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Key enzyme involved in protecting nerves from degeneration identified - 0 views

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    Fly's enzyme is used to cure diseases such as Parkinson's, and aid nerve damage and spinal cord
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The Top 10 Everything of 2009 - TIME - 1 views

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    The decoding of the human genome nearly a decade ago fueled expectations that an understanding of all human hereditary influences was within sight. But the connections between genes and, say, disease turned out to be far more complicated than imagined.
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New Hope Of a Cure For H.I.V. - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • So people with H.I.V. now must take drugs every day for life, which some researchers say is not a sustainable solution for tens of millions of infected people.
  • CCR5,
  • This is what was done with the Trenton patient. Some of the man's white blood cells were removed from his body and treated with a gene therapy developed by Sangamo BioSciences. The therapy induced the cells to produce proteins called zinc-finger nucleases that can disrupt the CCR5 gene.
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    • avikan
       
      Millions of people worldwide are currently affected by HIV and many have died from AIDS. Scientists have been trying for many years to find a cure for the epidemic, but now many are trying to find a way to prevent the passing on of the virus for future generations. Although no definite treatment has been discovered yet, recent findings have shown promising results for the future. 
    • avikan
       
      With the fast developing biological technologies we are seeing today, scientists hope's are growing stronger.  Maybe one of us one day will be a part of the phenomenon, in search of a way to help the millions affected by the epidemic  
    • avikan
       
      CD4 cells initiate the body's response to infections.
    • avikan
       
      Many forms of HIV, initially use CCR5 to enter and infect host cells. A few individuals carry a mutation known as CCR5 delta 32 in the CCR5 gene, protecting them against these strains of HIV.
    • avikan
       
      For over 30 years scientists have been trying to find a cure for the HIV/AIDs epidemic and so far have been unsuccessful 
    • avikan
       
      Incase some of us forgot, AIDs stands for Acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a disease in which there is a severe loss of the body's cellular immunity. And HIV stands for Human immunodeficiency virus, a virus that causes AIDs
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Dieting During Pregnancy Increases Risk Of Obesity And Diabetes For Offspring - 0 views

  • babies of mothers who diet around the time of conception and in early pregnancy, may have an increased risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes throughout their lives. This study provides exciting insights into how behavior can lead to epigenetic changes in offspring related to obesity and disease.
  • dieting around the time a baby is conceived may increase the chance of the child becoming obese later in life
  • changes in the genes that control food intake and glucose levels that may lead to obesity and diabetes.
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  • epigenetic changes with alterations in the structure of the DNA and its associated proteins, histones, which affects the way that genes can behave in later life.
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    Article about how dieting during pregnancy cause offsprings to have a change in genes.
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Why having sex really IS the best thing to do: Gene mapping finally proves mating is be... - 0 views

  • Why having sex really IS the best thing to do
  • is better for evolution than self-reproduction
  • Having sex allows us to evolve more effectively than species which reproduce without a partner, according to tests that claim to finally prove the long-held theory.
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  • cording to the study by the University of Edinburgh.
  • Meanwhile, creatures who reproduce asexually are more likely to be lumbered with disease-causing genes
  • Combining the genes of two parents – rather than one in the case of fruit flies, stick insects and other animals – allows for damaging DNA to be removed within a few generations.
  • h longer, a
  • or muc
  • This is because individuals who inherit healthy genes tend to flourish and pass on their DNA to the next generatio
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    well, I guess SEX is the best way to develop a super human for the future + I know everyone gonna love it :) 
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EBSCOhost: "BUT IT DOESN'T RUN IN MY FAMILY" - 1 views

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    health right now Closing the GAPS in your knowledge of YOUR FAMILY TREE can quite literally save your LIFE SARA McGREGOR never worried about getting breast cancer. Neither did her two older sisters. After all, their mother and maternal grandmother never had the disease.
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deCODEme - Empowering prevention. Calculate genetic risk for diseases, DNA research for... - 0 views

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    a company that sells DNA technology and genetic screening.
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Missing Lincs - Science News - 6 views

