Monthly Archives: February 2014

DNA Verification Of Peanut Allergy Treatments

Posted: February 1, 2014 at 3:42 pm

February 1, 2014

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

Scientists with Stanford University are finding that healing a peanut allergy with oral immunotherapy alters the DNA of the patients immune cells. The finding could serve as the basis for a simple blood test to monitor the long-term effectiveness of the allergy therapy.

Allergy scientists are currently performing clinical trials of doctor-supervised immunotherapy involving peanut-allergy sufferers taking escalating amounts of peanut powder in an attempt to desensitize them to the nuts. At the conclusion of the trial, patients are usually expected to eat some peanuts every day throughout their lives.

At first, eating two peanut butter cups a day might seem fun, but it gets a little boring and a lot of people might stop, said Dr. Kari Nadeau, an immunologist at Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Childrens Hospital Stanford.

Until now, doctors couldnt test if patients who had finished immunotherapy could safely give up eating daily doses of peanuts, she said.

Our new finding can help us try to determine whether, for the long term, someones allergy has truly been shut off so people can eat ad lib, Nadeau said.

In the study, which was published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, the scientists evaluated 20 peanut-allergic adults and children who had concluded two years of immunotherapy, which made it possible for them to eat one 4-gram serving of peanuts daily without experiencing a major allergic reaction.

The patients were asked to stop consuming peanuts for three months and were then given a bit of peanut powder to see if their allergy returned. Thirteen of the patients had a relapse of their allergy, while seven did not. The scientists evaluated the immune cells in the blood of patients from the two groups. Blood samples from peanut-allergic participants who had never acquired the immunotherapy were utilized as a control.

The scientists focused on the regulating T cells, which are white blood cells that help to reduce an allergic reaction. In these cells, the DNA at a gene called forkhead box protein 3 (FOXP3) was somewhat different in each of the three sets of patients. The FOXP3 gene has been previously found to play a role in allergies.

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DNA of peanut-allergic kids changes with immune therapy, Stanford/Packard study finds

Posted: at 3:42 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

31-Jan-2014

Contact: Erin Digitale digitale@stanford.edu 650-724-9175 Stanford University Medical Center

STANFORD, Calif. Treating a peanut allergy with oral immunotherapy changes the DNA of the patient's immune cells, according to a new study from the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford. The DNA change could serve as the basis for a simple blood test to monitor the long-term effectiveness of the allergy therapy.

Peanut allergy, like other food allergies, currently has no cure. Scientists are conducting clinical trials of doctor-supervised immunotherapy, in which peanut-allergic patients take increasing amounts of peanut powder to try to desensitize them to the peanut allergen. At the end of the trial, patients are usually asked to eat some peanuts every day for the rest of their lives.

"At first, eating two peanut butter cups a day might seem fun, but it gets a little boring and a lot of people might stop," said Kari Nadeau, MD, PhD, associate professor of pediatrics at Stanford and an immunologist at Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford. Until now, doctors could not test whether patients who had completed immunotherapy could safely stop eating daily doses of peanuts, she said. "Our new finding can help us try to determine whether, for the long term, someone's allergy has truly been shut off so people can eat ad lib."

Nadeau is the senior author of a paper describing the new findings, which will be published online Jan. 31 in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

In the new study, Nadeau's team examined 20 peanut-allergic children and adults who had completed two years of immunotherapy, which enabled them to eat one 4-gram serving of peanuts daily without experiencing a major allergic reaction.

The patients were asked to stop eating peanuts for three months and then were given a small amount of peanut powder to see if their allergy returned. Thirteen of the patients regained their allergy, while seven did not. The researchers compared the immune cells in the blood of patients from the two groups. Blood samples from peanut-allergic patients who had never received oral immunotherapy were used as a control.

The researchers focused on the regulatory T cells, which are white blood cells that help to suppress an allergy response. In these cells, the DNA at a gene called forkhead box protein 3, or FOXP3, was slightly different in each of the three groups of patients. The FOXP3 gene has previously been shown to play a role in allergies.

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Discussing "decoding the hookworm genome" with Dr. Makedonka Mitreva – Video

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Discussing "decoding the hookworm genome" with Dr. Makedonka Mitreva
Makedonka Mitreva, PhD, Assistant professor of medicine and genetics and a member of The Genome Institute at the Washington University School of Medicine dis...

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The Human Genome Project, 3D Animation (1) – Video

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The Human Genome Project, 3D Animation (1)
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HUMAN GENOME PROJECT 2011 – Video

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HUMAN GENOME PROJECT 2011
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Introduction to genome browsers using Ensembl – Video

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Introduction to genome browsers using Ensembl
This video provides a basic introduction to genome browsers, with a focus on data and analysis available in Ensembl. A brief overview of genome sequencing, i...

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Why Can’t We Prevent Alzheimer’s?

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We got the human genome a decade ago. Where are the drugs?

My grandfather was found wandering shoeless in the town where he was born, 50 miles from home. That was the first day we knew. Or, it was the last day we could pretend. A stranger placed a call to my father at his apartment in Evanston, Illinois, after finding my grandfather on those wintery streets, untucked and empty-eyed.

On a regular day, hed take the L from Evanston into Chicago and place some bets at the track. He liked to play the ponies, and he whittled down his paychecks at the bar. My grandfather kicked alcoholism at age 65. He didnt touch a drop for 16 years until his death, something he was proud of; but in the last decade, he was vanishing. On this day, alcohol couldnt explain his disappearance. By the afternoon, something was amiss. Hours later, into the night, the telephone rang. Did we know an Anthony Kozubek?

