Monthly Archives: March 2014

Link between missing DNA, birth defects confirmed

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 6:45 am

In 2010, scientists in Italy reported that a woman and her daughter showed a puzzling array of disabilities, including epilepsy and cleft palate. The mother had previously lost a 15-day-old son to respiratory failure, and the research team noted that the mother and daughter were missing a large chunk of DNA on their X chromosome. But the researchers were unable to definitively show that the problems were tied to that genetic deletion.

Now a team from the University of Pennsylvania and The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia has confirmed that those patients' ailments resulted from the genetic anomaly. Creating mice that lacked the same region of DNA, the Penn and CHOP researchers showed that these animals suffered the same problems that afflicted the mother, daughter and son -- cleft palate, epilepsy and respiratory difficulties, a condition called human Xq22.1 deletion syndrome. And, by clarifying the syndrome's genetic basis, the researchers have laid the foundation for identifying the underlying molecular mechanism of these troubles and potentially treating them at their biological root.

"This study has demonstrated that deleting this region in mice causes them to respond like humans with the same deletion," said P. Jeremy Wang, senior author on the study and professor in the Penn School of Veterinary Medicine's Department of Animal Biology. "Now that we have a mouse model, we can dissect and try to genetically pinpoint which genes are responsible."

Wang co-led the study with his postdoctoral researcher Jian Zhou. Additional coauthors included Penn Vet's N. Adrian Leu and CHOP's Ethan Goldberg, Lei Zhou and Douglas Coulter.

The study appears in the journal Human Molecular Genetics.

To investigate the effects of missing this portion of DNA, more than 1 million base pairs long, the Penn team crossed existing mice that had particular deletions in their DNA to create a mouse that lacked the entire stretch that the human patients were missing. They quickly observed that all male mice died at birth due to respiratory failure. Females, who would have one normal X chromosome and one X chromosome with this missing stretch of genetic material, survived but had varying degrees of symptoms including epilepsy, cleft palate and other developmental problems.

"We believe this is because of skewed X chromosome inactivation," Wang said. "In females one of the X chromosomes' expression is randomly 'silenced' so that males and females have an equal dosage of genetic material from this sex chromosome under normal circumstances. In this case, if more female cells silence the X chromosome that has the deletion, the effects of the syndrome won't be as severe."

To narrow down which part of the deleted genetic material was responsible for the observed birth defects, the researchers genetically engineered one type of mice that lacked the first two-thirds of the original genetic deletion and another type that lacked the final third.

Unexpectedly, the mice lacking the two-thirds of the region on the X chromosome, which included 17 genes, did not display any respiratory failure, cleft palate or epilepsy.

"These mice were fine," Wang said. "It was very surprising to us that deleting this many genes on the X chromosome did not cause apparent problems for the mice."

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Link between missing DNA, birth defects confirmed

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B Howard Fake Ass Michael Jackson Son. – Video

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B Howard Fake Ass Michael Jackson Son.
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DNA rap video project – Video

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GARFF DANIERO CHECK MY DNA (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO) – Video

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GARFF DANIERO CHECK MY DNA (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)
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Cheap, reliable whole-genome sequencing? Not so fast, say Stanford researchers

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13 hours ago Mar. 11, 2014 - 2:41 PM PDT

Everyday access to the contents of our genes draws nearer and nearer. But the industry is currently complicated by a mix of rapidly advancing technology and just-emerging science: Despite the fact that we can read our genes, we dont necessarily know what they mean.

A Stanford University study that will be published tomorrow in theJournal of the American Medical Associationtook a look at whole-genome sequencing for clinical use and found that it has more substantial obstacles to overcome than many people might realize.

We need to be very honest about what we can and cannot do at this point in time, paper co-author Euan Ashley said in a release. Our hope is that the identification of specific hurdles will allow researchers in this field to focus their efforts on overcoming them to make this technique clinically useful.

The Stanford team evaluated obstacles by sequencing the genomes of 12 healthy people. They then manually analyzed about 100 genetic variations in each person. It took an hour for each variation to determine if it might increase the risk for disease.

After looking at each of the variations, the researchers settled on two to six per person that merited a follow up test. One test participant found out she was at risk for breast and ovarian cancer.

Although there are clearly challenges in bringing whole-genome sequencing into the clinic, this finding was clearly medically significant, co-lead paper author Frederick Dewey said in the release. Its not possible to predict from a study of 12 people how often this type of clinically actionable discovery will occur, but it definitely supports the use of this technology.

