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Archive for August, 2016

The Basics on Genes and Genetic Disorders – KidsHealth

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Have people ever said to you, "It's in your genes"? They were probably talking about a physical characteristic, personality trait, or talent that you share with other members of your family.

We know that genes play an important role in shaping how we look and act and even whether we get sick. Now scientists are trying to use that knowledge in exciting new ways, such as treating health problems.

To understand how genes work, let's review some biology basics. Most living organisms are made up of cells that contain a substance called deoxyribonucleic (pronounced: dee-AHK-see-rye-bow-noo-klee-ik) acid (DNA).

DNA contains four chemicals (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine called A, T, C, and G for short) that are strung in patterns on extremely thin, coiled strands in the cell. How thin? Cells are tiny invisible to the naked eye and each cell in your body contains about 6 feet of DNA thread, for a total of about 3 billion miles of DNA inside you!

So where do genes come in? Genes are made of DNA, and different patterns of A, T, G, and C code for the instructions for making things your body needs to function (like the enzymes to digest food or the pigment that gives your eyes their color). As your cells duplicate, they pass this genetic information to the new cells.

DNA is wrapped together to form structures called chromosomes. Most cells in the human body have 23 pairs of chromosomes, making a total of 46. Individual sperm and egg cells, however, have just 23 unpaired chromosomes. You received half of your chromosomes from your mother's egg and the other half from your father's sperm cell. A male child receives an X chromosome from his mother and a Y chromosome from his father; females get an X chromosome from each parent.

Genes are sections or segments of DNA that are carried on the chromosomes and determine specific human characteristics, such as height or hair color. Because you have a pair of each chromosome, you have two copies of every gene (except for some of the genes on the X and Y chromosomes in boys, because boys have only one of each).

Some characteristics come from a single gene, whereas others come from gene combinations. Because every person has about 25,000 different genes, there is an almost endless number of possible combinations!

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Interdepartmental Genetics Program | Kansas State University

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Interdepartmental Genetics Program New Graduate Funding Opportunities! The Interdepartmental Genetics Program is now offering a competitive fellowship to select applicants to its PhD program. This prestigious fellowship comes with anannual stipend of$29,400plus tuition (2015-2016 academic year rate), and allows students to rotate through multiple Genetics research labs before choosing a thesis advisor. Submit your applications soon, its deadline isDecember15, 2015.More information

The goal of the interdepartmental Genetics Graduate Program at Kansas State University is to train M.S. and Ph.D. students in the basic principles and applications of classical and molecular genetics for careers in research, teaching, and industry. The program is diverse and includes faculty from the following Divisions and Departments

As a result, research opportunities are diverse and include plant and animal breeding, population and evolutionary genetics, quantitative genetics, molecular and developmental genetics, and genomics and bioinformatics. Interdisciplinary interactions are fostered and encouraged based upon a common interest in genetics. Such interactions often bridge basic and applied genetics and merge diverse fields such as agriculture and computer sciences. Thus, the Genetics Graduate Program offers students a truly interdisciplinary and interactive environment in which to pursue their scientific interests.

After meeting the core curriculum requirements, students in the program are encouraged to choose an emphasis, which enables them to specialize in a particular subdiscipline of genetics. At present, the following emphases are available: Arthropod Genetics; Genetics of Plant-Microbe Interactions; Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Genetics; and Quantitative Genetics. These tracks have been designed so that there is significant overlap in coursework.

Research and teaching facilities at Kansas State University are excellent. These include theIntegrated GenomicsFacility(IGF), the Plant Biotechnology Center, Sequencing and Genotyping Facility, NMR Facility, Metabolomics Center, electron microscopes, real-time PCR machines, insectaries, greenhouses, etc. The interdisciplinary nature of our programs provides access to many of these facilities to all students in the program. High-technology classrooms with state-of-the-art computer technology are also available.

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Interdepartmental Genetics Program | Kansas State University

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Learn Genetics Visually in 24 Hours by Rapid Learning

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

With our breakthrough 24x Rapid Learning SystemTM of smart teaching and rich media, you can now finally gain a powerful learning edge over others who are still struggling with static textbooks and online freebies. Catch up and excel in class with the host of tightly integrated learning modules, designed specifically for today's web and video savvy students and supported by a team of teaching experts. Speed up your learning one chapter one hour at a time. The entire 24-chapter rapid learning package includes:

Genetics -Tutorial Series

This series provides an in-depth coverage of a typical genetics curriculum with rich-media and expert narration for rapid mastery.

Core Unit #1 The Introduction

Core Unit #2 Cellular Basis of Genetics

Core Unit #3 Genetic Mapping

Core Unit #4 Quantitative Genetics

Core Unit #5 Molecular Genetics

Core Unit #6 Recombinant DNA Technology

Core Unit #7 Mutation and Disease

Core Unit #8 Developmental, Population and Evolutionary Genetics

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Learn Genetics Visually in 24 Hours by Rapid Learning

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Genetics | The Gruber Foundation

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

"Genetics is one of the most far-reaching of the sciences with its potential to alleviate human suffering."

Peter Gruber, Chairman Emeritus and Co-Founder The Gruber Foundation

The Genetics Prize is presented to a leading scientist, or up to three, in recognition of groundbreaking contributions to any realm of genetics research.

The Gruber Foundation established and awarded its first Genetics Prize in 2001. This year of monumental accomplishment in genetics research, with the successful sequencing of the human genome, was a particularly auspicious time to launch the world's first major international prize devoted specifically to achievements in the realm of genetics research.

Created 135 years after Gregor Mendel discovered laws of heredity that implied the existence of genetic factors, the Genetics Prize is awarded under the guidance of an international advisory board of distinguished genetics scientists.

Beginning in 2001, the Prize a gold medal and unrestricted $500,000 cash award has been awarded for fundamental insights in the field of genetics. These may include original discoveries in genetic function, regulation, transmission, and variation, as well as in genomic organization.

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STAR: Genetics – Home

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

StarGenetics is a Mendelian genetics cross simulator developed at MIT by biology faculty, researched-trained scientists and technologists at MIT's OEIT. StarGenetics allows students to simulate mating experiments between organisms that are genetically different across a range of traits to analyze the nature of the traits in question. Its goal is to teach students about genetic experimental design and genetic concepts. For more information on StarGenetics click here.

StarGenetics is freely accessible via the web. Press the Start button to get started.

StarGenetics can be used to teach simple genetics concepts that are appropriate for high school biology students as well as complex genetics concepts that are appropriate for advanced biology undergraduate students.In addition,StarGenetics allows for instructors to customize the exercises presented to the student. To find out how to create your own StarGenetics exerciseand for more information on the concepts that can be taught using StarGenetics, click here.

StarGenetics simulates genetic experiments using known model organisms such as Mendel's garden peas, flies (Drosophila melanogaster), and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). StarGenetics simulate crosses in cows, which can be use to explore traits in organisms with similar genetics to humans. In addition, StarGenetics can simulate crosses between non-model organisms such as "smiley faces", which are typically used for introducing genetic concepts to younger audiences. The following are the currently available visualizers for StarGenetics:

Examples of genetic experiments in each of the different StarGenetics visualizers (from left to right, clockwise): Fly, Peas, Cow, Smiley Face, Fish, andYeast visualizers. (Click on the image for a larger view)

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Genetics, Breeding, & Animal Health : Home

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

The mission of the Genetics, Breeding, and Animal Health Research Unit is to define the role of genetics in animal, pathogen, and microbial community interactions in domestic livestock production. Our overall goal is to develop effective genetic strategies to improve meat quality, animal health, and production efficiency. RESEARCH PROGRAM

Research at USMARC characterizes genetic differences ranging from DNA sequence differences through breed differences. These genetic differences arise by chance in the DNA sequence, by geographic isolation, by the mating restrictions of breed associations, by crossbreeding, and by natural and human imposed selection. Close cooperation with USMARC scientists from many disciplines results in comprehensive evaluations of genetic differences. Collaborations with researchers at other locations across the United States and internationally are used to advance the research.