He was a child raised in the depth of the Great Depression. He could fix anything. Repair your front steps. Fix your plumbing. Install new gutters. One time he visited our house, and within an hour was upon our roof. We didnt have a ladder so he built us one. A few hours later, he built us a back staircase. He told us, maybe to build the lore of his hardscrabble life, that as a child he recycled his sisters shoes for his by cutting off the heels.

The son of Polish immigrants, my grandfather grew up on a polyglot street, and he began drinking with purpose in his teens. My grandmother stowed money in cans so that he wouldnt spend it. He was a boxer. Tall and lithe, he fought amateur Golden Gloves bouts in his Chicagoan youth in the 1930s. (His brother Joe traveled to New York and sparred with heavyweight champ Jack Sharkey). He fought and he drank, inside the ring and outside, and it continued while he served the U.S. Armys Engineer Corp.

He didnt talk about WWII, but years later we learned of his station transfers through the jackbooted continent based on records of his stints in the brig. The poor arent born into this world; they come crashing into it. When he learned he was having a son, my grandfather and his brother-in-law celebrated with drinking, stumbling and shattering a store-front display window, landing in a heap of plate glass.

He would later suffer from late-onset Alzheimer's disease. (Jim Kozubek)

Years later, my father would scribble down notes in journals, detailing those past events, documenting hard lives that built the foundation for us. We had recovered my grandfather from those slippery streets, but his faulty memory couldnt be rescued. In fact, his lack of recognition was jarring. When my father was preparing to remove his clothes from a dresser, he recalls, my grandfather protested, "You can't take those clothes, they belong to my son." Alzheimers "moments" drop like chasms.

And yet, this is not one elegiac story, it is many. Five million people in the United States have Alzheimers disease. This number will double in a decade. If any of us live to be 85, the chances of having the disease or some form of dementia is about one in three. The explanation for why some of us get it and some dont is a largely unsolved genetic riddle. My grandfather eventually died from it. My grandmother is now 96-years-old, writes me cards with lacy cursive, and regularly beats me at Scrabble.

Recently, my father subscribed to a service that allowed us to mail in a cheek swab to learn about our genetic ancestry. I learned that I belonged to Haplogroup Ra type of ethnic branch on our genetic treethat I am German and Polish (which I knew), and by a small fraction Ashkenazi Jewish (which I didnt know), and I received a colorful map of my ancestors probable traipses through Europe. But though it was an option on the test, my father did not want to know about our risk for Alzheimers, it turns out. And for good reasonthere is not a single meaningful drug to treat Alzheimers.

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Please Support Scientific Research Related to Longevity and Life Extension – Video

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Please Support Scientific Research Related to Longevity and Life Extension
Please support research related to human longevity and radical life extension. Support SENS Research Foundation. Considering learning enough to conduct resea...

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Okinawan Longevity and Health – Video

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Okinawan Longevity and Health
Okinawan Longevity and Health A documentary about the health and longevity of Okinawa - and a warning of the health dangers posed by modern #39;American lifesty...

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Want to Live a Long Time? Pay Attention

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Long before the age of gene therapy and miracle medical treatments, the secrets of long life were being gathered and revealed in a unique study of 1,500 children born about 1910. By studying these people throughout their lives, successive generations of researchers collected nearly 10 million pieces of observable data and have been able to produce solid insights into human longevity.

"Most people who live to an old age do so not because they have beaten cancer, heart disease, diabetes, or lung disease; rather, the long-lived have mostly avoided serious ailments altogether," Howard S. Friedman and Leslie R. Martin said in their 2011 book, "The Longevity Project."

"The best childhood personality predictor of longevity was conscientiousnessthe qualities of a prudent, persistent, well-organized person," according to the two professors (he at the University of CaliforniaRiverside, and she at La Sierra University). "Conscientiousness ... also turned out to be the best personality predictor of long life when measured in adulthood."

[Read: Do You Recognize These Lessons of Longevity?]

Since their book was published, Martin recently told U.S. News, the benefits of conscientiousness have been affirmed and even strengthened in other research studies. "This is still a pretty hot topic," she says. "Work that's come out since the book was published has mainly confirmed the importance of conscientiousness."

In particular, she explained, research being done in Hawaii on personality traits over time is producing similar results to Friedman's and Martin's own research, which chronicles efforts begun in 1921 by Lewis Terman, a Stanford University psychologist. He selected 1,500 bright and generally high-performing children and began amassing detailed information about their personal histories, health, activities, beliefs, attitudes, families and other variables.

Over the next eight decades, other academics maintained the Terman Project and assembled exhaustive details on all facets of the original subjects' later lives. It is this unique depth of detail that has permitted Friedman and Martin to reach what they feel are scientifically sound conclusions about what it takes to live a long life. Now, Martin says, more researchers are reaching similar conclusions.

"It was not cheerfulness and it was not having a sociable personality that predicted long life across the many ensuing decades," she and Friedman wrote in their book. "Certain other factors were also relevant, but the prudent, dependable children lived the longest. The strength of this finding was unexpected, but it proved to be a very important and enduring one."

The book presents three reasons why conscientious people live longer:

1. They are more likely to obey the rules, protecting their health and not engaging in risky behaviors such as smoking or driving without a seat belt. If a doctor tells them to take a medicine, they take every prescribed dose.

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