Dr. Sebat's Dream
This Friday, the medical journal Science will publish a study, which
used new gene-scanning technology, where high-resolution techniques
quickly scan the entire human DNA map. Scientists discovered 53 genetic
mutations that were three times as likely to turn up in people with
schizophrenia.
One of them distorts a protein, which guides neurons to their proper
places during brain development. Another mutation changes "the shape of
a molecule that transports glutamate, a chemical that excites neurons
and is heavily involved transmitting signals between brain cells."
“The take-home message is that there’s a new way to search for genetic
links, and this new method goes straight to the underlying biology,”
said the senior author, Jonathan Sebat, an assistant professor of
genetics at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.
“My dream,” Dr. Sebat said, “is that we’ll do this kind of
high-resolution analysis across tens of thousands of people and have
full catalogs of variations that will tell us something not only about
schizophrenia but about bipolar disorder, autism, depression, all of
these disorders.”
References:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/28/science/28gene.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2008/327/1
Tags: schizophrenia, depression, high-resolution-gene-scanning, bipolar-disorder, autism
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