But catching that one instance of disease risk came at a great cost: 100 hours of labor, which boosted the cost of sequencing to $17,000. Three genetic counselors, three clinicians and one medical pathologist pored over each of the results because there is no straightforward way to determine if a single gene mutation poses a risk. Instead, the team consulted medical literature and made the call if all of a patients gene mutations together called for a follow up test. Follow ups costfrom $351 to $776.

The team also found that it is impossible for currently available off-the-shelf tests to achieve the same level of accuracy in genome sequencing.

These off-the-shelf genome sequencing techniques were developed to provide generally good coverage of most of the genome, Dewey said in the release. But there are some regions that remain to be covered well that we care very deeply about. We still need to supplement this information with additional sequencing in some regions to make clinically usable decisions.

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Cheap, reliable whole-genome sequencing? Not so fast, say Stanford researchers

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Whole genome sequencing 'not ready for widespread clinical use'

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Both the technical barriers associated with human DNA sequencing and the costs involved have been decreasing for some time. A new study investigates the benefits and drawbacks of whole genome sequencing in clinical applications.

The first sequencing of a human genome began in 1990 and was completed in 2003 at a cost of $2.7 billion. Now, whole genome sequencing (WGS) can cost as little as $1,000, with the procedure taking just days.

When sequencing an organism's DNA, the order of DNA nucleotides is documented by machines. This ordering is transcribed in letters - A, C, G and T - which each represent a particular piece of DNA (adenines, guanines, thyamines and cytosines). The human genome is made up of 3 billion of these letters.

Using the genome sequence, scientists are able to find genes much more easily. In a clinical setting, it is hoped that WGS could quickly and accurately reveal the genetic basis of family diseases. Even in healthy individuals, it is believed that WGS can uncover potentially important information about a person's genes and their health.

For example, Medical News Today recently reported on new research that looked at using WGS to select embryos for in vitro fertilization.

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Whole genome sequencing 'not ready for widespread clinical use'

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Artform Gallery presents – "Politically Incorrect" Meet The Artists 1 – Video

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Artform Gallery presents - "Politically Incorrect" Meet The Artists 1
Saturday March 1st Artform Gallery introduced a new art show benefiting and exploring human rights called "Politically Incorrect". The show features amazing ...

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Andy Dick talks MTV freedom and censorship on Tom Green Live – Video

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Andy Dick talks MTV freedom and censorship on Tom Green Live
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Surveillance: a symptom of unchecked power

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Revelations from former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden made it clear to people around the world that their digital communications are being tracked and saved by the US spy agency.

That was one of the reasons why the NSA and its British counterpart GCHQ were included on the 2014 list of Enemies of the Internet published on Wednesday (12.03.2014) by Reporters Without Borders.

It's been a tough year for freedom of speech on the Internet

"The mass surveillance methods employed, many of them exposed by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, are all the more intolerable because they will be used and indeed are already being used by authoritarians countries such as Iran, China, Turkmenistan, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain to justify their own violations of freedom of information," the report said. "How will so-called democratic countries be able to press for the protection of journalists if they adopt the very practices they are criticizing authoritarian regimes for?"

Inclusion on the press freedom group's list put the US and UK in the company of regimes in Tehran and Beijing, which have both come under heavy international criticism for their long-time censorship and surveillance of the Internet.

Iran: Fluctuation on the surface

Despite some minor loosening of restrictions under Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, authorities in Iran have continued to develop a "national Internet" - the so-called "halal Internet" - that would cut off access to material deemed unacceptable, the report said.

"There have been fluctuations on the surface, including President Rouhani using Twitter, but the depth of the problem is intact," Arash Abadpour, a Toronto-based Iranian blogger, researcher and engineer, told DW. "The filtering regime is a reality, the National Internet is creeping in, and online activity is still criminalized."

A national 'halal' network could remove Iranians from the wider, public Internet

Filtering content, controlling Internet service providers, intercepting communications, staging cyber-attacks and imprisoning bloggers and Internet activists are common practice in Iran, Reporters Without Borders wrote.

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Ron Paul: Gold Is Going To Be The Safe Haven It’s Been For Six Thousand Years – Video

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Ron Paul: Gold Is Going To Be The Safe Haven It #39;s Been For Six Thousand Years
Air Date: March 4th, 2014 This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a #39;fai...

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