(Press-News.org) For all those who have wondered where they'd be without their mothers, a study reported in the February Cell Metabolism, a Cell Press publication, puts a whole new spin on the question. Mice whose mothers pass along a mutant copy of a single imprinted gene can't keep themselves warm and die soon after leaving the comfort of the nest. The findings also reveal that the babies require a second round of heat-generating brown fat to survive.
"When that second wave is delayed, it gets them in the end," said Anne Ferguson-Smith of the University of Cambridge.
The findings also show how "exquisitely sensitive" animals can be to seemingly subtle molecular-level effects that change the dose of particular genes, say Ferguson-Smith and first author of the study Marika Charalambous.
Imprinted genes do different things depending on whether they came from your mother or your father and are especially important in mammalian growth and development. The genes are normally programmed in eggs or sperm to be turned off or on, leaving embryos and offspring with half as much of the gene's product as they would have if both copies were on.
Ferguson-Smith and her team are really interested in understanding the importance of this type of regulatory control in the mammalian genome—and they think understanding what those genes do is a good place to start. Earlier studies showed that complete loss of imprinting in a small cluster of genes on chromosome 12 produced mice that die before they are born.
The mice in the new study carry a mutation in this same spot, but the animals are rather unique in that the maternally inherited gene (which is normally switched off) is switched on—but only a little bit.
"The protein-coding genes on the maternal chromosome are usually off," Ferguson-Smith said. "But here they are on by about 30 percent." While the mice that die before birth have 200 percent expression of the gene, the mutants in the new study have 130 percent. They still die, but not as early.
"In the mutant, the rather modest overexpression of this gene at a critical time doesn't completely compromise brown fat, but it causes a delay in its timely formation right before weaning," Charalambous says. At that stage, even normal animals are especially vulnerable. They are beginning to roam and find food on their own but are still very small, and mutants with compromised brown fat cannot maintain their body temperatures.
Not only are the mutant animals lacking in brown fat, but they also make too little thyroid hormone, which is important for brown fat to function. As a result, the animals fail to thrive and die. The researchers also showed that mutant mice could be rescued by simply placing them on a heat mat.
"This was a real detective story," Ferguson-Smith said. "It took a lot of time to work out what was happening."
This one particular cluster of imprinted mouse genes is also a model for the importance of genetic variation in regulatory regions throughout the genome, the researchers say.
"Studies of genetic variation associated with human disease are revealing that most variation occurs within intergenic regulatory regions rather than in coding sequences," the researchers wrote. "Whilst the model we describe was generated by genetic manipulation, it illustrates how a regulatory mutation influencing gene dosage can have a dramatic effect on whole body physiology."
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BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Parkinson's disease researchers at the University at Buffalo have discovered how mutations in the parkin gene cause the disease, which afflicts at least 500,000 Americans and for which there is no cure.
The results are published in the current issue of Nature Communications.
The UB findings reveal potential new drug targets for the disease as well as a screening platform for discovering new treatments that might mimic the protective functions of parkin. UB has applied for patent protection on the screening platform.
"This is the first time that human ...
The aviation accident attorneys at Baum, Hedlund, Aristei & Goldman are representing the families of the two men killed in Robinson Helicopter Company's first R66 crash which occurred on July 12, 2011 near Flandes, Colombia.
Jose Ricardo Cabrera Killed in the crash, was the owner of the R66 aircraft, Juan Pablo Gaviria, former president of the Colombian Civil Air Patrol, and Jose Ricardo Cabrera, his dear friend and a skilled helicopter pilot.
The R66 crashed shortly after take-off from Girardot Airport in Colombia. According to the National Transportation Safety ...
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Visitors to Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol Building may have experienced a curious acoustic feature that allows a person to whisper softly at one side of the cavernous, half-domed room and for another on the other side to hear every syllable. Sound is whisked around the semi-circular perimeter of the room almost without flaw. The phenomenon is known as a whispering gallery.
In a paper published in Nature Communications, a team of engineers at Stanford describes how it has created tiny hollow spheres of photovoltaic nanocrystalline-silicon and harnessed physics to do ...
While epilepsy surgery is a safe and effective intervention for seizure control, medical therapy remains the more prominent treatment option for those with epilepsy. However, a new 26-year study reveals that following epilepsy surgery, nearly half of participants were free of disabling seizures and 80% reported better quality of life than before surgery. Findings from this study—the largest long-term study to date—are now available in Epilepsia, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE).
More than 50 million ...
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Additional authors on the study include: Elie Ghanem, MD and Bahar Adeli, BA, both with the Rothman Institute at Jefferson.
About Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals
Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals (TJUH) are dedicated to excellence in patient care, patient safety and the quality of the healthcare experience. Consistently ranked by U.S. News & World Report among the nation's top hospitals, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, established in 1825, has over 900 licensed acute care beds with major programs in a wide range of clinical specialties. ...
Patients who have their anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstructed by surgeons who have performed less than 60 surgeries are roughly four to five times more likely to undergo a subsequent ACL reconstruction, according to a study by researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery. The study also showed that participating in a subspecialty orthopedic fellowship-training program did not improve the learning curve of young surgeons performing ACL reconstructions. The research was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, held Feb 7-11.
"Conventional ...
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Dr. Peter Pronovost, a leading patient-safety experts at Johns Hopkins University, estimates diagnostic errors are responsible for the deaths of 40,000 to 80,000 hospitalized patients every year. That is a shockingly high number.
With so many errors being made, injured people naturally turn to the legal system seeking proper compensation. And ...
Geneva, Switzerland: The first European Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs) for the diagnosis and management of Wilson's disease are published today by the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) on the EASL website -- www.easl.eu.(1) Developed to assist physicians and healthcare providers in the clinical decision making process, the guidelines describe best practice for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with Wilson's disease -- a rare genetic(2) disorder that, if left untreated, is fatal.
Approximately one in 30,000 people worldwide are affected ...
Stripping some mouth bacteria of their access key to gangs of other pathogenic oral bacteria could help prevent gum disease and tooth loss. The study, published in the journal Microbiology suggests that this bacterial access key could be a drug target for people who are at high risk of developing gum disease.
Oral bacteria called Treponema denticola frequently gang up in communities with other pathogenic oral bacteria to produce destructive dental plaque. This plaque, made up of bacteria, saliva and food debris, is a major cause of bleeding gums and gum disease. Later ...