Genomic scientists skilled in obtaining DNA sequence, identifying sequence differences, developing DNA markers, and determining genotypes have worked with computational biologists trained in comparison and analysis of very large collections of data to achieve significant successes. Until recent efforts to produce whole genome sequences for cattle and pigs, much of the publicly available DNA sequence for these species was developed at USMARC. Many QTL studies with cattle and pigs conducted worldwide use information from the linkage maps developed by USMARC and collaborators. A genetic marker for beef tenderness has been widely adopted by beef genomics companies and beef cattle breeders. A Gene Atlas was developed to identify what genes are being expressed in different tissues. New insights into genome organization, such as microRNA elements and copy number variants, are gained from whole genome sequence and are being evaluated in livestock. It is now feasible to obtain tens and hundreds of thousands of genotypes on a single animal from marker chips. These chips were used to quickly identify a defective mutation for marble bone disease and the affected breed is using a test based on these results to prevent the disease from propagating. Thousands of cattle and pigs at USMARC have been genotyped with these chips and associations with the genetic markers and prediction equations based on the genotypes have been released. The chips are being used to find associations in additional industry animals using a lower-cost method called pooling.

Geneticists skilled in quantitative genetics, experimental design, and statistics develop populations of animals that are measured for traits such as growth, efficiency of production, carcass, meat quality, reproduction, and indicators of health. Information is analyzed to estimate breed differences, heterosis, and heritabilities. Selected populations verify whether predicted selection responses are obtained and correlated changes in other traits are measured. Genomic scientists work with these populations to evaluate linkage and associations of traits with genetic markers. USMARC continues to be a premier source of information on breed differences and heterosis. In cattle, breed differences have been incorporated into across breed EPD adjustments increasing the impact of the research. Current research is expanding to include more direct connections to prominent industry sires. In sheep, emphasis is on easy-care maternal breeds and disease resistance. Selection experiments in pigs and cattle have emphasized selection for reproduction. Results have demonstrated that genetic change can be made even for traits with low heritabilities or genetic antagonisms. Current selection experiments incorporate genetic markers into breeding decisions to evaluate their potential contributions.

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Genetics – Genetic inheritance – NHS Choices

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Each cell in the body contains 23 pairs of chromosomes. One chromosome from each pair is inherited from your mother and one is inherited from your father.

The chromosomes contain the genes you inherit from your parents. There may be different forms of the same gene called alleles.

For example, for the gene that determines eye colour, you may inherit a brown allele from your mother and a blue allele from your father. In this instance, you will end up with brown eyes because brown is the dominant allele. The different forms of genes are caused by mutations (changes) in the DNA code.

The same is true for medical conditions. There may be a faulty version of a gene that results in a medical condition, and a normal version that may not cause health problems.

Whether your child ends up with a medical condition will depend on several factors, including:

Genetic mutations occur when DNA changes, altering the genetic instructions. This may result in a genetic disorder or a change in characteristics.

Mutations can be caused by exposure to specific chemicals or radiation. For example, cigarette smoke is full of chemicals that attack and damage DNA. This causes mutations in lung cell genes, including the ones that control growth. In time, this can lead to lung cancer.

Mutations can also occur when DNA fails to be copied accurately when a cell divides.

Mutations can have three different effects. They may:

Some medical conditions are directly caused by a mutation in a single gene that may have been passed onto a child by his or her parents. These are known as monogenic conditions.

Depending on the specific condition concerned, monogenic conditions can be inherited in three main ways. These are outlined below.

For conditions that are inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern to be passed on to a child, both parents must have a copy of the faulty gene (they are carriers of the condition).

If the child only inherits one copy of the faulty gene, they will be a carrier of the condition but will not have the condition themselves.

If a mother and a father both carry the faulty gene, there is a one in four (25%) chance of each child they have inheriting the genetic condition and a one in two chance (50%) of them being a carrier.

Examples of genetic conditions inherited in this way include:

For conditions that are inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern to be passed on to a child, only one parent needs to carry the mutation.

If one parent has the mutation, there is a one in two (50%) chance it will be passed on to each child the couple has.

Examples of genetic conditions inherited in this way include:

Some conditions are caused by a mutation on the X chromosome (one of the sex chromosomes). These are usually inherited in a recessive pattern albeit in a slightly different way to the autosomal recessive pattern described above.

X-linked recessive conditions often don't affect females to a significant degree because females have two X chromosomes, one of which will almost certainly be normal and can usually compensate for the mutated chromosome. However, females who inherit the mutation will become carriers.

If a male inherits the mutation from his mother (males cannot inherit X-linked mutations from their fathers because they will receive a Y chromosome from them), he will not have a normal copy of the gene and will develop the condition.

Whena mother is a carrier of an X-linked mutation, each daughter they have has a one in two (50%) chance of becoming a carrier and each son they have has a one in two (50%) chance of inheriting the condition.

When a father has an X-linked condition, his sons will not be affected because he will pass on a Y chromosome to them. However, any daughters he has will become carriers of the mutation.

Examples of genetic conditions inherited in this way include:

Although genetic conditions are often inherited, this is not always the case. Some genetic mutations can occur for the first time when a sperm or egg is made, when a sperm fertilises an egg, or when cells are dividing after fertilisation. This is known as a 'de novo' or 'sporadic' mutation.

Someone with a new mutation will not have a family history of a condition, but they may be at risk of passing the mutation on to their children. They may also have, or be at risk of developing, a form of the condition themselves.

Examples of conditions that are often caused by a de novo mutation include some types of muscular dystrophy, haemophilia and type 1 neurofibromatosis.

Some conditions are not caused by a mutation on a specific gene, but by an abnormality in a person's chromosomes such as having too many or too few chromosomes, rather than the normal 23 pairs.

Examples of conditions caused by chromosomal abnormalities include:

While these are genetic conditions, they are generally not inherited. Instead, they usually occur randomly as a result of a problem before, during, or soon after the fertilisation of an egg by a sperm.

Very few health conditions are only caused by genes most are caused by the combination of genes and environmental factors. Environmental factors include lifestyle factors, such as diet and exercise.

Around a dozen or so genes determine most human characteristics, such as height and the likelihood of developing common conditions.

Genes can have many variants, and studies of the whole genome (the whole set of genes) in large numbers of individuals are showing that these variants may increase or decrease a persons chance of having certain conditions. Each variant may only increase or decrease the chance of a condition very slightly, but this can add up across several genes.

In most people, the gene variants balance out to give an average risk for most conditions but, in some cases, the risk is significantly above or below the average. It is thought that it may be possible to reduce the risk by changing environmental and lifestyle factors.

For example, coronary heart disease (when the heart's blood supply is blocked or interrupted) can run in families, but a poor diet, smoking and a lack of exercise can also increase your risk of developing the condition.

Research suggests that in the future it will be possible for individuals to find out what conditions they are most likely to develop. It may then be possible for you to significantly reduce the chances of developing these conditions by making appropriate lifestyle and environmental changes.

The two strands of DNA are wound around each other into a double helix

Page last reviewed: 07/08/2014

Next review due: 07/08/2016

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Department of Genetics at Washington University St. Louis

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Samantha comes to us from Boston Childrens Hospital and Harvard Medical School where she has been a postdoctoral...

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Geneticists seek to understand how genes are inherited, modified, and expressed. Geneticists have been remarkably...

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View progress of the new Genetics Building

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The Genome Engineering and IPSC Center (GEiC) was formed by the consolidation of two pre-existing cores, the Genome...

posted on: Dec 5, 2013 | author: admin

Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis plans to construct an energy-efficient, multistory research...

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Gautam Dantas, PhD, has won a prestigious National Institutes of Health award for innovative research that may improve...

