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Genes implicated in bipolar disorder identified – The Hindu

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

A study by researchers from the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR) and the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences (NIMHANS), in Bengaluru, identifies two specific genes which may be related to bipolar disorder, a neuropsychiatric disorder that has been studied widely.

While there are strong indications that genetics plays a role in it, the specific genes whose mutations result in the individual being affected are difficult to identify. In a paper published recently in the journal Bipolar Disorders, the team describes their decade-long work studying four generations of a family with several members in each generation affected. In all, 28 members of one family were genotyped, and of these 11 were affected by bipolar disorder.

When asked about the challenges involved in carrying out the study, Prof. Anuranjan Anand, from JNCASR, an author of the paper, says in an email to The Hindu, A variety of genetic parameters and models of the disorder needed to be tested. Further, disease-gene mapping is very sensitive to genetic parameters and defining this in a psychiatric disorder like BPD is a challenge.

Bipolar disorder is an illness that affects about 0.8% of the global population. Also known as manic-depressive illness, it is characterised by mood swings, irrational behaviour and phases of mania or extreme highs, and at other times, phases of depression. The figures in India are not definitely known due to lack of reporting and diagnosis and poor documentation. However, judging by the global estimate, a significant number of Indians could be affected by this disease.

If in a family there are multiple members with the disorder, then what is shared among the ill members, and not shared by the unaffected members may help identify the gene, says Dr Sanjeev Jain from NIMHANS, one of the authors of the paper. However, since the human genome is over three billion base pairs [long], we use a number of markers to identify which region of the genome is shared, and look up the gene in that region. He is quick to clarify that with psychiatric genetics, not all those at risk may develop the disease.

The experiment involves doing thousands of genotyping reactions and a large amount of sequencing of reactions for a large family with several affected members, says Prof. Anand.

The group identified regions within chromosome 1 and chromosome 6 and, subsequently, found that variants of two genes (KANK4 and CAP2) were the likely candidates.

We sequenced all the genes in the region, compared them to databases of the world, and of south Asians, and control samples from here, as well as other patients from here, and then zeroed in on the two variants, says Dr Jain.

KANK1, one of the KANK family of genes, has been implicated in cerebral palsy, spastic quadriplegia-2 and steroid resistant nephritic syndrome, according to the authors of the paper. Other genes in the KANK family have been linked to diseases, so it is likely that this variant in KANK4, too, may be linked to disease, says Dr Jain.

The authors also describe that these mutations in KANK4 and CAP2 are rare variants. These occur in less than 1% of the population, often fewer than one in a thousand. As Prof. Anan puts it, Today there are nearly 150 families across the world with structures like this. These give us a toe-hold into biology, illuminating clinical molecular mechanisms involved.

The study suggests understanding the consequences of this variation in biological processes in the brain and further analysis of these two genes in people with bipolar disorder will be beneficial and help understand the biological aspects of the disease.

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Scientists Release Sterile Mosquitoes in Burkina to Fight Malaria – News18

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

SOUROUKOUDINGA: Scientists in Burkina Faso have deployed a new weapon in the fight against malaria, and waded into a thorny bioethics debate, by letting loose thousands of genetically sterilized mosquitoes.

Their experiment is the first outside the lab to release genetically altered mosquitoes in the hope of reducing their ability to spread the often deadly disease.

It works using a technique called a gene drive, which edits and then propagates a gene in a population - in this case to prevent males from producing offspring.

Investments in anti-malarial drugs, mosquito nets and insecticides have slowed malaria over the past two decades in Africa, which accounts for more than 90% of global cases.

But malaria still killed more than 400,000 people across the continent in 2017, and the World Health Organization says progress against the disease is stalling, leading researchers to push for fresh approaches.

"The conventional tools that we have at our disposal today have reached their limit," said Dr Abdoulaye Diabate, who is running the experiment for Target Malaria, a research consortium backed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

One hot evening in July, Diabate's researchers peeled off mesh nettings from wire-rimmed containers to release about 5,000 male mosquitoes into Souroukoudinga, a village in western Burkina Faso.

The mosquitoes had been injected as embryos with an enzyme that sterilizes them.

"Our objective is not to eradicate mosquitoes," said Diabate, noting the enzyme targets only the three main species - out of more than 3,500 worldwide - that carry malaria. "The objective is . . . to reduce the density of these mosquitoes."

Target Malaria is also developing an enzyme preventing male mosquitoes from passing on X chromosomes. This results in male offspring, reducing malaria since only female mosquitoes bite - males mostly feed off plant honeydew.

Diabate said he hoped the new approaches would win approval from national regulators in the coming years for widespread use.

Using a gene drive proved effective in lab experiments at Imperial College London, where researchers last year said they had succeeded in wiping out populations of caged mosquitoes within 11 generations.

"GUINEA PIGS"

Activists in Burkina fear unintended environmental consequences.

They point to Burkina's experiment with genetically-modified cotton a few years ago, which farmers said had lowered quality and was ultimately abandoned in favor of conventional seeds.

"We are not going to allow Burkinabes to be used as guinea pigs," said Ali Tapsoba, a Burkinabe activist.

"If we intoxicate one link in the food chain, we are going to intoxicate the next link."

Those concerns echo beyond Burkina. Last November, signatories of a United Nations convention on biodiversity noted "uncertainties regarding engineered gene drives."

Critics of gene drives fear they could be used to manipulate human genetics, or develop a bio-weapon.

Researchers in Brazil have also released genetically modified mosquitoes in an attempt to control diseases like yellow fever and Zika, but it is not clear how effective that has been.

Target Malaria says it consults with communities and that research is overseen by national regulatory authorities and an independent ethics committee.