    • Nitchakan Chaiprukmalakan
       
      Scientists are finding more information about the importance of the non coding RNAs, lincRNAs.
  • Only now have scientists begun identifying the previously invisible contractors who make sure that materials get where they are supposed to be and in the right order to build a human being or any other creature. Some of these little-known workers belong to a class of molecules called long intergenic noncoding RNAs.
  • And the lincRNAs originate in what scientists used to view as barren wastelands between protein-coding genes. But new research is showing that these formerly underappreciated workers have important roles in projects both large and microscopic.
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  • In the last few years, scientists have learned that lincRNAs, as well as other RNAs that are long and noncoding but not intergenic, perform a variety of jobs. Some serve as guides showing proteins where to go, while others tether proteins to different types of RNA, or to DNA. Some work as decoys, distracting regulatory molecules from their usual assignments. Some may even have multiple roles, all the while chattering away to other RNA within cells. (It is not idle gossip; RNA communication within cells may ward off diseases such as cancer.) And as the ultimate multitaskers, lincRNAs keep proper cellular development ticking along and help define what makes mice mice and people people.
  • That archive contains about 3 billion genetic letters, far more than the genomes of less complex organisms such as roundworms and fruit flies.
  • In 2005, the research revealed that even though genes that code for proteins make up only 1.5 percent of the mouse genome, more than 63 percent of the genome’s DNA is copied into RNA. In humans the number is even higher, with up to 93 percent of the genome made into RNA, even though protein-coding genes make up less than 2 percent of the genome.
  • At first, many scientists didn’t know what to make of the excess RNA. Some thought it was overexuberance on the part of the DNA-copying machinery. But gradually researchers began to realize that many of those extra RNAs had important jobs to do.
  • Some, though, appear to act like general contractors — not hammering in the nails and pouring the foundations of cells themselves, but dictating how the job should be done.
  • One of the most famous long noncoding RNAs, known as XIST, is also one of the most hands-on. XIST is in charge of shutting down one of the X chromosomes in every single cell of women and girls
  • XIST doesn’t have a long commute to work; it coats whichever X chromosome makes it, preventing other genes on the chromosome from being activated
  • One of the most well-studied linc­RNAs, named HOTAIR, wasn’t lucky enough to get a job close to home. It is copied from DNA on chromosome 12 but has to travel to chromosome 2 to shut down several genes in a group known as the HOXD cluster, genes important for proper development of an organism
  • Not only does HOTAIR help direct development, but it is also important throughout life to help cells pinpoint their location in the body.
  • Whether promoting health or mis­directing cells, lincRNAs don’t necessarily act alone.
  • A lincRNA known as HOTTIP also works with a crew of histone modifiers, but instead of shuttering genes, HOTTIP’s crews hang grand-opening signs to attract gene-activating machinery
  • In the recipe for humans, lincRNAs are in the thick of things from the very beginning. At least 26 different lincRNAs need to be on to keep an embryonic stem cell a stem cell
  • Just how lincRNAs choose which genes to turn on and off isn’t yet known. But Pier Paolo Pandolfi, a geneticist at Beth Israel Deaconess and Harvard Medical School, suspects that the lincRNAs are whispering to each other and to other RNAs, keeping tabs on all a cell’s goings-on. Pandolfi laid out his hypothesis for how this chatter might help control protein production and other processes in the Aug. 5 Cell.
  • The Columbia team and Pandolfi’s team independently found that tweaking levels of a few messenger RNAs that distract microRNAs from PTEN messenger RNA can lead to prostate cancer or a type of brain tumor called glioblastoma. Just messing with levels of a messenger RNA from another gene known as ZEB2 throws off PTEN protein levels and can lead to melanoma in mice, Pandolfi’s group reported in another paper in the Oct. 14 Cell.
  • Losing one noncoding RNA may be disastrous for a cell, but for want of noncoding RNAs whole species may never have evolved, argues Queensland’s Mattick. He and others say the real function of lincRNAs is to give evolution a sort of molecular clay from which to mold new designs.
  • Humans have several lincRNAs that are found in no other species. Many of those RNAs are made in the brain, leading scientists to speculate that the molecules may be at least partially responsible for that important organ’s evolution.
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    Is RNA the most important molecule in the cell? There is a lot of evidence leading to new understandings of RNA and it's role in many different mechanisms within a cell.
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Genetics as Rorschachs: Pondering Our Genes and Our Fate | Psychology Today - 0 views