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Barak A. Cohen, PhD, and Robi D. Mitra, PhD, have been named Alvin Goldfarb Distinguished Professors of Computational...

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The Department of Genetics is at the forefront of the rapidly developing field known as Genomic (or Personalized)...

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Genetic errors identified in a new study led by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis may reduce risk...

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Sarah Garwood, MD, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis,...

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Using a laser probe, neurosurgeons at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have opened the...

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Worldwide, an estimated 25 percent of children under age 5 suffer from stunted growth and development. The most...

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Human Genetics – Population Genetics

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

for 1st YEAR STUDENTS INTRODUCTION

he applications of Mendelian genetics, chromosomal abnormalities, and multifactorial inheritance to medical practice are quite evident. Physicians work mostly with patients and families. However, as important as they may be, genes affect populations, and in the long run their effects in populations have a far more important impact on medicine than the relatively few families each physician may serve. It is important that certain polymorphisms are maintained so that the species may survive, even at the expense of individuals. Genetic polymorphisms often are detrimental to the homozygote, but they allow others of the species to survive. Before medical intervention was possible, populations that lacked the sickle cell anemia allele could not survive in the malaria regions of West Africa. Those that had the sickle cell anemia allele survived, and the gene remains in the population at high frequency today, even though the homozygous recessive phenotype was at a severe disadvantage in the past. The high rate of thalassemia in people of Mediterranean origin, the high rate of sickle cell anemia in people of West African descent, the high rate of cystic fibrosis in people from Western Europe, and the high rate of Tay-Sachs disease in ethnic groups from Eastern Europe may all owe their origin to environmental factors that cause changes in gene frequencies in large populations by giving some advantage to heterozygotes who carry a deleterious allele. Although one may never use the calculations of population genetics in medical practice, the underlying principles should be understood.

Population genetics is also the most widely misused area of human genetics, sometimes bordering on "vigilante genetics," a term coined by Newton Morton. Persons have mistakenly applied population genetics to "prove" race superiority for intelligence and aptitudes, and have misused it in eugenics. As an educated and, I hope, a respected member of your community you must be alert to "vigilante genetics."

Population genetics is concerned with gene and genotype frequencies, the factors that tend to keep them constant, and the factors that tend to change them in populations. It is largely concerned with the study of polymorphisms. It directly impacts counseling, forensic medicine, and genetic screening.

Consider a population of 1000 individuals all typed for the simplest test at the MN blood group locus. At its most simplistic form this locus can be reduced to a codominant system with two alleles M and N. (In reality it is considerably more complex than this but this simple form will suffice for our examples.) Every individual in the population will be either M (having two M alleles), MN (heterozygous), or N (having two N alleles). Suppose the blood typing results were as follows: 300 M individuals, 600MN individuals, and 100 N individuals. You probably want to ask, "What is the gene frequency of the M allele in the above population of 1000 individuals?" I'm glad you're interested!

1000 individuals each have two alleles at the MN locus = 2000 genes

Each M individual has 2 M alleles 300 x 2 = 600 M alleles

Each MN individual has 1 M allele 600 x 1 = 600 M alleles

There is a total of 1200 M genes in a population of 2000 genes. The gene frequency of the M allele is 1200/2000 = 0.6

I'll bet you want to know, "What is the gene frequency of the N allele?" Well, I'll show you how to find out.

Each MN individual has 1 N allele 600 x 1 = 600 N genes

Each N individual has 2 N genes 100 x 2 = 200 N genes

Again, there is a total of 2000 genes in the population for the MN locus. The gene frequency of the N allele is 800/2000 = 0.4

Notice that when there are only two alleles in the population, their gene frequencies must add to 1. If they don't, you've done something wrong. This counting method of calculating the gene frequency must be used whenever the heterozygote can be detected.

Gene frequency = (2 x homozygote + heterozygote) / 2 x population

Gene frequency for one allele = 1 - gene frequency of the other allele

These two general formulas assume nothing of the population, only that it is a single interbreeding group. All other methods make some assumptions of the population in order to simplify calculations.

For many human autosomal recessive traits the heterozygote cannot be distinguished from the normal homozygote. When this occurs the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium is assumed to apply. These authors, Hardy in England and Weinberg in Germany, used different approaches but came to the same conclusions in 1908. They made several assumptions of the population:

Under these assumptions, Hardy and Weinberg found that the gene frequency and the genotype frequency in the population do not change from generation to generation. Furthermore, if the frequency of the dominant allele A in the founding population was p , and the frequency of the recessive allele a in the founding population was q, then after one generation of random mating the genotype frequencies would remain fixed and would be in the ratio:

If you want to see evidence that this is true, see Figure 20. If, on the other hand, you believe everything you read, and only want to study what will be covered on the examination, continue on.

Hopefully, someone will ask the question, "Is there any evidence that the human population meets the requirements of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, or is this just a mental exercise?" Of course there is evidence! Consider the following:

In my experience, one may use several criteria for selecting a person to mate with, but one usually doesn't select a mate based on blood types at the MN blood group locus. Therefore, we might assume that this locus would be a good test of random mating. All of the other Hardy-Weinberg criteria also seem to be met. Mutations at this autosomal locus are rare. We know of no selective advantage or disadvantage in the present environment. And migration wouldn't be much of a factor if we took the sample at one short interval of time. This locus should provide a good test.

We have already seen that gene frequencies and genotype frequencies for this locus can be determined without using assumptions of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. Let's see if a real population sample is distributed as p2 (M), 2pq (MN), q2 (N).

In 1975, Race and Sanger reported the typing results from 1279 individuals in London. They were not collecting these data for the purpose of testing for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, so they could not be accused of typing individuals until a certain distribution was achieved, a question that has always remained about Mendel's original studies. Race and Sanger found 363 persons were M, 634 were MN, and 282 were N. Using our original method of calculating gene frequencies, the frequency of the M allele (p) would be:

p = (2 x 363) + 634 / (2 x 1279) = 0.53167

The frequency of the N allele (q) would be:

q = (2 x 282) + 634 / (2 x 1279) = 0.46833

If the population were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, then the number of M individuals should be p2 x 1279, the number of MN individuals should be 2pq x 1279, and the number of N individuals should be q2 x 1279, or

For the MN blood group locus there can be little doubt that the conditions for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium are met in the human population, at least the population in London where the sample was taken. The observed frequencies closely approximate what would be expected if the population were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

This gives us the assurance that we can use Hardy-Weinberg as a method when the heterozygote cannot be detected. An example of the use of the Hardy-Weinberg principle in medical genetics is given below.

Suppose there is an autosomal recessive disease where the frequency of affected in the population is 1/10,000. If the population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, this frequency would equal q2. The gene frequency of the recessive allele (q) would then be the square root of q2, or the square root of 1/10,000 which equals 1/100. The carrier (heterozygote) frequency (2pq) is usually approximated as 2q since p (0.99) is so close to 1. The carrier frequency is then 1/50.

For an autosomal recessive disease with a population frequency of 1/10,000, the carrier frequency is 1/50. Put another way, on average, as many as 3 or 4 first year medical students at UIC are carriers of such a disease.

From time to time, certain groups have suggested that the way to eliminate a deleterious disease from the population is to not allow affected individuals to mate. The above example should provide some evidence that this will have little effect on gene frequencies in the population. Although the frequency of the disease is only 1/10,000, (we should have one affected first year medical student at UIC every 50 years) the carrier frequency is 1/50 (we should have 3 or 4 carriers at UIC in every incoming class). These phenotypically normal carriers will keep the gene in the population.

If, by chance, a student in the first year class has a sibling with an autosomal recessive disease that is present at birth, the student would have a 2/3 chance of being a carrier. If that student were to have a child with an unrelated partner selected at random from the general population, and the disease frequency in the general population is 1/10,000, the probability of their child being affected is:

Compare that to the probability that two unrelated individuals, with no history of the disease in their families would have an affected child, when the carrier frequency is 1/50:

Since it is a stated goal of medicine to do what is best for the patient, what happens to genes in populations when exceptions to Hardy-Weinberg occur?