Two months after the mosquitoes were released, Souroukoudinga chief Pascal Traore told Reuters villagers were happy with the experiment's progress.

"We all believe that the project could reduce the malaria that kills our sons and daughters," he said. "This project is not just for us, but for the entire world."

Get the best of News18 delivered to your inbox - subscribe to News18 Daybreak. Follow News18.com on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Telegram, TikTok and on YouTube, and stay in the know with what's happening in the world around you in real time.

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DNA Found in 70000-Year-Old Pinky Bone Gives 1st Glimpse of Ancient Human Relative – Inside Edition

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

What did prehistoric teens look like? Thanks to some scientists atHebrew University in Israel, we now have some idea.

The researchers were able to reconstruct our human ancestor's face with DNA found in the pinky bone of a 13-year-old girl who died tens of thousands of years ago.

Known as aDenisovan, the girl was a member of a species of ancient human that is similar to the Neanderthals.

"This is the first time that we provide a detailed anatomical reconstruction showing us what these humans looked like," said Hebrew University genetics professor Liran Carmel.

According to scientists,Denisovan DNA is believed to have helped modern-day Tibetans live at high altitudes as well as contributed to the Inuits' abilities to withstand shockingly cold temperatures.

Check out the video above for more.

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Scientists release genetically altered mosquitoes to fight malaria – Global News

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

Scientists in Burkina Faso have deployed a new weapon in the fight against malaria, and waded into a thorny bioethics debate, by letting loose thousands of genetically sterilized mosquitoes.

Their experiment is the first outside the lab to release genetically altered mosquitoes in the hope of reducing their ability to spread the often deadly disease.

It works using a technique called a gene drive, which edits and then propagates a gene in a population in this case to prevent males from producing offspring.

READ MORE: How science could wipe out disease-carrying mosquitoes and save lives

Investments in anti-malarial drugs, mosquito nets and insecticides have slowed malaria over the past two decades in Africa, which accounts for more than 90% of global cases.

But malaria still killed more than 400,000 people across the continent in 2017, and the World Health Organization says progress against the disease is stalling, leading researchers to push for fresh approaches.

The conventional tools that we have at our disposal today have reached their limit, said Dr Abdoulaye Diabate, who is running the experiment for Target Malaria, a research consortium backed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

WATCH: The worlds deadliest predator

One hot evening in July, Diabates researchers peeled off mesh nettings from wire-rimmed containers to release about 5,000 male mosquitoes into Souroukoudinga, a village in western Burkina Faso.

The mosquitoes had been injected as embryos with an enzyme that sterilizes them.

Our objective is not to eradicate mosquitoes, said Diabate, noting the enzyme targets only the three main species out of more than 3,500 worldwide that carry malaria. The objective is to reduce the density of these mosquitoes.

Target Malaria is also developing an enzyme preventing male mosquitoes from passing on X chromosomes. This results in male offspring, reducing malaria since only female mosquitoes bite males mostly feed off plant honeydew.

Diabate said he hoped the new approaches would win approval from national regulators in the coming years for widespread use.

Using a gene drive proved effective in lab experiments at Imperial College London, where researchers last year said they had succeeded in wiping out populations of caged mosquitoes within 11 generations.

Activists in Burkina fear unintended environmental consequences.

They point to Burkinas experiment with genetically-modified cotton a few years ago, which farmers said had lowered quality and was ultimately abandoned in favor of conventional seeds.

We are not going to allow Burkinabes to be used as guinea pigs, said Ali Tapsoba, a Burkinabe activist.

If we intoxicate one link in the food chain, we are going to intoxicate the next link.

READ MORE: Mosquitoes are on the move due to climate change, and they could bring diseases

Those concerns echo beyond Burkina. Last November, signatories of a United Nations convention on biodiversity noted uncertainties regarding engineered gene drives.

Critics of gene drives fear they could be used to manipulate human genetics, or develop a bio-weapon.

Researchers in Brazil have also released genetically modified mosquitoes in an attempt to control diseases like yellow fever and Zika, but it is not clear how effective that has been.

Target Malaria says it consults with communities and that research is overseen by national regulatory authorities and an independent ethics committee.

READ MORE: Scientists could soon fight malaria with mosquito birth control

Two months after the mosquitoes were released, Souroukoudinga chief Pascal Traore told Reuters villagers were happy with the experiments progress.

We all believe that the project could reduce the malaria that kills our sons and daughters, he said. This project is not just for us, but for the entire world.

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Global Human Genetics Market Report, History and Forecast 2014-2025, Breakdown Data by Companies, Key Regions, Types and Application – Market Industry…

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

In this report, the Global Human Genetics market is valued at USD XX million in 2017 and is expected to reach USD XX million by the end of 2025, growing at a CAGR of XX% between 2017 and 2025. Global Human Genetics market has been broken down by major regions, with complete market estimates on the basis of products/applications on a regional basis.

Browse full research report at https://www.crystalmarketreport.com/global-human-genetics-market-report-history-and-forecast-2014-2025-breakdown-data-by-companies-key-regions-types-and-application

Summary

Human geneticsis the study of inheritance as it occurs inhuman beings. Genes can be the common factor of the qualities of most human-inherited traits.

In 2018, the global Human Genetics market size was xx million US$ and it is expected to reach xx million US$ by the end of 2025, with a CAGR of xx% between 2019 and 2025.

This report studies the Human Genetics market size by players, regions, product types and end industries, history data 2014-2018 and forecast data 2019-2025; This report also studies the global market competition landscape, market drivers and trends, opportunities and challenges, risks and entry barriers, sales channels, distributors and Porters Five Forces Analysis.

