DNA Not The Same In Every Cell Of Body

Ellipse

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
ScienceDaily
July 16, 2009


DNA Not The Same In Every Cell Of Body: Major Genetic Differences Between Blood And Tissue Cells Revealed​

Research by a group of Montreal scientists calls into question one of the most basic assumptions of human genetics: that when it comes to DNA, every cell in the body is essentially identical to every other cell. Their results appear in the July issue of the journal Human Mutation.


This discovery may undercut the rationale behind numerous large-scale genetic studies conducted over the last 15 years, studies which were supposed to isolate the causes of scores of human diseases.

Except for cancer, samples of diseased tissue are difficult or even impossible to take from living patients. Thus, the vast majority of genetic samples used in large-scale studies come in the form of blood. However, if it turns out that blood and tissue cells do not match genetically, these ambitious and expensive genome-wide association studies may prove to have been essentially flawed from the outset.

This discovery sprang from an investigation into the underlying genetic causes of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) led by Dr. Morris Schweitzer, Dr. Bruce Gottlieb, Dr. Lorraine Chalifour and colleagues at McGill University and the affiliated Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research at Montreal's Jewish General Hospital. The researchers focused on BAK, a gene that controls cell death.

What they found surprised them.

AAA is one of the rare vascular diseases where tissue samples are removed as part of patient therapy. When they compared them, the researchers discovered major differences between BAK genes in blood cells and tissue cells coming from the same individuals, with the suspected disease "trigger" residing only in the tissue. Moreover, the same differences were later evident in samples derived from healthy individuals.

"In multi-factorial diseases other than cancer, usually we can only look at the blood," explained Gottlieb, a geneticist with McGill's Centre for Translational Research in Cancer. "Traditionally when we have looked for genetic risk factors for, say, heart disease, we have assumed that the blood will tell us what's happening in the tissue. It now seems this is simply not the case."

"From a genetic perspective, therapeutic implications aside, the observation that not all cells are the same is extremely important. That's the bottom line," he added. "Genome-wide association studies were introduced with enormous hype several years ago, and people expected tremendous breakthroughs. They were going to draw blood samples from thousands or hundreds of thousands of individuals, and find the genes responsible for disease.

"Unfortunately, the reality of these studies has been very disappointing, and our discovery certainly could explain at least one of the reasons why."

AAA is a localized widening and weakening of the abdominal aorta, and primarily affects elderly Caucasian men who smoke, have high blood pressure and high cholesterol levels. It often has no symptoms, but can lead to aortic ruptures which are fatal in 90 per cent of cases.

If the mutations discovered in the tissue cells actually predispose for AAA, they present an ideal target for new therapies, and may have even wider therapeutic implications.

"This will probably have repercussions for vascular disease in general," said Schweitzer, of McGill's Department of Medicine. "We have not yet looked at coronary or cerebral arteries, but I would suspect that this mutation may be present across the board."

Schweitzer is optimistic that this discovery may lead to new treatments for vascular disease in the near to medium term.

"The timeline might be five to 10 years," he said. "We have to do in-vitro cell culture experiments first, prove it in an animal model, and then develop a molecule or protein which will affect the mutated gene product. This is the first step, but it's an important step."

Journal reference:

1. Gottlieb et al. BAK1 gene variation and abdominal aortic aneurysms. Human Mutation, 2009; 30 (7): 1043 DOI: 10.1002/humu.21046

Adapted from materials provided by McGill University.

source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/07/090715131449.htm


Note: related article : http://www.cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php?topic=7313.0
 
Really, there' a problem with the sott.net search engine. If you do a search for 'tissue' their's no result, with 'genetic' the article didn't appear.
 
Ellipse said:
Really, there' a problem with the sott.net search engine. If you do a search for 'tissue' their's no result, with 'genetic' the article didn't appear.

The SOTT search engine requires a minimum of 3 words. If you only have one, add a plus sign (no space) to the word. Example: +genetic

:)
 
Ellipse said:
Really, there' a problem with the sott.net search engine. If you do a search for 'tissue' their's no result, with 'genetic' the article didn't appear.

When I searched for it, I've used "insource: ScienceDaily" in the search engine and look for the specific one, page by page.
 
Now with a search on 'tissue' I have a lot of result instead of the "0 Result" sentence. :shock: Perhaps the index have changed, don't know.


When I searched for it, I've used "insource: ScienceDaily" in the search engine and look for the specific one, page by page.
Ok, I had never realize that the question mark in front of the query field was for an help page for the search engine. The design lead to some confusion, for me it was just graph to indicate the search field...

Thx.
 
AAA is a localized widening and weakening of the abdominal aorta, and primarily affects elderly Caucasian men who smoke, have high blood pressure and high cholesterol levels. It often has no symptoms, but can lead to aortic ruptures which are fatal in 90 per cent of cases.

If I understand 'aortic', it means" large blood vessels?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aorta

I wonder if the bold above was "thrown in" and I'd like to
see the data supporting it. Obviously other factors
were mentioned, even so, why was `smoking' mentioned
first in line followed by the rest?

Perhaps I am just be biased, could be. :cool2:

FWIW,
Dan
 
dant said:
AAA is a localized widening and weakening of the abdominal aorta, and primarily affects elderly Caucasian men who smoke, have high blood pressure and high cholesterol levels. It often has no symptoms, but can lead to aortic ruptures which are fatal in 90 per cent of cases.

If I understand 'aortic', it means" large blood vessels?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aorta

I wonder if the bold above was "thrown in" and I'd like to
see the data supporting it. Obviously other factors
were mentioned, even so, why was `smoking' mentioned
first in line followed by the rest?

One piece of data: my father had an aortic abdominal aneurysm and he was a Caucasian smoker in his late 50s and with a diet high in cholesterol. It's a pretty terrible surgery to undergo and a very deadly affliction. If the aneurysm bursts on the aortic valve, chances of survival are very low. Also, it is very difficult to detect without knowing that is the problem. My father had numerous tests to find out what was causing him lower back pain before they discovered the aneurysm. The term aortic refers to the aortic valve, which runs from the heart down to the abdomen, splits, and runs down both legs. So a bursting of that valve is a very scary thing to consider.

Now, the smoking part doesn't mean that tobacco, in and of itself, would cause it. Smoking American name-brand cigarettes along with a diet high in cholesterol and a genetic disposition towards high blood pressure all seem to be contributing factors. Smoking, all by itself, most likely does not cause it.
 
Thanks!

Make sense to me, as you add a host of harmful habits taken
together to really knock body systems out of sync.

I was just wondering these days with the big push to
shutdown smoking in general that smoking is used as
an adjective anywhere where health is being discussed
like the constant banging of the drum, you know?
... like there it is! The common denominator!!! ;)
 
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