Although mutation rates are usually very low, geneticists have long been concerned about environmental factors that will lead to even slight increases. There are two general types of mutation, a mutation that changes a gene that makes a functional product into a gene that makes a nonfunctional product (forward mutation) and a mutation that changes a gene that makes a nonfunctional product into a gene that makes a functional product (reverse mutation). Several events can lead to a forward mutation, base change, base insertion, base deletion, etc., but a reverse mutation must correct the specific change that produced the original forward mutation. For example if a single base deletion caused the original forward mutation, then that base must be re-inserted in exactly the same place for a reverse mutation to occur. In general, forward mutations occur at a frequency that is at least 10 times that of reverse mutations. A method of estimating forward mutation rates is given in Gelehrter, Collins, and Ginsburg, 2nd ed., Chapter 4. Students will be well advised to read this chapter carefully.

If is the forward mutation rate from a functional to a nonfunctional allele, and is v the reverse mutation rate from a nonfunctional allele to a functional allele at the same locus, an equilibrium will be established between these two mutation rates that determines q, the gene frequency of the nonfunctional allele.

At equilibrium, q = /(+v)

If v is truly one tenth the frequency of , then we can assign the value 1 for v and 10 as the value for . The above equation reduces to

qequil = 10/(10+1) or 10/11 =0.90909090909

Gene frequencies for nonfunctional alleles tend to increase in the population because of recurrent mutation. They will not entirely eliminate functional alleles but they tend to replace them, and can, if no other factors are involved, reach very high frequencies.

As a possible human example of the effects of recurrent mutation consider the following. In the ABO blood group system, there are two functional alleles, A and B. Alleles A and B control transferase enzymes that connect the proper sugar molecule (glucosamine or n-acetyl glucosamine) to a common precursor substance. Most likely, B was the result of arare mutation of the A allele. O is a nonfunctional allele that recognizes no substrate, and no sugar molecule is transferred, leaving the precursor unchanged. In the ABO system, O is now the most frequent allele. If there is no selective advantage, O should continue to increase at the expense of A and B.

The derivations of the equations used to calculate the effects of recurrent mutation are shown in Figure 21. Again, if you are interested only in studying for possible test questions, this material is not required.

Assume a population of N individuals with two alleles at a locus, D with a frequency of p and d with a frequency of q. At generation 0 there will be 2Np D alleles , or 2N(1-q) D alleles, and 2Nq d alleles. Assume D mutates to d at a frequency of and that d mutates to D at a frequency of v. Assume that is 10 times as frequent as v. Then at generation 1 the number of d alleles (2Nq1) would be:

2Nq1 = 2Nq (from gen. 0) + 2N (1-q) (mutations from D to d) - 2Nqv (mutations from d to D)

This reduces to:

q1 = q + (1-q) - qv Or the change in q = q1 - q or the change in q = q + (1-q) - qv - q

At equilibrium the change in q = 0, so at equilibrium 0 = q +(1-q) -qv -q, or, qv = (1-q), or, qv = - q

This reduces to q (at equilibrium) = /(+v)

One factor assumed in the discussion of recurrent mutation was that the nonfunctional allele and the functional allele have the same selective advantage. This may be true of the ABO blood group system, but it is not usually true of autosomal recessive diseases. The disease state, by definition, is always a deleterious phenotype. In autosomal recessive diseases the phenotype is almost always the result of nonfunctional alleles in the homozygous state. If left untreated the recessive phenotype for a disease would be less fit than the heterozygote or normal homozygote. How does selection against the homozygous recessive individual affect gene frequencies in the population?

Fitness, to a geneticist, is not the same as fitness to a movie director or a sports columnist. Fitness is not measured by physical attributes, it is measured by the number of offspring produced in the next generation that survive and reproduce. In a hunting-gathering society, the most fit person may have been the near sighted male who could not go on the hunt because he would stumble and make too much noise. If he were left behind to gather fruit and berries with the women, he may have become the most fit person in the tribe. Grandchildren, great-grandchildren, etc., are the best measures of the fitness of an individual. This has alway been my favorite explanation of why so many of us are near sighted, and why society changed from hunting-gathering to agriculture. It's all population genetics!

The most fit phenotype in the population is assigned a fitness of 1. If there are two equally fit phenotypes, each is assigned a fitness of 1. Those less fit must be assigned a fitness of less than 1. The difference between 1 and the fitness value is called the selection coefficient. The relationship between fitness, w, and the selection coefficient, s, is given by the equation, w = 1-s. The textbook uses f as the symbol for fitness, although historically most geneticists reserve f as the symbol for the inbreeding coefficient and use w as the symbol for fitness.

The effect of selection against the recessive phenotype is that, no matter how little the selection coefficient, as long as s is not 0, recessive alleles will be lost at each generation until no more remain in the population. Selection tends to reduce nonfunctional recessive alleles from the population; recurrent mutation tends to create nonfunctional recessive alleles in the population. The derivations of the effects of selection against the recessive phenotype are shown if Figure 22. Again, the material in Figure 22 will not be examined in this course.

The frequency of q in generation 1, q1, = (2 x homozygote + heterozygote)/ 2 x total

q1 = [2(1-s)q2 + 2pq]/ 2(1-sq2) , and q, the change in q, = q1 - q

q = [(1-s)q2 + (1-q)q]/ (1-sq2) , which reduces to q = [-spq2]/ (1-sq2)

q = 0 only when q = 0. There will be no equilibrium until the recessive allele is eliminated.

Since mutation tends to increase nonfunctional alleles in the population, and selection against the recessive phenotype tends to remove them, is there a point where these two will reach an equilibrium where gene frequencies remain stable from generation to generation? Again, if is the mutation rate, and s is the selection coefficient, an equilibrium will be reached when

= sq2

If the fitness of the homozygous recessive individual is 0, that is, the individual with that phenotype cannot reproduce, then s equals 1 and the above equation reduces to

= q2

The disease frequency cannot go lower than the recurrent mutation rate, even if affected individuals cannot reproduce.

The derivations of these equations are shown in Figure 23.

For mutation, the change in q = - q -qv. For selection, the change in q = [-spq2]/ [1-sq2]. If they balance at an equilibrium, the net effect is that they should sum to 0.

- q - qv + ([-spq2]/[1-sq2]) = 0

To simplify calculations, we will get rid of second order variables (qv) is only 1/10 of (q) and can be eliminated. Similarly, sq2 is very small in the denominator when compared to 1, and can be eliminated. This reduces the equation to

-q - spq2 = 0 to first order magnitude.

This reduces to - q = s(1-q) q2 or (1 - q) = (1-q)sq2

At equilibrium, = sq2 to first order magnitude.

Some genes exist at a rather high frequency in the population because the heterozygote is more fit than either homozygote. The only documented example of this is sickle cell anemia in Western Africa. There are three major genotypes for the sickle cell locus, each producing a different phenotype, in West Africans, AA, or normal individuals, AS or heterozygote individuals (often called carriers), and SS individuals who will have sickle cell anemia. Without medical intervention, SS individuals will have a fitness less than 1. In the falciparum malarial environment of West Africa, AA and AS individuals get malaria, but AS individuals usually have much milder cases of the disease and usually survive while AA individuals are less likely to do so. The heterozygote is the most fit phenotype of the three. If the selection coefficient against the homozygous normal AA individual is t, and the selection coefficient against the homozygous SS individual is s, and if p is the frequency of the A allele and q the frequency of the S allele then an equilibrium will be reached in which

p = s/(s + t) and q = t/(s + t). The gene frequencies at equilibrium are determined only by the relative sizes of the selection coefficients, not by their absolute magnitudes.