This report focuses on the global top players, covered

QIAGEN

Agilent Technologies

Thermo Fisher Scientific

Illumina

Promega

LabCorp

GE

Market segment by Regions/Countries, this report covers

North America

Europe

China

Rest of Asia Pacific

Central & South America

Middle East & Africa

Market segment by Type, the product can be split into

Cytogenetics

Prenatal Genetics

Molecular Genetics

Symptom Genetics

Market segment by Application, the market can be split into

Research Center

Hospital

Forensic Laboratories

The study objectives of this report are:

To study and forecast the market size of Human Genetics in global market.

To analyze the global key players, SWOT analysis, value and global market share for top players.

To define, describe and forecast the market by type, end use and region.

To analyze and compare the market status and forecast among global major regions.

To analyze the global key regions market potential and advantage, opportunity and challenge, restraints and risks.

To identify significant trends and factors driving or inhibiting the market growth.

To analyze the opportunities in the market for stakeholders by identifying the high growth segments.

To strategically analyze each submarket with respect to individual growth trend and their contribution to the market

To analyze competitive developments such as expansions, agreements, new product launches, and acquisitions in the market.

To strategically profile the key players and comprehensively analyze their growth strategies.

In this study, the years considered to estimate the market size of Human Genetics are as follows:

History Year: 2014-2018

Base Year: 2018

Estimated Year: 2019

Forecast Year 2019 to 2025

For the data information by region, company, type and application, 2018 is considered as the base year. Whenever data information was unavailable for the base year, the prior year has been considered.

Key Stakeholders

Raw material suppliers

Distributors/traders/wholesalers/suppliers

Regulatory bodies, including government agencies and NGO

Commercial research & development (R&D) institutions

Importers and exporters

Government organizations, research organizations, and consulting firms

Trade associations and industry bodies

End-use industries

Available Customizations

With the given market data, QYResearch offers customizations according to the companys specific needs. The following customization options are available for the report:

Further breakdown of Human Genetics market on basis of the key contributing countries.

Detailed analysis and profiling of additional market players.

Browse full research report at https://www.crystalmarketreport.com/global-human-genetics-market-report-history-and-forecast-2014-2025-breakdown-data-by-companies-key-regions-types-and-application

Reasons to Buy This Research Report

About Crystal Market Reports

Crystal Market Reports is a distributor of market research spanning 160 industries. Our extensive database consists of over 400,000 quality publications sourced from 400 plus publishers, this puts our research specialists in the unique position of been able to offer truly unbiased advice on what research provides the most valuable insights.

Contact Info.:-

Address: 90 State StreetSuite 700 AlbanyNew York 12207Email: [emailprotected]Web: https://www.crystalmarketreport.com

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‘Rejuvenation treatment can delay onset of heart diseases, cancer’ – Down To Earth Magazine

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

Steve Horvath, a geneticist who was able to reverse nine peoples biological clock recently, spoke to Down To Earth about the study

A group of scientists in the US have, for the first time, been able to reverse the biological clock of nine volunteers by 2.5 years by just administering a cocktail of drugs for a year.

The lead scientist Steve Horvath is a professor of human genetics and biostatistics in the David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and Fielding School of Public Health. In an interview, hetoldDown To Earth about the studyits findings and the likely ramifications of the breakthrough. Excerpts:

What prompted the study and is it the first one to suggest that the biological clock of humans can be reversed?

My collaborator Greg Fahy aimed to develop a treatment for rejuvenating the thymus (a ductless glandular organ at the base of the neck that produces lymphocytes and aids in producing immunity. It atrophies with age). After the study, he contacted me to test whether this treatment can also reverse the epigenetic age of blood samples.

I invented several epigenetic clocks for measuring the age of blood and other tissues. I have evaluated many other treatments with the epigenetic clock method. None of the other treatments had an effect. Greg Fahy's cocktail was the first to reverse epigenetic age.

What can be the ramifications of the study?

We have only accomplished the first step. It is a very important step but more work is needed. We need to repeat the study using a larger group of people. If these results are true, they will have profound effects on public health.

A rejuvenation treatment promises to delay the onset of most chronic diseases including heart disease and cancer. Also, a rejuvenated thymus promises to rejuvenate the immune system which means that our body could avoid autoimmune diseases and dangerous infectious diseases.

Many older people die of pneumonia because their immune system does not work well anymore.

What do you plan to do next?

We plan to conduct a larger replication study that involves about 100 people, which will consist of both men and women. We need to carefully evaluate this treatment.

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LSU researcher looking at ‘miracle drug’ metformin as potential weapon against breast cancer – NOLA.com

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

About 268,000 women in the United States will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year, and 41,000 will die from the disease. Now, a study by a Louisiana researcher suggests a drug to prevent breast cancer or stop its progression may already exist.

Suresh Alahari, a professorof biochemistry and genetics at the LSU Health New Orleans School of Medicine, published research last week indicating that metformin, a drug typically prescribed to diabetes patients, might also keep cancerous tumors from forming.

The study used genetically altered mice to test whether metformin could raise levels of a key enzyme linked to tumor prevention.

The mice were intentionally made deficient in a protein called nischarin, which in turn made an enzyme known as AMPK inactive. Mice that didn't receive metformin developed tumors all over their bodies. The mice that were given metformin, which activates AMPK, saw a much smaller incidence of tumor development than mice that were genetically normal.

That tells us this gene is protecting animals from getting tumors, said Alahari, a breast cancer researcher.

The Gulf of Mexicos tiny, overworked fleet of research vessels is finally getting a flagship.

The study adds to a growing body of research on metformin, which regulates blood sugar, and has been called a possible miracle drug with the potential to help patients suffering from a raft of diseases.

Off-label, metformin is regularly prescribed for polycystic ovarian syndrome and prediabetes, though the Food and Drug Administration has not approved its use for those purposes. It's also increasingly being taken by a group known as "superagers" who are on a quest to retard the aging process and extend their years of healthy living.

