, a camera or detector can watch as the reaction takes place and give real-time feedback on how the test is going.

The waiting period the time you have to wait to get your results may be due to a number of factors all of which contribute to the reliability of your test result. The crucial one is to reduce the risk of getting a false negative (when the PCR test says you dont have the infection, but in fact you do).

According to the NICD, a false negative could occur when the specimen:

Technical reasons inherent in the test, for example virus mutation, may also lead to a false result.

False positives occur less often and may be the result of the slightest of contaminations in the testing process, among other factors.

The World Health Organisation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the NICD provide guidance for laboratory testing on their websites. But the Covid-19 virus is new, so testing protocols are being formulated and refined as new knowledge emerges.

Other tests needed

At present, PCR tests can only be done in specialised laboratories. Even putting aside the time it takes to get the sample from the patient to the lab, the fastest available process takes at least four hours to get a result. This time includes the sample preparation and the actual analysis.

The backlog that is building up because of the increased demand for tests could mean the process will, in the short term, probably become slower rather than faster.

Other, quicker, types of tests are needed.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has in the past few days approved a test developed by molecular diagnostics company Cepheid. It produces a machine called the Gene Xpert, the size of a desktop computer, which can be used in health facilities to do PCR tests for the new coronavirus.

But at this stage it is unclear how well the Cepheid test works, how quickly the company can produce the reagents needed for it, what these will cost and how quickly it can be rolled out across the world.

To permit the use of this test, the FDA, on 29 February, posted new rules allowing emergency use authorisations of coronavirus tests other than the ones made and distributed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The RT-PCR test is recommended by the World Health Organisation.

Another possible way for testing would be that recommended by David Ho, a viral epidemic expert, who suggested antibody testing in his interview with Caltech.

To fight viruses, your body will begin producing antibodies. An antibody is a protective protein produced by your immune system to help it fight this foreign substance. These are usually cheaper and quicker than PCR tests, and can be done at a clinic quickly, with a patient able to get his result before going home.

Reports are emerging of promising antibody tests, but at the time of publication none had been approved. Things are changing quickly, however. For example, on 18 March 2020, researchers posted a preprint on the Medriv website of a serology test which would identify the antibodies within three days of the onset of symptoms. A serology test is a blood test that looks for antibodies in your blood.

The researchers were clear that this was not a clinical trial, but the first development towards such a test.

On March 22, the WHO published its interim guidance for Laboratory testing strategy recommendations for Covid-19. It stipulated that serological assays will play an important role in research and surveillance, but are not recommended for case detection at present.

The role of rapid disposable tests for antigen detection for Covid-19 needs to be evaluated and is not currently recommended for clinical diagnosis pending more evidence on test performance and operational utility.

Behind the scenes

There is a lot more going on behind the scenes in the testing lab than most people realise. Entire teams are working to ensure your results are reliable.

The process, by its very nature, is painstaking and methodical.

But the good news is that throughout the world, scientists are working together, sharing knowledge that is being accrued by the day. Theyre making tests that are quicker, and more reliable.

For informed information on how to proceed for testing, contact the National Institute for Communicable Diseases on its 24-hour toll-free number: 0800 029 999. DM

Fatima Khan has a background in laboratory research and education. She is currently enrolled on Roving Reporters environmental journalism training project. Additional reporting by GroundUp.

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Covid-19: Why testing takes time and what to expect - Daily Maverick

What You Should Know About the Mind Gut Connection – Thrive Global

Dr. Emeran Mayer is a gastroenterologist who specialises in the communication between the brain, the gut and our environment. He is widely recognised as a pioneer of medical research into the brain, gut and microbe interactions and author of The Mind-Gut Connection: How the Hidden Conversation Within Our Bodies Impacts our Mood, Our Choices and Our Overall Health. (Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.)

You discuss in your book, The Mind-Gut Connection, the journey you took at medical school to study the link between the brain and body in disease. What was the prevailing thought at the time and how were you going against it?

When I got into medical school, I was interested in studying the biological underpinnings of psychological constructs. When looking for a thesis advisor, I went from one professor to the next and they all said that mind gut connections cant be studied even though they knew it was important. After doing a rotation in gastroenterology at the Mass General Hospital at Harvard I was convinced that I wanted to study how the brain interacts with the digestive system. It was surprising to me how big the disconnect was between psychological and holistic concepts and traditional medicine at the time. Coventional Medicine selected people who were interested in mechanical, linear concepts of disease rather than an interest in health as a complex whole.

What is this mechanical, linear view of traditional medicine and why is it not sufficient in treating disease?