The derivations of these formulas are shown in Figure 24. Again, you are not responsible for knowing how to derive these formulas.

The gene frequency of the q allele at generation 1, q1 = [2pq + 2q2(1-s)]/2[1- tp2 - sq2]

Again the change in q, q, = q1 - q and at equilibrium, q = 0

0 = [pq + (1-s)q2/ [1-tp2-sq2] Substituting (1- q) for p, this equation will reduce to:

0 = -spq + tp2 or sq = tp

When (1-q) is substituted for p or (1-p) is substituted for q, this reduces to:

q = t/(s + t) and p = q/(s + t).

Assortive mating in humans may occur to a limited degree for traits such as intelligence. In some studies, married couples have higher correlation coefficients for intelligence than do siblings. In modern western culture, we tend to marry someone who is about our own intelligence, although this is probably an over simplification. If intelligence were controlled by a single genetic locus with two alleles, S for smart and D for dumb, then three phenotypes would be possible, SS for smart persons, SD for persons with average intelligence, and DD for persons who are mentally challenged. Of course, we know that intelligence is a multifactorial trait and not a single gene trait, but it is interesting to see what happens if it were a single gene trait with assortive mating where smart persons were only allowed to mate with smart persons, average persons with average persons, and mentally challenged only with mentally challenged. Strangely enough the gene frequencies do not change, only the genotype frequencies. The results are shown in Figure 25.

Two different populations result, one smart, the other mentally challenged. Average gets lost. Assortive mating eventually results in two species being formed from one.

Gene frequencies in small isolate populations do not reflect those of the larger founding population from which they were derived because of two factors, founder effect and random genetic drift. Founder effect occurs when the population grew from a few founding individuals. A few individuals cannot represent all of the genomes of the founding population. As we discussed before, each of us is carrying from 1 to 8 mutant genes in the heterozygous state, even though we are normal. When the founding population is small, intermarriage must result even though steps are taken to avoid it. The mutations carried by the founders are in higher frequency than they would be in the general population from which the founders came. Island populations founded by pirates or shipwreck, that were isolated for several generations tend to have different gene and genotype frequencies because of founder effect. Similarly, religious isolates, where marriage outside the religion is forbidden, also have founder effects.

Even if the founders of small isolate populations had exactly the same genotypes and gene frequencies of the original parent population, gene and genotype frequencies would change because of random genetic drift. Random genetic drift occurs because a small population cannot maintain randomness. Consider a population with 10 individuals with only two alleles at a locus, D with a frequency of 0.5 and d with a frequency of 0.5. By chance alone one would expect to find 10D and 10 d gametes being passed to the next generation. But one may find 11 D and only 9 d gametes. The next generation, one could find 10 and 10 again, or could find 12 and 8. But suppose after drifting to 12 D and 8 d, by chance a really skewed sampling occurred and one got 15 D and 5 d. It would be difficult, if not impossible to get back to the original 10D and 10 d. Sampling errors in small populations are always going to occur if given enough opportunities. These errors assure that random genetic drift will always occur. Isolate populations never have the same gene and genotype frequencies as their founding populations.

It is obvious that the major difference between autosomal loci and X-linked loci in populations is that the males (usually half the population) have only one X. Males cannot have the distribution, p2, 2pq, and q2 because they have only one X, they have either the normal allele p, or the recessive allele, q. In males, gene and genotype frequencies are the same. Thus, the genotype frequencies in the male and female can never be the same. In addition, there can be no heterozygote x heterozygote mating class since there are no male heterozygotes, and as of this date females cannot mate and produce a child. X-linked traits can reach stable gene frequencies in males and females, but cannot reach Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

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Human Genetics - Population Genetics

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Gene Therapy News — ScienceDaily

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

In Lung Cancer, Not All HER2 Alterations Are Created Equal Jan. 28, 2016 Study shows two distinct causes of HER2 activation in lung cancer: mutation of the gene and amplification of the gene. In patient samples of lung adenocarcinoma, 3 percent were found to have HER2 ... read more Dec. 12, 2015 Results from a long-term clinical trial conducted by cancer researchers show that combining radiation treatment with 'suicide gene therapy' provides a safe and effective one-two punch ... read more Gene Therapy Used to Extend Estrogen's Protective Effects on Memory Dec. 8, 2015 The hormone estrogen helps protect memory and promote a healthy brain, but this effect wanes as women age, and even estrogen replacement therapy stops working in humans after age 65. Now researchers ... read more Shrinking Tumors With an RNA Triple-Helix Hydrogel Glue Dec. 7, 2015 An efficient and effective delivery vehicle for gene therapy has been developed by researchers who have used it to shrink tumors by nearly 90 percent in a pre-clinical model of triple-negative breast ... read more Characteristics That May Increase a Breast Cancer Survivor's Risk of Developing Leukemia Following Treatment Identified Dec. 7, 2015 A new analysis indicates that certain characteristics may increase a breast cancer survivor's risk of developing leukemia after undergoing chemotherapy and/or radiation. The findings are a first ... read more Early Gene Therapy Results in Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Promising Dec. 6, 2015 Researchers reported promising preliminary outcomes for the first four children enrolled in a US gene therapy trial for Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS), a life-threatening genetic blood and immune ... read more Gene Therapy Restores Immunity in Children and Young Adults With Rare Immunodeficiency Dec. 6, 2015 Gene therapy can safely rebuild the immune systems of older children and young adults with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID-X1), a rare inherited disorder that primarily affects males, ... read more MECP2 Duplication Syndrome Is Reversible, Study Suggests Nov. 25, 2015 The MECP2 Duplication Syndrome is reversible, say researchers. Importantly their study paves the way for treating duplication patients with an antisense oligonucleotide ... read more Gene Therapy: Promising Candidate for Cystic Fibrosis Treatment Nov. 16, 2015 An improved gene therapy treatment can cure mice with cystic fibrosis (CF). Cell cultures from CF patients, too, respond well to the treatment, suggest new encouraging ... read more Link Found Between Genetic Mutations, Proliferation, Immune Surveillance in Lung Cancer Nov. 11, 2015 There are four gene mutations (KRAS, TP53, STK11, and EGFR) that most commonly occur in lung cancer; however, there are limited effective therapies to target these mutations. With this in mind, ... read more Nov. 9, 2015 Genome editing techniques for blood stem cells just got better, thanks to a team of researchers. In a new article, they describe a new, more efficient way to edit genes in blood-forming or ... read more Nov. 2, 2015 Eye drops have been used to deliver the gene for a growth factor called granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) in a mouse model of brain ischemia. The treatment led to a significant reduction ... read more Oct. 21, 2015 Delivering the hormone leptin directly to the brain through gene therapy aids weight loss without the significant side effect of bone loss, according to new ... read more New Study Explains Why You Bulk Up With Resistance Training, Not Endurance Training Oct. 20, 2015 Resistance and endurance exercises activate the same gene, PGC-1?, but the processes stimulated for the muscles to adapt depend on the exercise type. A new study offers insight into why the physical ... read more Researchers Identify Gene That Increases Risk of Sudden Death in Patients With Mild Epilepsy Oct. 15, 2015 A gene mutation that increases the risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) in patients with mild forms of the disease has been discovered by a group of ... read more Oct. 8, 2015 Compared with direct gene injection, cell-mediated GDNF gene delivery led to considerably more pronounced preservation of myelinated fibers in the remote segments of the spinal cord (5 vs 3 mm from ... read more 'Alarm Clock' of a Leukemia-Causing Oncogene Identified Oct. 8, 2015 Mutations in DNMT3A gene cause MEIS1 activacion, triggering leukemia, a research team ... read more Oct. 5, 2015 A novel mouse model for the vision disorder Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) has been developed by researchers who have found that they can use gene therapy to improve visual function in the ... read more Genetic Polymorphism Associated With Lung Cancer Progression Oct. 5, 2015 Genetic polymorphisms associated with cancer progression lead to variations in gene expression and may serve as prognostic markers for lung cancer, researchers show. They found that in patients with ... read more New Hope for Lou: Unexplored Therapeutic Targets for ALS Sep. 3, 2015 No cures exist for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and the only approved therapy slows the progression by only a few months. A new study identifies a promising unexplored avenue of treatment for ... read more

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Originally posted here:
Gene Therapy News -- ScienceDaily

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High-fat diets may spur cancer by activating tumor-prone …

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Chowing down on a high-fat diet may not only grow your waistline. It may also plump stem cell populations in your gutcells that are prone to producing tumors.