A search on clinicaltrials.gov, the federal website that tracks ongoing clinical trials, shows its being studied as a possible aid against dementia, frailty, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune diseases, various cancers and aging.

Researchers are starting to address how one drug, a chemical version of a plant that for centuries was used to treat frequent urination, could address so many different diseases.

The short answer to that very important question is that nobody knows, said Gerardo Ferbeyre,a biochemistry professor at the University of Montreal.We can say for sure that it acts in mitochondria, he said, referring to the part of a cell that generates energy.

One way it may work, he said, is by inhibiting inflammation. The other way that has been proposed is through activating AMPK, the enzyme studied at LSU.

A long-awaited report released Wednesday by the University Network for Human Rights, a nonprofit founded last year by Stanford University law

Metformin has proved in animal studies to beable to prevent cancers, said Ferbeyre. Its promising. All of the animal models are excellent, he said.

In humans, the drug has mainly been tested in large studies that track how diabetes patients who were prescribed metformin fared against people with the disease who took other drugs to treat their condition. In those patients, cancer risk was significantly lower for those taking metformin.

If you look at epidemiological studies, you find that with metformin there is a reduction in cancer risk somewhere between 30 and 40%, said Dr. Kishore Gadde, the medical director of clinical services at the LSU-affiliatedPennington Biomedical Research Center.

Gadde has studied metformins effect on obesity and longevity. He was not part of Alaharis breast cancer study, but he called the data compelling. Still, he said its too soon to start taking metformin for diseases people dont yet have. The drug has minimal side effects, though it very rarely causes a reaction known as lactic acidosis.

Lets say someone was found to have polyps on a colonoscopy, said Gadde. With polyps, theres an increased risk of colon cancer. Its something to consider in those instances, but at this point we dont have strong evidence to make a recommendation.

In the next few years, more evidence will trickle out of studies on how metformin treats or prevents cancer. The good news: Metformin has been approved for use in the U.S. since 1994 and in France since the 1950s, which means it will not have to go through rigorous safety testing.

But that same fact makes it difficult to fund studies of metformin through big pharmaceutical companies because there is not enough money to be made off of it.

Metformin is very cheap, said Ferbeyre. Its got to be government that will pay for a big clinical trial.

For Alahari, the next step is to implant human breast cancer tissue in mice with and without the nischarin protein that activates AMPK. But results from that are at least five years away, with human trials even further down the line.

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Genes, the social environment and adolescent smoking – Princeton University

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

Adolescence is a time of dramatic change. It marks a period of significant physical transformation such as the drive toward sexual maturity. But it can also be a time of considerable psychological change and social experimentation.

In the United States and elsewhere, such experimentation often takes the form of behaviors deemed deviant or risky. Tobacco use among teens is one such risky behavior. A U.S. Department of Health and Human Services statistic from 2014 noted that most smokers begin the habit during their early teenage years. And it is during these years that this habit typically coalesces into an addiction.

Yet the reasons many adolescents take up smoking are little understood. Social scientists have variously attributed teen smoking to several factors, including, chief among them, genetic predisposition and the influence of peers. Evidence suggests that in some people the propensity to smoke and the addiction to nicotine may be partially governed by genes. At the same time, it is known that peer smoking increases ones risk of taking up the habit.

But few researchers have attempted to combine these two explanations into a coherent hypothesis.

Until now.

Its interesting to think about how social forces and genetic forces, which we usually think of as two separate things, can come together, said Ramina Sotoudeh, a graduate student in sociology at Princeton and the first author of a paper recently published in the Proceedings of the Natural Academy of Sciences that investigates the interplay of genetics and the social environment on teen smoking.

Sotoudeh and her colleagues suggest that a teens decision to smoke is influenced by the genetic makeup of that teens peers especially if those peers have a genetic predisposition to smoke.

A lot of researchers are beginning to look at how the genes of others can affect us, Sotoudeh added. Genes are part of our social environment, theyre not two distinct things. The genes of others are an important aspect of the social environment.

It is well known that genetic material in the form of DNA is passed from parents to offspring, and that certain dominant genes can play a role in the expression of a particular trait, such as eye color. It is also known that a mix of several genes can predispose people toward certain behaviors.

But there is also evidence from recent studies that the parents non-transmitted genes genes that are not passed on can affect their children.

Your parents genes affect you in terms of your education and your health, said Dalton Conley, the Henry Putnam University Professor of Sociology at Princeton and senior author of the study. This includes not just the genes that they gave you when they conceived you, but also the genes they didnt pass on. These end up affecting you because it affects their behavior and therefore it affects how you turn out.

Perhaps even more astonishing, there is mounting evidence suggesting that the behavior of an individual can be influenced by the genes of an unrelated individual such as a peer or friend.

Studies conducted on certain animals like mice have demonstrated evidence that the genes of an unrelated mouse can influence the behavior of another mouse when the two are kept together, when they are cage mates. In the parlance of biology, this is an instance of the genotype (the genetic makeup) of one individual influencing the phenotype (the physical characteristics) of an unrelated individual.

This concept is often referred to as a social genetic effect or an indirect genetic effect, Sotoudeh said. However, she and her colleagues use the term metagenomics, a word borrowed from microbiology, to explain this phenomenon. In microbiology, it denotes all the genetic material of many individual organism present in an environmental sample.

In our case, metagenomics refers to the landscape or ecology of other peoples genes around us, Sotoudeh said. Its the genomic landscape of your social environment.

To investigate the metagenomic effects of smoking, the researchers used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. This is a nation-wide study, began in 1994-95, that sampled students from 132 middle and high schools across the United States. It collected data on the students health, behavior and genetics.