The linear viewpoint of the world around us represents the whole paradigm of the Western World. We go from point A to point B and dont look at the holistic context in which this interaction is happening. This model has been very successful in surgery in treating infectious diseases, where you identify a pathogen and develop an antibiotic to kill it. In reality, chronic diseases are not linear phenomena. Chronic diseases are dysregulations of a whole network, in which every organ in the body is interconnected, including the brain. For instance, if you are suffering from obesity, you also have a high risk of metabolic syndrome, of cardiovascular, liver and brain disease and cancer. This is no longer a linear phenomenon. You are looking at a paradigm of interconnectedness of every organ in the body. Chronic disease is a rearrangement in this global network that links every cell in our bodies together. Western medicine has not recognised that and as a result, nearly half of the US population are on chronic medicines. We are clearly not healing the disease. We are treating the systems and suppressing the issue.

How would you describe your approach to disease?

My view is as a systems biology approach. I look at the connections between every part of the body, down to every cell. For instance, if you look at genes, initially we thought that a single gene determines how old you are going to get. Now we know that it is a whole network of genes. Its the same with microbes. We have a hundred trillion microbes in our gut. We have to apply a systems approach of interconnectedness to understand and model it. In chronic disease, the systems go way beyond our bodies. The microbes in your gut live off the food systems from which you get your food, for instance the plants in the soil. And if you pursue this consistently, you all of a sudden see that we are all part of this gigantic interconnected system. I think what is happening with these viral epidemics is in some ways a systems phenomenon. We are attacking the normal system by cutting down the forests, encroaching on ecological niches of wild animals, and overcrowding in cities. And the way these diseases spread is not linear either. The whole world and system is affected.

Why did you decide to focus your research specifically on the connection between the brain and the gut?

From an evolutionary standpoint, our nervous system and our gut were always very closely connected, more so than any other organ. The first primitive organisms were simply a floating digestive tube with a nerve net around them. This basic architecture persisted through millions of years, and we still have a similar design in our gut. I think if you had to choose two organs that are the core of our being I would say it is the gut and the brain. The gut itself is not just a digestive tube, it is also the immune system, the nervous system, and the endocrine system. Contrary to popular belief, 95% of our bodys serotonin is stored in our gut. We interact with the world more through our gut than we do with our skin.

Why are there so many hormones such as serotonin stored in our gut?

We still dont know the full answer to this question. On the one side, the serotonin that is released in the gut communicates with the brain by stimulating the vagus nerve. Serotonin is only one molecule; tryptophan is broken down by the microbes and cells in the gut into many molecules, one of which is serotonin. The ratio of serotonin to some of the other tryptophan metabolites is influenced by microbial activities. The microbes can talk to some of the cells lining our gut and tell them to make more serotonin and release it onto the vagus nerve, which carries the signal to the brain. It also is released back into the gut and influences the behaviour of the microbes, so its going full circle. The molecule that allows microbes to take up the serotonin is the same molecule that acts when you take an antidepressant. We are still at the beginning of understanding the mechanisms of this. What we do know for now is that there is a major link between what we eat, what the microbes do with our food and how it affects brain function.

As well as the link between what we eat, our gut and brain function, you also discuss the effects of negative emotions such as stress on our body. What effect does this have in our gut?

Everybody now talks about the healthy diet and what it does to your gut and microbiome. Very few people talk about the fact that negative emotions in the brain can do almost the same damage as unhealthy food. Chronic stress decreases the diversity of your microbes, and changes the behaviour and leakiness of your gut. Your gut is a mirror image of your emotions. We dont listen and sense the effects of negative emotions or food on our gut on a daily basis. We tend to only notice the effects when we are in a lot of pain. People talk about the negative effects of the Western diet and obesity on cancer. You can imagine the combination of negative emotions and stress, plus the Western diet, will have twice the effect on increasing your risk of chronic disease. Typically in Western medicine, we dont pay too much attention to the mind but it is really key to realise this importance.

You also discuss how those with a positive attitude to life tend to heal faster from disease. What is the explanation behind this?

This comes back to the concept of our body as an interconnected network. How this network is constructed in our lives, determines how resilient it is to disease. This is shaped early in life, in the first two years of our lives for the microbiome and the first 18 years for the brain. The way this is programmed determines your resilience later in life. If framed in a positive way, such as with grit, enthusiasm, passion, compassion, and with the right diet, you are likely to be more resilient later in life. It offers an explanation for chronic diseases and longevity, determining how long we live and how healthy we are. As humans, we have this amazing ability to learn, our prefrontal cortex is incredibly plastic, providing our body with the opportunity to adapt and change to varying situations. I think our health ultimately all comes down to attitude and diet.

