(Press-News.org) 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."
This was not the case for the mice missing the last 350 kilobase pairs of the region of interest. These mice had the same suite of problems as mice missing the entire region: males died after birth and females had cleft palates, higher rates of death soon after birth, developmental delays and had seizures.
After ruling out the genes in this smaller region that have no equivalent in humans, the researchers were left with only four genes. All four belong to the same family of genes and encode proteins that are involved in cellular signaling.
"These proteins are involved in the neuronal circuitry and activity of neurotransmitters," Wang said. "That is probably why we see that females lacking one copy of these X-linked genes have epilepsy."
Wang and colleagues plan to continue studying these four genes to determine which lead to the developmental problems such as cleft palate and epilepsy when they are missing. The information gained from this and future studies could inform prenatal testing, Wang said, giving doctors advance warning to treat possible respiratory or other problems in newborns.
Understanding how the lack of these genes leads to epilepsy could also help guide treatments for the condition.
"Epilepsy and cleft palate affect tens of thousands of children in the U.S. alone each year," Wang said, "and respiratory failure is a particular problem in premature and low birth weight babies. Finding the causative genes for these conditions could have some very clinically important implications."
INFORMATION:
The study was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health.
Scientists from Penn and CHOP confirm link between missing DNA and birth defects
2014-03-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Lessons learned managing geriatric patients offer framework for improved care
2014-03-11
A large team of experts led by a Johns Hopkins geriatrician reports that efforts to improve the care of older adults and others with complex medical needs will fall short unless public policymakers focus not only on preventing hospital readmission rates, but also on better coordination of community-based "care transitions." Lessons learned from managing such transitions for older patients, they say, may offer a framework for overall improvement.
Nationwide, some 22 percent of older adults experience so-called care transitions annually, moving from and among hospitals, ...
Change happens: New maps reveal land cover change over 5 years across North America
2014-03-11
This news release is available in French and Spanish. Montreal, 11 March 2014—A new set of maps featured in the CEC's North American Environmental Atlas depicts land cover changes in North America's forests, prairies, deserts and cities, using satellite images from 2005 and 2010. These changes can be attributed to forest fires, insect infestation, urban sprawl and other natural or human-caused events. Produced by the North American Land Change Monitoring System (NALCMS), a trinational collaborative effort facilitated by the CEC, these maps and accompanying data can ...
AGU journal highlights -- March 11, 2014
2014-03-11
The following highlights summarize research papers that have been recently published in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL), Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres (JGR-D), and Journal of Geophysical Research-Earth Surface (JGR-F).
In this release:
Cassini sheds light on Titan's second largest lake, Ligeia Mare
Tectonic stress feedback loop explains U-shaped glacial valleys
Measuring the effect of water vapor on climate warming
First assessment of noctilucent cloud variability at midlatitudes
Modeling surface circulation patterns in the Gulf of Mexico
New ...
Ocean food web is key in the global carbon cycle
2014-03-11
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Nothing dies of old age in the ocean. Everything gets
eaten and all that remains of anything is waste. But that waste is pure gold to
oceanographer David Siegel, director of the Earth Research Institute at UC Santa
Barbara.
In a study of the ocean's role in the global carbon cycle, Siegel and his colleagues used those nuggets to their advantage. They incorporated the lifecycle of phytoplankton
and zooplankton — small, often microscopic animals at the bottom of the food chain —into a novel mechanistic model for assessing the global ocean carbon ...
Lack of sleep, stress describe a mother's experience after child's ALL treatment
2014-03-11
"It's a whole new cancer world" and "I don't remember what it's like to have sleep" were the most common themes of mothers interviewed by University of Colorado Cancer Center researchers during the maintenance period after a child's treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Results of this qualitative study are published in a recent issue of the Journal of Pediatric Nursing. A second study, published today in the Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing, shows the quantitative differences between stress, anxiety and depression in these parents of chronically ill children ...
NREL examines solar policy pathways for states
2014-03-11
The Energy Department's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) has published a report that aligns solar policy and market success with state demographics. By organizing the 48 contiguous states into four peer groups based on shared non-policy characteristics, the NREL research team was able to contextualize the impact of various solar policies on photovoltaic (PV) installations.
"Although it is widely accepted that solar policies drive market development, there has not been a clear understanding of which policies work in which context," lead author Darlene Steward ...
Repeat ED visits for opioid overdose raise risk of hospitalization, respiratory failure
2014-03-11
Patients brought to hospital emergency departments (EDs) more than once in a year for treatment of opioid drug overdoses are more likely to be hospitalized for overdose and to need respiratory support with a mechanical ventilator. A study conducted by Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators also identified factors that increased the risk of subsequent overdoses requiring emergency department visits.
"To our knowledge this is the first study that has identified risk factors for repeat ED visits for opioid overdose," says Kohei Hasegawa, MD, MPH, MGH Department ...
New technique uses ATP as trigger for targeted anti-cancer drug delivery
2014-03-11
Biomedical engineering researchers have developed a new technique that uses adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP), the so-called "energy molecule," to trigger the release of anti-cancer drugs directly into cancer cells. Early laboratory tests show it increases the effectiveness of drugs targeting breast cancer. The technique was developed by researchers at North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
"This is a proof of concept, but we've demonstrated there is now a new tool for introducing anti-cancer drugs directly into cancer cells ...
Empathy chimpanzees offer is key to understanding human engagement
2014-03-11
VIDEO:
First Rowena and then Liza watch videos of familiar chimpanzees yawning.
Click here for more information.
In their latest study about empathy, Yerkes National Primate Research Center researchers Matthew Campbell, PhD, and Frans de Waal, PhD, have shown chimpanzees exhibit flexibility in their empathy, just as humans do. These findings, which appear in the current issue of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, may help explain the evolution of how and when humans engage ...
New gene for bipolar disorder discovered
2014-03-11
First on top of the world and then in the depths of despair – this is what the extreme mood changes for people with bipolar disorder are like. Under the direction of scientists from Bonn, Mannheim and Basel, an international collaboration of researchers discovered two new gene regions that are connected to the prevalent disease. In addition, they were able to confirm three additional suspect genes. In this unparalleled worldwide study, the scientists are utilizing unprecedented numbers of patients. The results are now being published in the renowned journal "Nature Communications."
Throughout ...