Sotoudeh and her colleagues measured a students genetic propensity to smoke based on what is called a polygenic score. This measurement includes the contribution of all genetic variants identified as contributing to a particular phenotype in this case, a propensity to smoke.

The researchers used these polygenic scores to explore the relationship between an individuals smoking behavior and his or her peers genetic propensity to smoke. The most significant finding, the researchers deemed, was at the grade-level, which was considered a quasi-random distribution because the students did not choose their peers they were in essence thrown together by virtue of age. The polygenic scores for each person in the grade were calculated and converted to an average score that represented each particular grade. Each individual in that grade was then evaluated with reference to the average polygenic score for the grade to which they belonged. The researchers then asked the question: If you happen to be in a grade that has a high average polygenic score, are you also more likely to smoke?

They discovered that this was indeed the case; an individuals smoking behavior was influenced by whether the individuals peer group was genetically predisposed toward smoking. In simplest terms, an individual is more likely to smoke when his or her peers genetic makeup the individuals metagenomic environment is predisposed toward smoking. Surprisingly, this outcome proved an even stronger predictor of smoking behavior than an individuals own genetic makeup.

They further discovered that a minority of students with a high genetic risk to smoke what the researchers called bad apples play a particularly disproportionate role in increasing the likelihood of those around them to smoke. However, students with a very low genetic risk of smoking did not have a protective effect on their peers.

They believe that this is likely the result of smokings visibility as compared to some other activity that does not have an active, visible component. Its hard to spread not doing something, said Conley. Its easier to spread doing something.

Metagenomic studies like this are shedding new light on the old debate about nature versus nurture. They are demonstrating that genes and the environment are constantly involved in a complex interplay that is often mediated by our social environment by our family, our friends and our peers. Consequently, there isnt a clear distinction between the effects of genes, on the one hand, and the environment, on the other.

Our study is another important brick out of the wall between nature and nurture, Conley said. The notion of nature versus nurture as two distinct effects or forces acting on us is really falling apart.

Practically, the researchers believe that the results from this study can help guide public policy. Prevention programs aimed at curbing adolescent smoking might benefit from the insights the paper highlights especially the influence of peers on an individuals smoking behavior.

The paper, Effects of the peer metagenomic environment on smoking behavior, by Ramina Sotoudeh, Kathleen Mullen Harris and Dalton Conley, was published online Aug. 13 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (DOI:10.1073/pnas.1806901116). This work was supported by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), and 23 other federal agencies and foundations. This research used Add Health GWAS data funded by NICHD Grants R01 HD073342 and R01 HD 060726.

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The next omics? Tracking a lifetime of exposures to better understand disease – Knowable Magazine

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:48 pm

In the summer of 2016, 100 teenage girls living in Californias Salinas Valley slipped silicone bracelets onto their wrists and committed to keep them there for a week. Around the same time, 92 preschoolers in Oregon accessorized the same way. The bands found their way onto the wrists of farmworkers in Peru and Houston residents working to rebuild after Hurricane Harvey. Aside from color, the wristbands looked much the same as the yellow Livestrong bracelets popularized by cyclist Lance Armstrong in the early 2000s.

But this was not some fashion trend shared by teenage girls, farmworkers and preschoolers. These bands were research tools, whose porous silicone made them ideal for soaking up chemicals in their surroundings. All were worn as part of a growing effort to understand just what is present in different environments and how those exposures be they pesticides, smoke, floodwater contaminants or just the day-to-day contents of a preschool classroom can affect health.

Using satellite imagery and ground-based monitors, researchers modeled mean concentrations of nitrogen dioxide a component of air pollution known to increase risk of respiratory and cardiovascular disease across Belgium on a weekday in 2015. Adding data from 5 million cell phone users helped reveal individual exposures, providing a more accurate picture than regional data alone.

CREDIT: B. DEWULF ET AL / INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH GEOGRAPHICS 2016

In homes, on buildings, from satellites and even in apps on the phone in your pocket, tools to monitor the environment are on the rise. At the intersection of public health and toxicology, these tools are fueling a new movement in exposure science. Its called the exposome and it represents the sum of all environmental exposures over a lifetime. As explored in a trio of papers in the Annual Review of Public Health, scientists think that if we knew every substance that a person was exposed to at every moment ever, it could give rise to dramatic improvements in the understanding of the causes and risk factors for disease.

That goal, its architects will readily admit, is absurdly ambitious even impossible. But even imperfectly realized, the approach may be whats needed to finally understand why one person develops a disease and another doesnt, which environmental exposures are the most worrying and if there are windows of vulnerability times of life when exposures may be especially harmful.

We think about all health and illness as a combination of genes and the environment, and now it really is time to fill out the environment side of that equation, says Julia Brody, a toxicologist affiliated with Brown University and the leader of the Silent Spring Institute, which studies environmental links to breast cancer. Weve made an enormous investment in understanding the genome and almost nothing comparatively to focus on the exposome.

Impossible or not, researchers are forging ahead, breaking off bits and pieces of a lifetimes exposure to put under the microscope. Still, discussions continue about how to make real progress and how to collect and examine information in a meaningful way.

Some scientists are advocating for more air monitors in cities and homes. Others are developing wearable monitors that soak up pieces of the environment as people move through their day. Some are trying to match tracking data from cell phones to satellite indicators of air quality, helping to assess individual exposures based on a persons locale and movements. Still other researchers are looking inside the body, hoping to identify chemical footprints that distinct exposures may have left behind.

Bracelets made of porous silicone passively soak up chemicals from the environment. The material can trap thousands of airborne substances, including pesticides, pharmaceuticals and flame retardants. Researchers are taking advantage of the lightweight bracelets to detect chemicals that study participants encounter in their day-to-day lives.