After about a year of feeding mice a diet of 60 percent fat, researchers found that the rodents had an unusually hefty population of cancer-susceptible intestinal stem cells and cells that act like stem cells. Those cells were supercharged by a protein called PPAR-, which can be switched on by the presence of fatty acids in the gut, the researchers reported.

The findings, published in Nature, may explain why epidemiological data in humans has repeatedly linked obesity to boosted risks of cancer, particularly colon cancer. It may also offer researchers a new target for knocking back the risks of cancer in the obese.

In the gut, there is usually a tiny pocket of stem cells that works to replenish the cells that line the intestine. These cells hang around for a lifetime, giving them extra opportunities to acquire mutations that could spur tumors.

In the fat-fed mice, which grew chubby, this tiny stem cell population unexpectedly flourished. And, progenitor cellsspecialized progeny of stem cellsstarted acting more like their parents, too. They lived longer, upping their opportunities to acquire mutations and tumor-spawning potential.

The researchers found that PPAR- was behind that boom in stem and progenitor cells. In petri-dish experiments, the researchers found that fatty acids from the high-fat diet increased the amounts of PPAR- cells were making.

That makes sense because the protein is known to switch on metabolic machinery that helps burn fat over carbohydrates. But the protein also seems to spark specific genetic changes that ignite the two cell populations, the researchers suggest.

In their fat mice, the researchers noted higher rates of spontaneous tumors than in control mice.

Still, the researchers will need to do more work to know if PPAR- and the stem cells explain the link between cancer and obesity in humans.

Nature, 2015. DOI: 10.1038/nature.2016.19484 (About DOIs).

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Sports Medicine | Stanford Health Care – ValleyCare …

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

ValleyCare offers comprehensive sports medicine care at the award-winning, state-of-the-art LifeStyleRx in Livermore and at ValleyCare Medical Center in Dublin.

Patients have access to a multidisciplinary team of sports medicine physicians, orthopedic surgeons, physical therapists, certified athletic trainers and strength and conditioning specialists.

We work to return athletes to their sport as quickly and safely as possible, through aggressive and innovative treatment and rehabilitation.

A concussion may be caused by a bump, blow or severe rapid movement of the head that can change the normal function of the brain. Every head injury is serious. Common terms that people use to describe a head injury are ding and bell ringer.

In January 2012, California passed a law that requires high school athletes to be taken out of sports following any head injury and receive written clearance by a physician prior to returning to play.

ImPACT testing is a computerized neurocognitive test that gives clinicians the ability to return an athlete to safe sports participation following a head injury. The test may also be used as a tool to gather baseline information, which provides normal results for comparison when a head injury does occur. The test includes memory skills, concentration and questions that require the individual to problem solve.

Here at ValleyCare Physical and Sports Medicine, we can provide sports teams with the baseline testing. The testing is administered by a Certified Athletic Trainer in one of our computer labs. The results are reviewed by a physician, as well as stored in the National Data Base. Testing should be administered prior to the beginning of the sports season. Scheduling is open Monday through Friday, between 9am and 7pm.

Being proactive and keeping our youth safe is our goal. Let it be yours too. To find out more information about ImPACT testing at ValleyCare, please call Kimberly Connors, ATC at 925.373.4019.

Located within the state-of-the-art LifeStyleRx facility, sports-specific physical therapy by licensed therapists with extensive experience in the prevention and treatment of sports-related injuries is available.

Our program especially caters to pediatric and adolescent athletes who require a special level of care and attention due to various age-related concerns. Through experience and education in Pilates, plyometrics and sports-specific training, we can provide an accelerated rehabilitation program when appropriate. Access to the latest equipment at LifeStyleRx allows us to provide strength and endurance training as well. Regular contact with the athletic trainers at the local schools gives us the ability to quickly modify individual programs for a faster and safer return to the sport.

Our goal is to return the athlete to sport as quickly as possible and help avoid future injuries. An individual program will be designed for each athlete that most likely will include instruction in a home or gym program for strength and flexibility, as well as education about the injury and the biomechanics of movement in order to help avoid future injury.

Physician referral is required. Most insurance plans will cover physical and sports medicine services. ValleyCare accepts all PPOs, some HMOs and Medicare.

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Spray on some stem cells and grow your own skin! | Katie PhD

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Ok. Bits of this film are a little grim, but its worth it. Well, go on then!

Amazing right? And yes, its real! I have to admit I double-checked the date when my friend forwarded me the National Geographic link, but April first it was not. Researchers at the University of Pittsburgs McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine have made the skin cell spray gun a very real, very effective treatment for burn victims.

So how does it work? At its core, this treatment relies on the unique properties of stem cells, so thats where Ill begin. Stem cells

Stem cells have fascinated biologists for years. They are unique amongst all other cells of the body in two ways; their capacity for self-renewal, and their ability to give rise to many different cell types.

Embryonic stem cells, which frequently (and controversially) make the news, are derived from a developing fetus. They are the ultimate in stem cell-iness because they have the potential to direct the development of an entire organism. This means that they contain all the information need to make muscles, nerves, eyes etc. And naturally this pluripotency (from the Latin pluri meaning many, and potency or potential) seemed like a fantastic quality for biologist to understand. Not only were there fundamental developmental principles to be learned, the medical applications were endless. However, glaring ethical issues arose regarding the taking of a life to save a life (that I wont get into here) that have resulted in the stringent regulation of embryonic stem cell research.

And so researchers turned to adult stem cells. While adult stem cells are not as versatile as embryonic stem cells, they do have the potential to direct the development of certain cell lineages. For example hematopoietic stem cells, which reside in your bone marrow, can divide asymmetrically into all the different cells of your blood. Similarly, all the different layers of your skin have ancestral skin stem cells.

Research into embryonic stem cells resulted in the identification of certain genes that were expressed in, and required by, stem cells. In 2006, a Japanese group generated the first induced pluripotent stem cells. Since then much work has gone into understanding the potential of these induced stem cells. However due to genetic manipulation and lack of correct genomic imprinting (small chemical modifications in our DNA that are laid down in the egg), induced pluripotent stem cells have the unfortunate ability to become cancerous. As detailed in a recent paper in Cell however, while these cells are not yet ready for the clinic, this should not prevent them from being used in a laboratory setting. Stem cells as a treatment

Bone marrow transplantation was the first example of a stem cell therapy. In 1959 the French surgeon Georges Math treated six nuclear power plant workers who had been so severely irradiated that their hematopoietic stem cell populations had been destroyed. The procedure has since been used with great success in the treatment of leukemia.

As with all transplants, the potential of the host rejecting the donor tissue exists. This rejection occurs because of subtle cellular differences between each and every one of us. Our immune system recognizes these differences as foreign, much as it would any other pathogenic invader, and mounts a formidable defense. With the development of tissue typing procedures and administration of immunosuppressive drugs, transplant rejection has significantly decreased.

By far the best way of avoiding rejection, however, is to transplant the recipients own tissue. In certain procedures, such as small areas of skin grafting, such auto-grafting is a viable option. But in others, such as in the case of organ transplantation, it is not. And this is where stem cells can sweep in and save the day.