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University of Maryland scientists research gene linked to depression – Baltimore Sun

Although medications exist to treat depression, many scientists arent sure why theyre effective and why they dont work for everyone.

Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine believe they may have found a key to the puzzle of major depression that could lead to therapies for those who dont respond to medications already on the market.

A new study by the researchers has identified the central role a gene known as Slc6a15 plays in either protecting from stress or contributing to depression, depending on its level of activity in a part of the brain associated with motivation, pleasure and reward seeking.

Published in the Journal of Neuroscience in July, the study is the first to illuminate in detail how the gene works in a kind of neuron that plays a key role in depression, according to the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Specifically, the researchers found that mice with depression had reduced levels of the genes activity, while those with high levels of the genes activity handled chronic stress better.

Though senior researcher Mary Kay Lobos primary studies were done with mice, she also examined the brains of people who had committed suicide and found reduced levels of the genes activity, confirming a likely link.

She hopes now that drugs could be developed that would encourage the genes activity.

I thought it was fascinating we had this system in place that allows us to go after things or be motivated or have pleasure and I was interested in how it becomes dysfunctional in certain diseases like depression, Lobo said. I hope that we can identify molecules that could potentially be therapeutically treated or targeted to treat depression.

Lobo and her colleagues have been examining the gene for years. In 2006, they discovered that it was more common among specific neurons in the brain that they later learned were related to depression. Five years later, other researchers learned the gene played a role in depression and Lobo and her research colleagues decided to investigate what that role is in those specific neurons.

About 15 million adults, or 6.7 percent of all U.S. adults, experience major depression in a given year, according to the Anxiety and Depression Association of America. It is the leading cause of disability for Americans aged 15 to 44. It is more prevalent in women and can develop at any age, but the median age of onset is 32.5.

David Dietz, an associate professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, said little was known previously about the biological basis of depression in the brain. Many drugs used to treat depression were discovered serendipitously, he said, and it wasnt clear why they worked.

Were starting to really get an idea of what does the depressed brain look like, Dietz said. When you put the whole puzzle together, you see where the problem is. For too long weve been throwing things at individual pieces. Its so complex and we have so little information that it was almost bound to be that way. For the first time this is one of those bigger pieces you can slide into the jigsaw puzzle.

Lobo said its not clear yet how Slc6a15 works in the brain, but she believes it may be transporting three types of amino acids into a subset of neurons called D2 neurons in a part of the brain called the nucleus accumbens. The nucleus accumbens and D2 neurons are known to play a role in pleasure, activating when one eats a delicious meal, has sex or drinks alcohol.

The amino acids would then be synthesized into neurotransmitters. Depression previously has been linked to imbalances of the neurotransmitters serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine.

So even though people may have proper levels of amino acids in their bodies, the neurons in their brains that need them may not be getting enough if the transporter is not working as it should.

This gene is critical for putting very specific amino acids in the right place so that neurotransmitters can be synthesized, said A.J. Robison, an assistant professor in the Department of Physiology at Michigan State University. Its the location, location, location idea. Its not the amino acids, its where theyre at and in which cells.

Robison said Lobos next step would be discovering more about how the transporter gene works.

The fact that this transporter seems to be important is what the paper shows and how it does it is not shown, and thats a challenge for her, he said. Figuring out the how of it is the next step and Dr. Lobo is particularly positioned to do it.

Lobos team was able to use gene therapy, a form of therapy in the early stages of being studied in humans, in the mice to boost the genes activity. The mice were exposed to larger, more aggressive mice, which usually causes depressive symptoms. But the gene therapy helped protect the mice against the stress, the team found. When the team reduced the genes activity in the mice, just one day of exposure to the aggressive mice was enough to cause symptoms of depression.

Gene therapy is starting to be used in the treatment of some types of cancers, but Lobo said science had not yet advanced to the point where it can be used for treating neurological issues in human patients. A more likely treatment would be a drug that targets the genes activity directly, she said.

I think this is a major step toward our understanding of the precise maladaptive changes that occur in response to stress, said Vanna Zachariou, an associate professor in the Department of Neuroscience at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. It can be a more efficient way to target depression because its not simply targeting monoamine receptors or dopamine but targeting molecular adaptations that occur. It doesnt act necessarily as the drugs we have available, so it might create an alternative avenue to treat depression.

Lobo said she wouldnt refer to Slc6a15 as a depression gene, saying the disease was complex and could have many factors.