CREDIT: KNOWABLE MAGAZINE. SOURCE: OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY EHSC

Though varied, the approaches share the goal of adding breadth to traditional exposure science studies, which have historically focused on linking a single disease to one or more suspicious exposures, often as cases build up over time. A history of poisoned lead workers dating back to the time of the Romans led modern researchers to demonstrate that even low levels of lead from automobile exhaust posed a serious public health risk. And a startling spike in lung cancer cases alongside increased smoking popularity drove researchers to perform focused studies on the dangers of cigarettes in the mid-twentieth century.

But many potentially harmful exposures could be far less obvious. The air you breathe, the food you eat, the products you use, the medicines you take, the surfaces you touch all may contain multitudes of invisible chemicals (many naturally occurring, others not) and microbes you never know youve contacted. Thus, exposure science remains far from what it would ideally be: a guide to avoiding disease risk. Exposome scientists want to change that by capturing as broad a picture as possible. They want to ask not only if certain chemicals or microbes can harm health, but also if certain substances are dangerous in particular combinations, during particular times such as during pregnancy or to particular groups of people.

It was a concern for unexplained diseases that led cancer researcher Christopher Wild to first come up with the term exposome in 2005. Wild had closely followed the race to sequence the human genome, which had successfully concluded two years prior, and worried that, in its eagerness to advance genetics, the world had forgotten the importance of environmental exposures in health. Its a sentiment that has only grown stronger in recent years as genetics has failed to yield clear links to many cancers and other diseases. A recent study looked at the prevalence of 28 chronic conditions in twins and found that genetics explained less than 20 percent of the risk in most of the illnesses examined. Even in asthma which ranked highest in terms of genetic contribution genetics explained less than 50 percent of the risk. For leukemia on the other end of the rankings genetics explained only 3 percent.

I was excited about the genetics, says Wild, who formerly directed the World Health Organizations International Agency for Research on Cancer. But I felt it was an imbalance in the tools and the investment that we had available, and that was going to lead to problems. If we cant measure this other component, were not going to get to the bottom of the problem.

To remind the world that the genome was only half the equation, Wild coined an ome of his own. He hoped that if the two factors had mirroring names it would push other scientists to think of them as having equal importance. It took some time, but slowly his colleagues have begun to rally around the idea. Efforts to develop sophisticated devices that sample the world around us are on the rise. And new research groups are forming around the world to bring together the technology and expertise needed to process the vast amounts of data that will come from emerging exposomics projects.

One example is the Childrens Health Exposure Analysis Resource, a network of US laboratories and other resources established by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to support researchers who want to add a stronger environmental component to their studies. CHEAR will allow scientists to test for more chemicals that children may be exposed to hundreds to thousands at once and will develop standardized testing to allow for data comparison across studies. The importance of such a resource is to help researchers break away from looking at a small number of potential threats at a time and start moving toward a way to take into account the entire realm of exposures, says Susan Teitelbaum, a member of CHEARs executive committee and a public health researcher at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

Efforts so far have focused largely on establishing the technology, methods and collaborations needed to move forward, but early studies have already yielded some small insights. A preliminary study that used wristbands to examine chemical exposure in preschoolers found that, as they go about their daily lives, children are exposed to many flame retardants even some that have been phased out due to concerns about toxicity.

Pilot studies to test new devices have led to a few, more personal realizations as well. Katherine Sward, a biomedical informatics researcher at the University of Utah, reported that a family trying out an in-home air monitor realized that vacuuming right before a visit from their childs asthmatic friend might actually lead to more, not less, risk after the cleaning launched dust particles into the air. In another pilot, a researcher using a portable monitor to track exposure to airborne particles concluded that he was allergic to eucalyptus, not pine, as he previously believed, when he noted that his worst symptoms seemed to correlate with high levels of eucalyptus pollen detected by his device.

Can real-time information about indoor air pollution help reduce peoples exposures? In a pilot study, University of Utah researchers outfitted homes with indoor and outdoor air monitors and gave participants tablets that displayed changes in air quality. When the monitors detected a spike in airborne particulates, participants received a text asking about their activities. Pink triangles note activities like cooking, vacuuming or hosting a barbeque.

CREDIT: J. MOORE ET AL / NIH PRISMS / UNIVERSITY OF UTAH

Researchers are still a long way from tracking even a fraction of the potential threats that surround us. Some think it might be more practical to tackle the problem by focusing on whats inside the body, hunting for traces of past exposures. Signatures left over in blood, urine, teeth and even toenails can hint at previous exposures. Blood in particular holds clues that can let researchers work backwards to match biological changes to triggering exposures, says Dean Jones, a biochemist at Emory University in Atlanta and coauthor of a 2019 article about the promise of the exposome paradigm in the Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology. The dream, he says, is to someday be able to create a readout of how the body is being affected by the environment and then determine the substances an individual should avoid, based on how they respond to each one.

All people are pre-disease, Jones says. The vision is that we will have tools good enough to put data together into predictive programs and the predictive programs will say: You are likely to develop renal disease when you are in your 50s and if you do a, b, c, youll reduce that risk.

In blood, Jones can look for metabolites, small molecules broken down or created by body processes. With tens of thousands of detectable components that hint at what the body is doing chemically, metabolites may be one possible alphabet scientists could use to read back whats happened internally following various exposures.

The human serum albumin protein captures and removes harmful compounds found circulating in the blood. Scientists can examine specific sites on this protein to determine which compounds have been bound. Some researchers think this interior view of exposures will help identify compounds that may be unusually high in people with diseases.