Tissues in dishes

We have long had the capacity to grow cells in vitro (which literally means within a glass). Bacterial cells grow happily in test tubes when provided with simple nutrients and an incubator, as do yeast cells. Mammalian cells are a little more difficult to deal with, but again we have been culturing them in the lab for over a hundred years. All they require is a container to grow in that protects them from infection, liquid media containing essential amino acids and other nutrients, and a warm humid chamber in which to grow.

I am however talking about growing one type of cell at a time. Growing an organized tissue presents a far greater challenge. Not only do the cells have to grow and divide, they have to interact with one another and take on specialized roles within the tissue. Normally in our bodies external forces and small molecules send signals between cells that direct this process. Culturing a tissue in vitro requires a significant understanding of how the tissue forms, and an ability to isolate the stem cells from which the tissue is derived.

In the case of transplantation, the stem cells can be derived from the patient who will receive the cultured tissue, thus removing the chance of complications arising due to donor incompatibility. As you saw in the video, skin grafts have been performed in this way for quite some time, but with variable success.

The skin gun

And this is of course where the genius of the skin gun, and its inventor Joerg C. Gerlach, comes in; it bypasses the need for the in vitro tissue culturing. Skin stem cells that had been destroyed in the burn are replaced, and then the tissue is allowed to heal. As in the case of tissue culture in a lab, these cells require a sterile and nutrient rich environment to thrive. After the initial spraying, the wound is covered with a dressing that contains a synthetic circulatory system that brings nutrients to the infant skin and removes any toxins and waste products.

The speed and effectiveness of this treatment is out of this world. The guy in the video didnt even have a scar after his treatment. Perhaps the spray gun as a means of stem cell delivery is unique to skin regeneration, but there are a couple of features that should be transferable to other transplants, particularly the ability to enrich a patients own stem cells and re-apply them to damaged tissue. This will likely be advanced from burgeoning knowledge on where adult stem cells reside in our body, in so-called stem cell niches. With skin stem cell therapy now a reality, what will be next? Will we be able to re-grow more complex organs such as kidneys? Or will we be able to harvest healthy stem cells from a niche before a disease such as leukemia becomes debilitating? What do you think?

Bock, C., Kiskinis, E., Verstappen, G., Gu, H., Boulting, G., Smith, Z., Ziller, M., Croft, G., Amoroso, M., & Oakley, D. (2011). Reference Maps of Human ES and iPS Cell Variation Enable High-Throughput Characterization of Pluripotent Cell Lines Cell, 144 (3), 439-452 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2010.12.032

Hi Peter,

Thanks for the links. I should probably have pointed out in my article that this idea is not totally novel. The Australian plastic surgeon Dr. Fiona Wood has been using a similar technique for close to a decade. She has since started a company, http://www.avitamedical.com/index.php?ob=1&id=37. The technique was used extensively to treat burn victims of the Bali bombings in 2002. The recent development of the stem cell gun has basically increased the efficiency of the system, reduced damage caused to the stem cells during spraying, and made the technique more user friendly in a hospital setting.

However, I searched and searched and there is no Nature paper, which honestly baffled me too.

I was happy to see in that link that a clinical trial is in the works. Hopefully from that some concrete data can be collected as to the precise efficacy of the cell spray system, as well as a peer-reviewed article on the subject. It seems to me that burn experts are divided on the merit or value of the treatment. In my opinion the only way a consensus can be reached is through a thorough, scientific and transparent trial. But should the therapy prove itself in that setting, I think it is a fantastic advancement in the therapeutic use of adult stem cells.

Would this work on a aged skin, skin damaged other than fire, frostbite, gangrene, cancer, etc?

What about those sunbathers with leathery type of skin?

Thanks

Ha I like your idea about the leathery sun-worshipers! I think stem cell therapy like this has potential for aiding wound healing, ie where large amounts of skin have had to be removed. But I do not think it could help adult skin thats already present. Youd have to remove the whole leathery mess and start againa new era of cosmetic surgery?

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Sports Medicine – Southeast Georgia Health System

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

At Southeast Georgia Health System, we are dedicated to providing our area athletes with the best care possible through our Sports Medicine Program aimed at preventing, recognizing and managing athletic injuries.

Our certified athletic trainers provide services for three area high schools in Glynn Country. These services include practices, athletic events and daily athletic training room hours during the school year. Each trainer is experienced in concussion recognition and management as well as ImPACT concussion testing for high-risk sports.

Our certified athletic trainers are skilled and experienced in the prevention of athletic injuries and the management of athletes' health and well-being. They also assist in the rehabilitation of injured athletes and work with players both on and off the field. Our Certified athletic trainers work under the supervision of Beau Sasser, M.D., director of the Sports Medicine Program.

In addition to our area schools, we offer our expertise to local youth and community sports organizations. Services include:

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Home | Oppenheimer Endocrinology

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Whether you suffer from diabetes, thyroid issues or other hormone-related problems, Oppenheimer Endocrinology of Sioux Falls is dedicated to treating you with advanced technology, 24/7 on-call service and the highest level of patient care possible. Dr. Mark Oppenheimer offers thirty years of medical expertise and a comfortable, friendly patient experience.

Oppenheimer Endocrinology is proud to offer a spacious clinic featuring immediate appointment availability, a convienent location and parking right outside the front door. You will find two registered nurses on staff, both certified in glucose monitoring equipment and the latest pump technology. Our entire staff is dedicated to the field of endocrinology. We take a personal approach to patient care and give our patients plenty of TLC. Because Dr. Oppenheimer is also an Internist, he is capable of identifying health problems outside the field of endocrinology.

Endocrinology allows Dr. Oppenheimer to work long-term with patients while helping them manage hormone-related disorders. He enjoys building relationships and helping patients achieve their goals. He also enjoys the flexibility his practice provides, such as helping people with diabetes adjust insulin doses over the phone and personally performing ultrasound diagnostics. He strives to offer cost-effective solutions and to always give patients more than they expect.

Phone: (605) 275-6525 Fax: (605) 275-6970

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Section of Endocrinology – OUHSC

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Welcome to the website of the Section of Diabetes and Endocrinology at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. This site will introduce you to our doctors, researchers, and staff, and summarizes our clinical, educational, research, and diabetes prevention programs. Our Section is a core component of the Harold Hamm Diabetes Center at The University of Oklahoma.

Our clinical work encompasses the full spectrum of Diabetes and Endocrinology, including thyroid, adrenal, pituitary, bone, gonadal, and metabolic disorders. Outpatients are seen by physician referral, and have the opportunity to participate in clinical trials. Diabetes services are undergoing rapid expansion in collaboration with many other disciplines and partners on and off campus. Our goal is a state-wide effort to improve the lives of all people affected by diabetes and other endocrine disorders.

Our professional educational programs are aimed not only at medical students, residents, and fellows, but also at the broad spectrum of health care providers in hospitals and in the community who must work as a team to provide first class clinical care. We also place a major emphasis on education of communities, patients, their families, the general public, and makers of policies that affects community health.

Our clinical fellowship program, with six RRC-approved positions, seeks academically-oriented physicians for 2-, 3- and 4-year training programs. There are opportunities for experience of clinical and basic science research during the fellowship.

Our research program is a cornerstone of the Section. Its major emphasis is on diabetes and its vascular complications (eye disease, kidney disease, neuropathy, and accelerated atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries)). We conduct clinical and basic science research with strong emphases on collaborations between clinicians and basic scientists, on linking different disciplines that are relevant to diabetes, on building partnerships with communities, particularly minority communities that are severely afflicted by diabetes, and on involving trainees in research. Our program has brought more than 40 new extra-mural grants and many new investigators to our Section in the past four years. Two major, five year NIH program grants were awarded in late 2007: a Diabetes Center of Biologic Research Excellence, and in collaboration with the OU College of Public Health, an Oklahoma Center on American Indian Diabetes Health Disparities. In 2012 the CoBRE "Diabetes Center of Biologic Research Excellence" was awarded a five year renewal under the leadership of Dr. Jian-Xing Ma.