I wouldnt say theres one depression gene she said. A number of things play a role, and also theres no depression neuron, theres multiple depression neurons.

There also may be different types of depression with different symptoms, she said. With the disease, some sufferers sleep a lot, while others sleep a lot less, for example.

With all these complex diseases, its hard to link it to something, she said. Like Huntingtons disease, we know theres a specific gene that causes Huntingtons disease. For depression we dont have that.

cwells@baltsun.com

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University of Maryland scientists research gene linked to depression - Baltimore Sun

World Cancer Day: Going back to the basics The genetics of cancer – Firstpost

We have all heard of the term gene and DNA, but little do we know about the impact of changes in them known commonly as genetic mutations. Most cancers are associated with these changes in specific genes which are sub-units of the genetic material, DNA. In this era of modern medicine & treatment, certain genetic mutations have been identified to be responsible for several diseases including cancer and targeting such mutations play a major role in the overall management of the disease, to improve the quality of the life and cure.

In the past two decades, there has been an increasing number of cancer cases in India. According to the Globocan 2018 data, about 1.16 million new cancer cases in India were reported with close to 7.9 lakh deaths. In India, the cancer subtypes in descending order are breast cancer (14 percent), lip/oral cavity cancers (10.4 percent), cervical cancer (8.4 percent), lung cancer (5.9 percent) and stomach cancer (5 percent) followed by others.

Most cancers are associated with changes in specific genes which are sub-units of the genetic material DNA.

The question that arises that How genetic testing would help in understanding genetic mutation and its relation to cancer/s? The simple answer to this question is, whatever one asks for. Genetic testing provides varied answers, starting from predisposition, and events before onset of cancer to treatment planning and monitoring as well as detection of early relapse/recurrence.

How can the genetic information related to cancer, be decoded even before the cancer onset? Well, the presence of certain gene mutations increases the chances of developing cancers drastically. These cancers are known as hereditary cancers, and the process is known as hereditary risk assessment. Understanding genetic mutations can help one understand whether there are increased chances of developing cancer. For example, any woman is at a 12 percent lifetime risk of developing breast cancer, in general population, but if there is a presence of harmful BRCA1 mutation, in a given individual due to inheritance, this risk can go as high as 70 percent.

Once cancer has developed, there are various ways in which these genetics tests can prove handy. Understanding genetic mutations can help the oncologist diagnose and differentially diagnose cancer subtypes in a more informed manner. Further certain genetic mutations help in understanding if the cancer progression will be aggressive or not. For example, in case of a leukaemia subtype: chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), the presence of IGHV gene mutation indicates that cancer wont progress aggressively. In medical terms it is known as good prognosis. On the other hand, there are some gene mutations that indicate poor prognosis of cancer as well.

Coming to the most known of application of genetic testing, we all have heard of what is called targeted treatment. Presence of certain gene mutations help the oncologists target the cancer as far as treatment is concerned. For example, in lung cancer, there are various classes of drugs that are based on gene mutations, such as EGFR inhibitors, which have a better effect on EGFR mutated lung cancers.

Certain genetic mutations help in understanding if the cancer progression will be aggressive or not.

Other applications of genetic testing include assessment of the treatment response for a given drug, also to detect the early recurrence in a periodic manner by a non-invasive procedure to check for cancer-specific mutations in the plasma of the blood sample, also known as liquid biopsy testing

Like all other subjects, cancer genetics is also something where India has certain unique features. There are multiple research papers that mention that in lung cancer, the prevalence of EGFR mutations is higher in south-Asian, particularly Indian population, as compared to the western populations. This provides an added advantage of treating these patients with targeted therapy for killing the specific cancer cells, thus avoiding the side effects associated with conventional chemotherapy. Hence understanding the mutation status of EGFR gene becomes imperative in case of lung cancers.

Similarly, there is a subclass of breast cancer called triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC), where there is an absence of receptors known to fuel breast cancer growth- Estrogen, Progesterone and Her-2/Neu gene. This is one of the most aggressive subtypes of breast cancer, where there are to targeted therapies available so far, and the standard of care remains conventional chemo-radiotherapy/surgery. Considering its aggressive behaviour the recurrence rates are very high in this subtype of cancers, and nearly 20 percent of these women are BRCA1/BRCA2 mutation carriers. As far as India is concerned, the triple-negative breast cancers incidence is higher in India (30 percent) as compared to the western population (12-17 percent), and have a poorer prognosis and survival (60 percent: 5 years age-adjusted survival) as compared to the Caucasian population (80 percent: 5 year age adjusted survival).