CREDIT: S.M. RAPPAPORT ET AL / TOXICOLOGY LETTERS 2012

At the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, Stephen Rappaport is exploring a different language found in blood. By examining human serum albumin a protein that vacuums up damaging compounds circulating in blood Rappaport can look for the residues those compounds have left behind. Both Jones and Rappaport think they can link these internal signs to external exposures. Eventually they aim to identify the ones that pose harm.

Blood can provide a snapshot of the goings-on inside the body, says Rappaport. Most of the things we think about as being toxic or protective from disease are things that are actively transported by the blood.

Even if scientists can count on the body to point to harmful chemicals, other challenges remain. Once scientists have found something in the blood, they must try to trace it back to a known chemical in a database. But they often wont find a match. The vast majority of the worlds chemicals (both natural and human-made) have never been characterized and new chemicals are created all the time.

Simply getting a handle on how many chemicals are out there is harder than it sounds. A recent study attempted this in 100 consumer products. Toothpaste contained 85 chemicals, while one plastic childrens toy contained about 300. Across all the products, the study detected 4,270 unique chemical signatures and tentatively identified 1,602 of those. But only 30 percent of those 1,602 chemicals could be matched to public lists of known ingredients in consumer products or compounds of toxicological interest.

Theres got to be tens of millions hundreds of millions, if not more, says Jon Sobus, an environmental health scientist at the US Environmental Protection Agency and coauthor on the consumer products study. Where does the number of chemicals end?

With so many unknowns, scientists are left with a huge number-crunching issue, making the exposome, like so many fields today, a big data problem. Thats forcing scientists to devise new ways to analyze the information they collect. One approach gaining popularity borrows from a common, if sometimes controversial, method in genetics. Dubbed the genome-wide association study, or GWAS, the method looks to see which of thousands of genes vary in conjunction with a particular disease or symptom.

In 2010, Harvard bioinformatician Chirag Patel adapted the GWAS into an environment-wide association study to see how 266 environmental factors varied in step with the risk of developing type II diabetes. The study rediscovered certain factors already linked to diabetes risk, but also pointed researchers to other potential risks, including a dietary component of vitamin E and heptachlor, a pesticide previously linked to type II diabetes in workers who applied it, but not known to have an effect at smaller levels in the general population.

After this, other researchers adopted the EWAS method to look for substances that might confer risk and should be studied further. In a 2011 study examining metabolites in human plasma, researchers found three small molecules that correlated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease later on. One of these was trimethylamine N-oxide, or TMAO. TMAO is a byproduct of choline, which is found in certain foods, including meat and eggs. Researchers realized that certain gut microbes converted choline to an intermediate compound, which was then broken down to TMAO in the liver. In mice, high TMAO levels corresponded to thickened artery walls. The researchers proposed that manipulating a patients microbiome might be able to protect people from this type of dietary exposure.

The study was applauded by researchers like Rappaport, who sees it as a validation of the EWAS method. Still GWAS itself is far from perfect and the EWAS faces many additional challenges when compared to its genetic predecessor. A genome-wide study is contained in a way that an environment-wide search is not. Humans have a lot of genes about 20,000 that code for proteins. But that number pales in comparison to the number of things people might encounter in the environment. And unlike the genome which is packaged together in a place we know how to find our exposures can be anywhere at any time in any quantity.

The sheer scope of the problem is daunting to researchers just hearing about the exposome. But for Sobus, its not unlike the early days of genomics, when many wondered if mapping the human genome was an unfeasible goal. As more tools and resources are created, more scientists are finding ways to incorporate the idea into their studies, he says. And each researcher who decides to tackle even a small chunk helps move the field forward.

I think everyone kind of goes through that growth period of a little bit of disbelief, he says. Then you start warming up to it and you want to get on the band wagon.

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The next omics? Tracking a lifetime of exposures to better understand disease - Knowable Magazine

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Ceremony honors 2019 GASD hall inductees – The Recorder

Posted: September 22, 2019 at 5:47 pm

By JOHN PURCELL

Recorder News Staff

PERTH Ten exemplary individuals and two standout athletic teams were enshrined Friday in the Greater Amsterdam School District Hall of Fame.

Around 150 people filled The Bridge Walk at Perthshire banquet facility Friday evening for the fifth annual GASD Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. Five academic inductees and five individuals and two entire teams for the athletic wing were honored that night.

John Purcell/Recorder staffGASD Hall of Fame Committee Chairman Richard Allen delivers remarks during the opening of this years induction ceremony Friday night.

This years academic honorees included the late Gerald Barnell, Dr. Alison Bertuch, the late Art Cotugno, the late Chet Curtis, and the late Jack Saroff. Atheltic inductees included Megan (Gaugler) Sumigray, Brian Benton, Sara (Puglisi) Hisert, Vinnie Nicosia, along with the 1995 state championship-winning football team and the 2007-08 girls basketball team.

The Class of 2019 inductees will also be honored Sunday afternoon during the school districts homecoming parade and football game.

Interim Superintendent Raymond Colucciello said what he has learned since taking over the reins at GASD six months is the quality of the people in the district, which is exemplified by the inductees.

When read through the bios of these individuals you read word likes distinguished, work ethic, mentor, international researcher people who really made a difference in the lives of all of us, Colucciello said. Hall of Fame people are picked because theyve been game-changers. I want to congratulate each and every member of the Hall of Fame.

Amsterdam High School Principal Tyrone OMeally, who stepped into the position almost a year ago, said he had learned the importance of community to GASD.

To all the inductees, my goal is that Im currently in the process of grooming kids so that they can come back to this one, OMeally said drawing applause from attendees. In order to be selected for this, you have to have made a major mark on Amsterdam.

GASD Hall of Fame Committee Chairman Richard Allen presented past chairman Robert Noto with a plaque honoring his efforts to establish the HOF. Noto, a retired athletic director for GASD, spearheaded the HOF and led the committee for four years.

