(Press-News.org) Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine and Cornell University's Ithaca campus have developed a new computational method for studying genetic and environmental interactions and how they influence disease risk.
The research, published Jan. 7 in The American Journal of Human Genetics, makes the process of finding these interactions much less difficult and demonstrates their importance in determining body mass index and diabetes risk.
"Our study demonstrates that your genes matter and the environment matters and that the interaction of the two can increase risk for disease," said co-senior author, Dr. Olivier Elemento, who is professor of computational genomics in computational biomedicine, professor of physiology and biophysics, associate director of the HRH Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud Institute for Computational Biomedicine, and director of the Caryl and Israel Englander Institute for Precision Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.
Typically, studying gene-environment interactions creates a huge computational challenge, said lead author Andrew Marderstein, a doctoral candidate in the Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences whose research was conducted both in Dr. Elemento's lab in New York City and Dr. Andrew Clark's lab in Ithaca, enabling him to have immediate access to computational biology and population health expertise.
"Genotype-environment interaction can be thought of as the situation where some genotypes are much more sensitive to environmental insults than others," said Dr. Clark, co-senior author and Jacob Gould Schurman Professor of Population Genetics in the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics in the College of Arts & Sciences and a Nancy and Peter Meinig Family Investigator at Cornell University. "These are exactly the cases where changes in the diet or other exposures might have the biggest improvement in health, but only for a subset of individuals."
The millions of genetic variants, or inherited genetic differences found between individuals in a population, and different lifestyle and environmental factors, such as smoking, exercise, different eating habits, can be analyzed for combined effects in numerous ways. When researchers test for gene-environment interactions, they typically analyze millions of data points in a pairwise fashion, meaning they assess one genetic variant and its interaction with one environmental factor at a time. This type of analysis can become quite labor intensive, said Marderstein.
The new computational method prioritizes and assesses a smaller number of variants in the genome--or the complete set of genetic material found in the body--for gene-environment interactions. "We condensed a problem with analyzing 10 million different genetic variants to essentially analyzing only tens of variants in different regions of the genome," Marderstein said.
While a standard genetic association study might look at whether a single genetic variant could lead to an average change in body mass index (BMI), this study assessed which genetic variants were associated with individuals being more likely to have a higher BMI or lower BMI. The researchers found that looking for sections of DNA associated with the variance in a human characteristic, called a variance quantitative trait locus or vQTL, enabled them to more readily identify gene-environment interactions. Notably, the vQTLs associated with body mass index were also more likely to be associated with diseases that have large environmental influences.
Another area of study where the new computational method might useful is determining how an individual might respond to a specific drug based on gene-environment interactions, said Marderstein. Analysis of social determinants of health, meaning a person's environmental and social conditions, such as poverty level and educational attainment, is a third area that the researchers are interesting in pursuing, according to Dr. Elemento.
Overall, scientists in the precision medicine field are realizing they can sequence a person's DNA, in addition to assessing environmental factors such air quality and physical activity, to better understand whether the individual is at risk of developing a specific disease. "The idea down the line is to use these concepts in the clinic," said Dr. Elemento. "This is part of the evolution of precision medicine, where we can now sequence somebody's genome very easily and then potentially analyze all of the variants in the genetic landscape that correlate with the risk of developing particular conditions."
INFORMATION:
Dr. Olivier Elemento is an equity stock holder in OneThreeBiotech, a company that uses biology-driven AI to accurately predict new potential therapeutics and to pinpoint the underlying biological mechanisms driving drug efficacy. Dr. Elemento is an equity stock holder in Volastra Therapeutics, a company that aims to extend the lives of cancer patients by leveraging unique insights into chromosomal instability.
Heart disease is a killer threat for southern sea otters feasting on domoic acid in their food web, according to a study led by the University of California, Davis.
The study, published in the journal Harmful Algae, examined the relationship between long-term exposure to domoic acid and fatal heart disease in southern sea otters, a threatened marine mammal.
"Sea otters are an amazing indicator of what's happening in the coastal environment, not just to other marine animals, but to us, too, especially on the issue of domoic acid," said Christine K. Johnson, director of the EpiCenter ...