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Section of Endocrinology - OUHSC

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Metabolism, Diabetes & Endocrinology – Temple University …

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

The Section is widely known for its diabetes research and treatment. It also serves as a resource for the study and management of hypoglycemia. Special endocrinology services include needle aspiration of thyriod nodules; diagnosis and management of pituitary tumors; and diagnosis and treatment of hypothyroidism, hypertension and general endocrine disorders.

1316 W. Ontario Street Jones Hall, First Floor (215) 707-4600

E. Victor Adlin, MD Specialty interests: hypertension, osteoporosis, thyroid and adrenal disease

Jonathan Anolik, MD Specialty interests: Clinical endocrinology, diabetes, metabolic diseases

Kristin Criner, MD Specialty interests: diabetes, obesity, thyroid cancer

Ajaykumar Rao, MD Specialty interests: hypertension, diabetes, endocrinopathies in the ICU

Daniel Rubin, MD Specialty interests: diabetes

Elias Siraj, MD Specialty interests: diabetes mellitus, diabetes after transplantation, thyroid disorders, general endocrinology

Imali Sirisena, MD Specialty Interests: Diabetes and obesity management and prevention with both lifestyle and medical therapies; thyroid disorders involving hypothyroidism, thyroid nodules, and thyroid cancer; metabolic bone disorders

Cherie L. Vaz, MD Specialty interests: aging related diseases in endocrinology, oxidative stress from high fat meals, antioxidant agents and therapeutic role in diabetes and metabolic syndrome

Kevin Jon Williams, MD Section Chief Specialty interests: lipid and lipoprotein abnormalities, diabetes

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Metabolism, Diabetes & Endocrinology - Temple University ...

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Sports Medicine – Youngstown State

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

YSU student-athletes have two impressive sports medicine centers at their disposal to treat and prevent injuries.

The Willard Webster Sports Medicine Center inside of Stambaugh Stadium is the main hub and serves the majority of YSU's athletic teams. There is also a training and rehabilitation room in Beeghly Center that caters to the needs of the volleyball, swimming and diving and men's and women's basketball squads. The centers are well-equipped to handle any needs with the latest available and innovative equipment for the care and prevention of injuries.

John Doneyko has served as the Head Athletic Trainer since 2008 after serving in the department for 25 years. A licensed athletic trainer in Ohio and a nationally-certified Athletic Trainer, Doneyko is assisted by Jenna Lesko, Jeff Wills, Todd Burkey, Sarah Sydor and Martha Dettl. Also, numerous student assistants are on hand throughout the year and work closely with all teams attending games (home and away) and practices.

The Penguins staff is assisted by a host of health care professionals in the Youngstown area, providing state-of-the-art care in prevention and treatment of athletic injuries. Dr. Ray Duffett, Dr. James Shina and Dr. J.J. Stefancin are on hand for all home football and basketball contests and work with all sports throughout the year.

Willard Webster Sports Medicine Center

The football program and all other athletic teams are served by the Willard Webster Sports Medicine Center on the first level of Stambaugh Stadium. The Center is well equipped to handle any needs with the latest available and innovative equipment for the care and prevention of injuries. Assisting Doneyko in the training room are Assistant Athletic Trainers Jenna Lesko, Jeff Wills, Todd Burkey, Sarah Sydor and Martha Dettl. Also, numerous student assistants are on hand throughout the year and work closely with all YSU athletic teams attending games (home and away) and practices.

The Penguins' staff is assisted by a host of healthcare professionals in the Youngstown area, providing state-of-the-art care in prevention and treatment of athletic injuries. Dr. Ray Duffett, Dr. James Shina and Dr. J.J. Stefancin are the team's physicians and are on hand on gamedays for home football and basketball games.

With the support of YSU's sports medicine staff, the communities physicians and their facilities, student-athletes can compete with the confidence that they are afforded the best care possible.

Phone Number: (330) 941-3190 Located in Room 1103 of Stambaugh Stadium (near the Jermaine Hopkins Academic Center)

From August through March, the Beeghly Center Athletic Training & Rehabilitation Room caters to the needs of volleyball, track and field, swimming & diving, and men's and women's basketball student-athletes.

Located on the lower level of the building, the Training Room is used throughout the volleyball, basketball and swimming and diving campaigns. The Center is well equipped to handle any needs with the latest available and innovative equipment for the care and prevention of injuries. Rehabilitation equipment along with training tables and the latest in sports medicine innovations are available to the student athlete.

Phone Number: (330) 941-3726 Located in Room 108 of Beeghly Center (lower level next to men's basketball locker room)

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Sports Medicine - Youngstown State

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What is a Sports Medicine Physician? – AMSSM

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

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What is a Sports Medicine Physician? - AMSSM

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Sports Medicine Doctor | School, Career and Salary Guide

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Education

Students interested in become a physician must first complete a bachelors degree with a pre-med concentration that provides them with a solid foundation in biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry and physics. Gaining admission into medical school can be competitive, so students must complete the aforementioned courses and obtain excellent grades to be considered a viable applicant to medical schools.

Beyond this coursework, students will also be required to perform well on the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) in order to secure a spot in medical school. While those interested in sports medicine are usually sports aficionados themselves (and therefore may take part in organized sports), this is in no way a requirement for admission into medical school or sports medicine.

Most sports medicine doctors complete a Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree or a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) degree. These programs both involve four years of academic coursework in biology, biochemistry, anatomy, pathology, psychology, physiology, medical ethics and pharmacology. Following the completion of medical school, students are awarded their respective degree (M.D. or D.O). Next, these newly minted physicians must go on to complete a clinical residency, which provides them with several years of hands-on practice in a variety of clinical settings under the supervision of fully trained, attending physicians (see below).

Three-year clinical residencies in internal medicine, family medicine, or emergency medicine (or a four-year residency in physical medicine and rehabilitation) all offer suitable training for an aspiring sports medicine physician. Other, more surgically inclined students may instead opt for a five-year residency in orthopedic surgery. During residency, it may be possible to secure an elective rotation in sports medicine to gain early exposure.

All states require medical doctors to be licensed, so sports medicine doctors must check with their states licensing board for specific requirements.

In addition to a license, doctors may seek certification by a recognized professional organization. This certification will help make the doctor a better job candidate since it will show that he or she has met the organizations professional requirements and is staying up-to-date in developments in this subspecialty through continuing education courses. Certification in sports medicine is offered by the following organizations:

Since sports medicine is a subspecialty, doctors must get a certification of added qualification (CAQ) in sports medicine. To prepare for this, doctors complete a two-year fellowship in sports medicine at a hospital, rehabilitation facility or university athletic department. These two years expose doctors to different types of athletic-related injuries and methods of diagnosing and treating them. Additionally, the fellowship provides experience with orthopedic surgeries, rehabilitative techniques, brain trauma, nutrition, and performance psychology. Orthopedic surgeons can also apply for fellowships in this field, but added qualification certification is not required.

As with all physicians, specialists and non-specialists alike, sports medicine physicians must possess and demonstrate empathy, compassion, strong interpersonal communication abilities, and proficient problem-solving skills in order to provide timely diagnosis and optimal clinical outcomes for their patients. In addition, sports medicine physicians must also possess good physical health, dexterity, and stamina if they intend to perform physical therapy-related treatments.

Sports medicine doctors may opt to base their practice in outpatient clinics, large hospitals, or academic medical institutions. Those in private practice can establish their own practices, or join current groups with the ultimate aim of becoming a partner. Alternatively, a position in larger hospitals will provide the sports doctor with opportunities for advancement, depending on experience and continuing education. For example, after several years of productive performance, staff physicians may take on supervisory or management roles, potentially becoming chairperson of a department.

If you would like to gain the necessary education to become a sports doctor, we highly recommend that you check out our free School Finder Tool located HERE.

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Sports Medicine Doctor | School, Career and Salary Guide

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