Barnell, a member of the Class of 1929, was a longtime music teacher in the district and is considered the godfather of GASDs instrumental program.

Over four decades in the district, Barnell started or directed every instrumental performance group playing on a stage in the school district. He was also a vital force in the Montgomery County Music Teachers Association, helping organize the first county music festival.

Barnell also shaped the Amsterdam High School marching band into what has become a prized aspect of the community. He developed the idea to form a majorettes squad and to have its members perform their well-known Rockettes kick line to the tune of Lullaby of Birdland.

Cotugno, a member of the Class of 1954, began his long career in GASD as a Spanish teacher at the high school in 1961. From 1965-69, he worked as the district coordinator of foreign languages. He then transitioned into administration and served as the assistant principal at Theodore Roosevelt Jr. High School. He ascended to become the principal of the junior high and oversaw the schools transition to Lynch Middle School.

Cotugno became director of staff personnel in 1983 and went on to serve as superintendent of schools in 1991. He continued leading the district until his retirement in June 1995. Throughout Cotugnos career, he was involved in several local and statewide organizations.

Bertuch, of the Class of 1981, is known internationally for her research on telomeres and as an expert on bone marrow failure. She serves as the director of the bone marrow failure program at Texas Childrens Hospital. She also is an associate professor of pediatrics and molecular and human genetics at Baylor College of Medicine.

Bertuch is an expert in the diagnosis and treatment of bone marrow failure, a condition where bone marrow is replaced with fat cells and no longer produces blood cells. She has published more than 75 research articles and medical textbook chapters, along with giving lectures across the nation and abroad.

Curtis, his given name Chester Kukiewicz, was a member of the Class of 1957 who went on to become one of Bostons leading television news anchors. His career in broadcasting started with stints in Rochester, Washington D.C. and New York City.

Curtis moved to Channel 5 in Boston in 1968, which started his more than 40 years connection to New England events, history and residents. Curtis and his then-wife, Natalie Jacobson, were the top-rated anchor team in Boston for decades. WCVB was named the best news station in the country during Curtis tenure. He received many awards and distinctions throughout his career, including several regional Emmy awards.

For much of his adult life, Curtis dedicated his free time to emceeing numerous charitable events and fundraising for several causes. He hosted the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Annual Labor Day Telethon for more than 25 years.

Saroff immigrated to the United States as a young boy during the Russian Revolution. He would go on to become an innovator and champion of science education at Amsterdam High School.

Saroffs four-decade effort to improve the teaching of science at AHS earned him a National Science Foundation Scholarship from Union College and a Shell Merit Scholarship at Cornell University. He also regularly provided science instruction training to elementary school teachers in GASD.

Saroff was a driving force in efforts to make teaching a more attractive career choice. His testimony in 1946 to the governors Education Commission in the state Assembly helped convince the panel to recommend increasing salaries of the states teachers. He was also instrumental in establishing the teachers union in GASD.

Sumigray was honored not only for her individual basketball accomplishments but as a member of the 2007-08 Lady Rams team. The basketball team inducted Friday marked the first female team to earn the Legacy Team honor from the HOF.

Sumigray is the most decorated 3-point shooter in Lady Rams history. As a junior, she broke the programs single-season record for 3-pointers with 57, then broke it again with 59 as a senior. For her career, she sank a school-record 154 shots from beyond the arc.

Nicosia was a four-year football standout for the Rugged Rams at both wide receiver and safety. He went on to attend Colgate, where he played four years as a safety while totaling 124 tackles, three sacks and two interceptions.

As a sophomore, Nicosia played a crucial role in leading Amsterdam to a NYSPHSAA Class A state championship. As a senior, Nicosia was a first-team all-state selection at safety and the Section II Division I most valuable player while also being named to the NYS Golden 50 team as one of the 50 top players in the state.

Benton was a six-year starter for the AHS varsity wrestling team, wrapping up his career with what was, at the time, both a program and Section II record 253 wins. A six-time first-team Big 10 all-star, Benton won five Section II Class B championships, three Section II Division 1 championships and was a three-time place finisher at the state tournament. That was capped off in 2008 when he won the NYSPHSAA state championship and finished second in the Federation tournament.

Hisert is one of the most decorated softball players in Amsterdam history. She also went on to play four years at Division II American International College, where she was a three-year team captain.

Hisert had a spectacular 2005 season at AHS, racking up 204 strikeouts in 103 innings. She was the first-ever unanimous Big 10 softball MVP, finishing the 2005 season with a 0.91 earned run average and leading the Lady Rams to their first sectional playoff win in 23 years en route to a Section II Class AA semifinal appearance.

Cudmore, this years coaching inductee, was a 1968 AHS graduate who played football, basketball and baseball in high school before moving on to a standout four-year football career at the University of Bridgeport. Cudmore then returned home to Amsterdam as a teacher and coach and established a legacy for more than 30 years.

In football, Cudmore was a vital assistant coach during the tenures of Brian Mee, Frank Derrico and Pat Liverio. As a line coach, Cudmore mentored GASD Hall of Fame inductees like Tom Catena, Rich Altieri and Josh Beekman, consistently producing offensive and defensive lines that were among the best in Section II.

In the early 1980s, Cudmore became the head track and field coach at AHS, leading to an explosion in the programs success. Under his leadership, Amsterdam consistently had top finishes at Section II championships in both individual and relay events.

Cudmore was an assistant on the 1995 football team that joined be the 2007-08 girls basketball team as a Legacy Team honoree. In the Rugged Rams final season under Hall of Fame coach Frank Derrico, the Rams became the first Section II football team to win a NYSPHSAA state championship. The Rams defeated Lake Shore 11-8 to capture the Class B title in 1995.

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