Investigators developed a tool for more accurate interpretation of biomedical research
2015-07-23
(Press-News.org) Investigators affiliated with VIB and UGent recently achieved great success with a study involving biomedical research on mouse models. The research group of Prof Peter Vandenabeele (VIB/UGent) recently used tangible examples to demonstrate how the side effects of genetic modification of mice can complicate the interpretation of biomedical research. The team developed a web tool that allows scientists to estimate the impact of this phenomenon more accurately. Their findings were recently published in the medical journal Immunity and received ample attention by a preview in Immunity and a comment in The Scientist.
Tom Vanden Berghe (VIB/UGent): "Our research will have a profound retro-active impact on the interpretation of a great deal of scientific research. In addition, it will also aid in explaining controversies in scientific literature surrounding certain disease models. Finally, in the long term, these results can contribute to an improved translation of findings from lab animals to humans."
Tests on mice are an important tool for research into diseases and drugs. By deactivating a specific gene in mouse strains, the investigators can study the effect of this gene on the development of a disease.
Translation from animals to humans
However, mouse models alone are not sufficient to reach irrefutable scientific conclusions. Clinical studies using human cells remain essential to validate the research results. These studies often produce different conclusions. An important reason for this is that the genetic modification of mouse strains not only changes the target gene, but also causes changes in the neighboring genes. Geneticists are familiar with this phenomenon, but it is sometimes overlooked.
Comparative analysis of mouse strains
In order to clarify this problem, the research group of Prof Peter Vandenabeele (VIB/UGent) performed a comparative analysis on the genetic information from various mouse strains.
Peter Vandenabeele (VIB/UGent): "Our bioinformatics analysis revealed that each mouse strain contains approximately one thousand genes that result in an abnormal protein. About a hundred of these could actually be attributed to a functional defect. In the first generation of a genetically modified mouse strain, the so-called recombinant congenic mice, we almost always see various other defective genes close to the inactivated gene. This means that in certain cases, researchers cannot be certain whether the inactivated gene, or the dysfunctional neighboring genes (or a combination of both) is/are responsible for the observed effect."
Online tool to support biomedical research
Post-doctoral researcher Tom Vanden Berghe supported this supposition with several tangible examples. In this way, he illustrated how this strongly underestimated problem in fundamental scientific research can result in false positives and premature conclusions.
Tom Vanden Berghe then worked with bio-informaticists Liesbet Martens and Paco Hulpiau to develop a web tool that helps researchers to estimate the impact of this phenomenon correctly. The tool gives researchers insight into the possible abnormalities and the potential effect of these on their research results. Tak Wah Mak, a top-scientist from Ontario Cancer Institute, concludes his preview on Vanden Berghe's article as follows "The wake-up call represented by this Immunity article on the importance of the passenger genome therefore does a great public service to the research community involved in the analysis and generation of gene targeted mice."
INFORMATION:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-07-23
Mangrove forests could play a crucial role in protecting coastal areas from sea level rise caused by climate change, according to new research involving the University of Southampton.
A joint study between researchers at the University of Southampton along with colleagues from the Universities of Auckland and Waikato in New Zealand used leading-edge mathematical simulations to study how mangrove forests respond to elevated sea levels.
Taking New Zealand mangrove data as the basis of a new modelling system, the team were able to predict what will happen to different types ...
2015-07-23
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling legalizing marriage between same-sex couples in all 50 states follows on the heels of national polls showing rapid cultural changes in attitudes toward lesbian and gay people. A new University of Virginia study confirms this, showing that not only are Americans' conscious and unconscious biases against lesbian women and gay men decreasing across all demographic groups, but the trend also appears to be accelerating.
"Many people have this gut feeling that our culture has changed," said lead researcher Erin Westgate, a doctoral psychology ...
2015-07-23
ROCHESTER, MINN. - A group of 118 of the nation's leading cancer experts have drafted a prescription for reducing the high cost of cancer drugs and voiced support for a patient-based grassroots movement demanding action on the issue. Their recommendations and support are outlined in a commentary, co-authored by the group, in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
"High cancer drug prices are affecting the care of patients with cancer and our health care system," says lead author Ayalew Tefferi, M.D., a hematologist at Mayo Clinic. "The average gross household income in ...
2015-07-23
WASHINGTON, DC (July 23, 2015) -- Chicken, turkey and pork sold in grocery stores harbors disease-causing bacteria known as Klebsiella pneumoniae, according to a new study. The research, which was published online today in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, shows that contaminated meat may be an important source of human exposure to Klebsiella.The U.S. food safety system has traditionally focused on a few well-known bacteria like Listeria, Salmonella and Campylobacter, which cause millions of cases of food poisoning every year. The research published today suggests ...
2015-07-22
The Middle East is called the "Cradle of Civilization" because it is where our hunter-gatherer ancestors first established sedentary farming communities. Recently, the traditional dating of humans' first agricultural attempt was shaken up by the discovery of the earliest-known example of plant cultivation in the Levant, 11,000 years earlier than previously accepted.
The team of archaeologists, botanists, and ecologists from Bar-Ilan University, Haifa University, Tel Aviv University, and Harvard University published their work in the scientific journal Plos One on July ...
2015-07-22
Until now, researchers believed farming was "invented" some 12,000 years ago in the Cradle of Civilization -- Iraq, the Levant, parts of Turkey and Iran -- an area that was home to some of the earliest known human civilizations. A new discovery by an international collaboration of researchers from Tel Aviv University, Harvard University, Bar-Ilan University, and the University of Haifa offers the first evidence that trial plant cultivation began far earlier -- some 23,000 years ago.
The study focuses on the discovery of the first weed species at the site of a sedentary ...
2015-07-22
Family members who make major medical decisions for relatives in an intensive care unit (ICU) may suffer posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) if they cope by avoiding the situation, according to a new study by scientists at Case Western Reserve University's Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing.
The patient isn't the only one affected by the long stay, according to Amy Petrinec, from the school of nursing. Family members may suffer, especially if they're required to make medical decisions with long-range consequences they may not understand, or are reluctant to question.
Family ...
2015-07-22
(NEW YORK CITY - July 22, 2015) Is it possible that too much iron in infant formula may potentially increase risk for neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's in adulthood -- and are teeth the window into the past that can help us tell? This and related theories were described in a "Perspectives" article authored by researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and the University of Technology Sydney and Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health in Australia, and published online recently in Nature Reviews Neurology.
"Teeth are of particular ...
2015-07-22
LOS ANGELES (July 22, 2015) - For the first time, researchers have employed a gene-editing technique involving low-dose irradiation to repair patient cells, according to a study published in the journal Stem Cells Translational Medicine. This method, developed by researchers in the Cedars-Sinai Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute, is 10 times more effective than techniques currently in use.
"This novel technique allows for far more efficient gene editing of stem cells and will increase the speed of new discoveries in the field," said co-senior author Clive ...
2015-07-22
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Coral reefs, under pressure from climate change and direct human activity, may have a reduced ability to protect tropical islands against wave attack, erosion and salinization of drinking water resources, which help to sustain life on those islands. A new paper gives guidance to coastal managers to assess how climate change will affect a coral reef's ability to mitigate coastal hazards.
About 30 million people are dependent on the protection by coral reefs as they live on low-lying coral islands and atolls. At present, some of these islands experience ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Investigators developed a tool for more accurate interpretation of biomedical research