Talking about BRCA1 mutated breast cancers, one particular mutation, DelAG, is considered to be founder mutation in Ashkenazi Jewish community. Founder mutations is when a genetic alteration is observed with high frequency in a group that is or was geographically or culturally isolated, in which one or more of the ancestors was a carrier of the altered gene. In our experience, we have seen this founder mutation in Indian sub-population as well over and above Ashkenazi Jewish community.

In conclusion, genetic testing is aimed at providing clarity and insights about a persons cancer to the Oncologists that helps them make an informed decision. An increasing number of Oncologists have adopted genetic testing as an important tool for diagnosis and treatment planning of cancer and its management. Our constant effort is aimed to ensure, maximum number of cancer patients get benefitted by this technology in the society.

Dr Vidya Veldore is a principal scientist for Oncology at MedGenome Labs Ltd.

Updated Date: Feb 04, 2020 17:32:40 IST

Tags :Cancer,Cancer Day. World Cancer Day 2019,Cancer Patients,Diagnosis Of Cancer,DNA,Gene Mutations,Genes,Genetics Of Cancer,Genetics Tests,Oncologists,Oncology,Types Of Cancer,World Cancer Day

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World Cancer Day: Going back to the basics The genetics of cancer - Firstpost

Research Roundup: CRISPR-based cancer therapy, tanning studies, immigration and deportation – The Stanford Daily

Each week, The Dailys Science & Tech section produces a roundup of the most exciting and influential research happening on campus or otherwise related to Stanford. Heres our digest for the week of Feb. 2 Feb. 8.

CRISPR-based cancer therapy shows promise

A new FDA-approved cancer therapy uses the gene-editing technology Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) to enhance T-cells, a type of immune cell, in order to better fight cancer, a study published on Feb. 6 in Science found.

Lets say normally, theres a T-cell thats involved in an allergic reaction to pollen, genetics and dermatology professor Howard Chang told Stanford Medicines blog SCOPE. We can use CRISPR to alter the cell so that it doesnt react to pollen anymore, and instead, only fights cancer.

The researchers goal was to introduce three gene edits to T-cells, then reintroduce edited T-cells back into the patient. The gene edits would rid T-cells of their natural receptors and increase their immune activity to actively fight cancer. After three months, researchers took edited T-cell samples from patients to analyze their molecular characteristics.

If you think of all of these edited T-cells like theyre in a horse race, analyzing these cells is like being able to see which horse wins the race, but also that horses speed, gait and all of the critical details that make that horse the best, Chang told Stanford Medicines blog SCOPE.

The findings suggest the therapy is safe, and further studies will need to be performed in future human clinical trials.

Industry-backed studies show bias favoring indoor tanning

Studies on indoor tanning that are financially backed by the tanning industry are more likely to promote benefits and dismiss risks compared to studies without financial support, an investigation published on Feb. 4 in the British Medical Journal found.

The association is quite striking, dermatology professor Eleni Linos told Stanford Medicine News. We need scientific data to be independent of industry influence. I am concerned that funding sources may influence the conclusions of these papers.

The researchers analyzed 691 journal articles referencing indoor tanning and found that 50 had industry backing. 78% of articles with industry backing portrayed indoor tanning in a positive light, compared to 4% of articles without industry backing.

This is the first study to examine conflict of interest in indoor tanning literature, and it echoes whats been said about the influence of the tobacco and sugar industries on science, Linos told Stanford Medicine News. Researchers, public health experts and members of the general public should be aware of and account for industry funding when assessing the evidence related to the risks and benefits of indoor tanning.

Immigrants who obtain legal status might still fear deportation

Immigrants might continue to fear deportation even after receiving documentation, a study published on Jan. 29 in Law & Society Review found.

Documentation is hardly a shield from deportation fears, sociology assistant professor Asad Asad told Stanford News. Documentation affords some protection from deportation, but it can also heighten fears since the bureaucracies that document immigrants have a greater perceived ability to surveil and expel them.

Between 2013 to 2015, he conducted extensive interviews with 50 undocumented and documented immigrants living in the Dallas metropolitan area to learn about their everyday lives.

Some undocumented migrants may be chilled out of legalization opportunities in an attempt to maintain a sense of invisibility to a system they view as primarily punitive, Asad told Stanford News. If fears of deportation lead immigrants to pass up rare opportunities for legal status in their search for invisibility from a system they view as unforgiving, they and their U.S.-citizen children may face restricted opportunities for promoting their long-term well-being in this country.

Contact Derek Chen at derekc8 at stanford.edu.

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Research Roundup: CRISPR-based cancer therapy, tanning studies, immigration and deportation - The Stanford Daily