To enter the world of the fantastically small, the main currency is either a ray of light or electrons.
Strong beams, which yield clearer images, are damaging to specimens. On the other hand, weak beams can give noisy, low-resolution images.
In a new study published in END ...
MAPUTO, Mozambique (January 26, 2021) - A team of marine scientists led by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) has confirmed that southern Africa's most threatened endemic shark - the Critically Endangered shorttail nurse shark (Pseudoginglymostoma brevicaudatum) - has been found to occur in Mozambique; a finding that represents a range extension of more than 2,000 kilometers (1,242 miles).
Publishing their findings in the journal Marine Biodiversity, the team said that the discovery was based on several records of the shark including underwater video surveys collected in 2019, recent photos of shore-based sport anglers' catches, and the identification of a specimen collected in 1967.
The ...
A hormone commonly associated with sleep-wake regulation has been found to reduce cysts in fruit flies, according to Concordia researchers. It's a finding that may affect the way we treat some kidney diseases and reduce the need for kidney transplants.
In a new paper published in the journal END ...
STUDY PROFILES IMMUNE CELLS FIGHTING COVID-19, MAY HELP GUIDE NEXT-GEN VACCINE DEVELOPMENT
Media Contact: Michael E. Newman, mnewma25@jhmi.edu
Even as the first vaccines for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, are being distributed, scientists and clinicians around the world have remained steadfast in their efforts to better understand how the human immune system responds to the virus and protects people against it. Now, a research team -- led by Johns Hopkins Medicine and in collaboration with ImmunoScape, a U.S.-Singapore biotechnology company -- has published one of the most comprehensive characterizations to date of a critical contributor to that protection: ...
Biologists often study animal sociality by collecting observations about several types of behavioral interactions. These interactions can be things like severe fights, minor fights, cooperative food sharing, or grooming each other.
But to analyze animal behavior, researchers need to make decisions about how to categorize these interactions and how to code these behaviors during data collection. Turns out, this question can be complicated.
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati dug into this tricky question while studying monk parakeets. In new research, published in the journal Current Zoology, the team asked: How do you properly categorize two seemingly similar behaviors? The study was led by UC ...
University of Alberta researchers have taken another step forward in developing an artificial intelligence tool to predict schizophrenia by analyzing brain scans.
In recently published research, the tool was used to analyze functional magnetic resonance images of 57 healthy first-degree relatives (siblings or children) of schizophrenia patients. It accurately identified the 14 individuals who scored highest on a self-reported schizotypal personality trait scale.
Schizophrenia, which affects 300,000 Canadians, can cause delusions, hallucinations, disorganized ...
SAN ANTONIO and BOSTON - Study findings released Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) hold both good news and bad news about transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), which are harbingers of subsequent strokes.
Sudha Seshadri, MD, professor of neurology at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and director of the university's Glenn Biggs Institute for Alzheimer's and Neurodegenerative Diseases, is senior author of the study and senior investigator of the Framingham Heart Study, from which the findings are derived. She said the extensive follow-up of Framingham participants over more than six decades enabled the study to present a more-complete picture of the risk of stroke to patients after a TIA.
The study points to the need for ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Research led by The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and College of Medicine identified a new compound that might serve as a basis for developing a new class of drugs for diabetes.
Study findings are published online in the journal Nature Chemical Biology.
The adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (Ampk) is a crucial enzyme involved in sensing the body's energy stores in cells. Impaired energy metabolism is seen in obesity, which is a risk factor for diabetes. Some medications used to treat diabetes, such as metformin, work by increasing the activity of Ampk.
"In ...
African trypanosomiasis (also known as sleeping sickness) is a disease transmitted by tsetse flies and is fatal to humans and other animals; however, there is currently no vaccine, this disease is mainly controlled by reducing insect populations and patient treatment. A study published in the open access journal PLOS Biology by Alvaro Acosta-Serrano at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and an international team of researchers suggests that the approved drug nitisinone could be repurposed to kill tsetse flies without harming important pollinator insects.
Currently, the most effective method of controlling the transmission of African trypanosomiasis is by employing insecticide-based vector control campaigns (traps, targets, ...