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    Even today scientists find the study of genes an ambiguous topic. The randomness of the genes being passed down or not, whether one child has a mutations while the other does not or if your sister has a higher risk of getting breast cancer than you is still being tested.
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Shot of Young Stem Cells Makes Rapidly Aging Mice Live Much Longer and Healthier - Gate... - 1 views

  • animals that got the stem/progenitor cells improved their health and lived two to three times longer than expected,
  • "Our experiments showed that mice that have progeria, a disorder of premature aging, were healthier and lived longer after an injection of stem cells from young, healthy animals," Dr. Niedernhofer said. "That tells us that stem cell dysfunction is a cause of the changes we see with aging."
  • "Typically the progeria mice die at around 21 to 28 days of age, but the treated animals lived far longer -- some even lived beyond 66 days. They also were in better general health."
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  • we injected stem/progenitor cells from young, healthy mice into the abdomens of 17-day-old progeria mice,
  • As the progeria mice age, they lose muscle mass in their hind limbs, hunch over, tremble, and move slowly and awkwardly. Affected mice that got a shot of stem cells just before showing the first signs of aging were more like normal mice, and they grew almost as large.
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    the experiment from the University of Pittsburgh shows that the mice can be stronger live longer after they were injected with stem cells from young healthy animals.
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Changes in gene expression causes high BP in pregnancy - 1 views

  • Washington: Researchers have discovered that changes in the gene expression of a key enzyme may contribute to high blood pressure and increase susceptibility to forming blood clots in pregnant women with preeclampsia.
  • Epigenetics refers to changes in gene expression that are mediated through mechanisms other than changes in the DNA sequence.
  • The VCU team reported that thromboxane synthase – an important inflammatory enzyme – is increased in the blood vessels of expectant mothers with preeclampsia.The thromboxane synthase gene codes for this enzyme, which is involved in several processes including cardiovascular disease and stroke. This enzyme results in the synthesis of thromboxane, which increases blood pressure and causes blood clots.
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  • According to Walsh, one of the main epigenetic mechanisms is methylation of the DNA, which controls the expression of genes. The increase of
  • his enzyme in the blood vessels is related to reduced DNA methylation and the infiltration of neu
  • enzyme
  • trophils
  • trophils into the blood vessels. Neutrophils are white blood cells that normally help fight infection.
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Gene switches do more than flip 'on' or 'off': Can exhibit much more complex binding be... - 1 views

  • right genes for the job are turned on only in the specific cells where they are needed
  • molecular "clutch" that converts treadmilling to a stable bound state, moving the transcription process forward to completion to turn the gene on
  • act like a switch; they are either "on" (bound to DNA) or "off" (not bound)
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  • can exhibit much more complex binding behavior
  • transcription factors' binding process is dynamic and involves more than just being bound or unbound
  • In addition to a stable binding state (on or off)
  • "treadmilling," where no forward transcription process is occurring
  • indicator of whether a gene was turned on or off
  • measure and calculate how long a protein is associated with all of the different genes it regulates
  • proteins that bind in the stable state are associated with high levels of gene transcription
  • if we can regulate the transition between treadmilling and stable binding, we can regulate the outcome in terms of gene expression
  • genetic medicine -- a new way to regulate the 'switches' that turn gene expression associated with disease on or off.
  • measured how long it took the competitor transcription factor to replace the resident protein and used this data to calculate the residence time at each location in the genome
  • specific proteins called "transcription factors" that control which genes are turned on or off in cells by binding to nearby DNA
  • new insights on how cells respond to developmental cues and how they adapt to changing environmental conditions
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    Genes have been discovered to be more complex than we previously thought--rather than having only on and off states, there is an intermediate state called "treadmilling".
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Concerns Raised about Genetically Engineered Mosquitoes - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  • These mosquitoes are genetically engineered to kill — their own children.
  • The results, and other work elsewhere, could herald an age in which genetically modified insects will be used to help control agricultural pests and insect-borne diseases like dengue fever and malaria.
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