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    News and Articles on Gene variant



    Nutrigenomics Researchers Replicate Gene Interaction With Saturated Fat  Nov 20, 2009
    However, for 13 percent of the Framingham Heart Study population with a specific gene variant, higher dietary fat was not. (May 10, 2008) Men who consumed high saturated fat diets (HSF) were younger and had higher BMIs at diagnosis than men with who consumed low saturated fat diets (LSF). (Science Daily)

    Largest gene study of childhood IBD identifies 5 new genes  Nov 16, 2009
    In a genome-wide association study, automated genotyping tools scan the entire human genome seeking gene variants that contribute to disease risk ... Although much research remains to be done, the current study may provide a basis for developing drugs that target the cytokine IL27's action, for patients with the disease-causing IL27 gene variant. (EurekAlert!)

    New Way to Biopsy Brain Tumors in Real Time  Nov 15, 2009
    27, 2009) People with a particular gene variant may be more likely to develop brain tumors, and at an earlier age, than people without the gene, according to a new. (Feb. (Science Daily)

    Danny Henley: Blame it on the genes  Nov 10, 2009
    U.S. researchers report finding that people with a particular gene variant performed more than 20 percent worse on a driving test than people with a different DNA sequence. Approximately 30 percent of Americans have the variant, according to the research team at the University of California Irvine. (Belmont Citizen Herald, MA)

    Blood test identifies women at risk from Alzheimer's  Nov 7, 2009
    This gene variant reduces the risk of dementia by no less than 65 percent when present doubled (homozygous) which occures in just one in ten Swedes and by 40 percent when present in mixed form (heterozygous) i additional four of ten Swedes. "We have only been able to carry out a genetic analysis on just over 550 of the blood samples from the Prospective Population Study of Women, and want to undertake bigger studies before we can say for sure that the gene really does protect against dementia,"... (EurekAlert!)

    Infotainment  Oct 31, 2009
    They found that people with a particular gene variant performed more than 20 percent worse on a driving test than people with a different DNA sequence. The study may explain. (Daily Times, Pakistan)

    Bad driver? Then blame your genes  Oct 30, 2009
    According to University of Irvine scientists, people with a particular gene variant performed more than 20 percent worse on a driving test than people without it ... This gene variant limits the availability of a protein called brain-derived neurotrophic factor during activity ... The driving test was taken by 29 people -- 22 without the gene variant and seven with it. (India Times, India -- Health/Science)

    Bad Driving May Have Genetic Basis, Study Finds  Oct 29, 2009
    People with a particular gene variant performed more than 20 percent worse on a driving test than people without it -- and a follow-up test a few days later yielded similar results ... This gene variant limits the availability of a protein called brain-derived neurotrophic factor during activity ... The driving test was taken by 29 people -- 22 without the gene variant and seven with it. (Science Daily)

    Possible Link Between Autism And Oxytocin Gene Via Non-DNA Sequence Mutation  Oct 23, 2009
    22, 2009) Researchers at Duke University Medical Center have uncovered a new genetic signature that correlates strongly with autism and which doesn't involve changes to the DNA sequence itself. Rather, the changes are in the way the genes are turned on and off. (Science Daily)

    Is autism genetic? Researchers close to answer  Oct 16, 2009
    "It's important that people realize that this doesn't lead to immediate fixes -- we can't identify a gene variant and then immediately go and fix it," says Mark Daly, an associate professor of medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston, and the co-leader of the new study. Nevertheless, "the pieces are in place" to head in that direction, he says, citing the technology to conduct genome studies and collaboration among researchers around the world. (CNN -- US)

    Gene Data Tool Advances Prospects For Personalized Medicine  Oct 12, 2009
    Genome-wide association studies (GWAS), in which automated genotyping tools scan the entire human genome seeking gene variants that contribute to disease risk, have yet to fulfill their potential in allowing physicians to accurately predict a person's individual risk for a disease, and thus guide prevention and treatment strategies. The authors say that for many diseases, the majority of contributory genes remain undiscovered, and studies that make selective use of a limited number of selected,... (Science Daily)

    Inhalers May Raise Risk of Asthma in Some Children  Oct 8, 2009
    The researchers found that salbutamol, a popular blue inhaler medicine also known as Ventolin, as well as salmeterol, an ingredient in GlaxoSmithKline's Advair, are less effective in children with a specific gene variant and may in some cases make their asthma worse ... The British study, which looked at patients aged between 3 and 22 years, showed that asthma patients using their inhaler on a daily basis who carry a gene variant called Arg16 had a 30 percent greater risk of asthma attacks... (MEDLINEplus)

    Diabetes gene link treatment hope  Oct 8, 2009
    Scientists have found that diabetics with a certain gene variant respond better to a particular treatment than those without it. They discovered that a group of drugs, known as sulphonylureas, were more than three times as effective in Type 2 diabetes sufferers with the variant. (BBC News -- Health)

    Autism Associated With Single-letter Change In Genetic Code  Oct 8, 2009
    4, 2009) A specific gene variant that links increased genetic risk for autism with gastrointestinal conditions has been. (Dec. (Science Daily)

    Gene Test Might Predict Tamoxifen's Effectiveness  Oct 8, 2009
    Women who do carry the gene variant may be candidates for alternative treatments. The gene affects the activity of the CYP2D6 enzyme, which converts tamoxifen into its metabolite, endoxifen. (MEDLINEplus)

    Gene Variant Linked To Glaucoma Identified  Sep 24, 2009
    23, 2009) An international team, led by researchers from the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and the National Eye Institute, has discovered gene variants for glaucoma in a black population ... "We have now identified very common gene variants that have a dramatic impact on an individual's risk for developing glaucoma," Zhang added ... "These gene variants are present in 40 percent of individuals with glaucoma in the Barbados population and explains nearly one-third of... (Science Daily)

    Cancer Predisposition From Particular Genetic Variation Shows Strong Gender Bias  Sep 23, 2009
    22, 2009) Cancer predisposition resulting from the presence of a specific gene variant shows a strong gender bias, researchers at the University of Cincinnati (UC) have demonstrated ... In addition, the research indicates that the risk for development of cancer in individuals harboring the gene variant can be further increased as a result of environmental exposure ... Women who carry this particular gene variant are predisposed to developing breast or ovarian cancer, says Stambrook, while men... (Science Daily)

    The Many Causes Of Immune Deficiency  Sep 18, 2009
    (May 7, 2005) A common gene variant has been identified as the risk factor behind a number of common diseases by research scientists at Karolinska Institutet and the Centre for Molecular Medicine (CMM). According. (Science Daily)

    Alzheimer's Gene Affects Brains of Young Adults  Sep 15, 2009
    FRIDAY, Sept. 11 (HealthDay News) -- A gene variant linked to a higher risk of Alzheimer's disease seems to affect the brain when people are young, much earlier than previously thought, new research suggests. The brains of people in their mid-20s who had the gene variant known as APOE4 -- which boosts the risk of Alzheimer's but doesn't guarantee it -- seem to work differently than those of other people who don't have the gene, the researchers said. (MEDLINEplus)

    Are the monoamines involved in shaping conduct disorders?  Sep 13, 2009
    An interesting question that remains to be answered is why the association between the MAO-B gene variant and antisocial behaviour was found to be considerably stronger than with the activity of platelet MAO-B. ... Usually this association has been found only in individuals in a poor psychosocial environment, where the gene variant associated with low activity (i ... This is in line with a marked sex difference between the gene variants with regard to changes in blood flow in specific brain... (EurekAlert!)

    Gene Variant Heightens Risk Of Severe Liver Disease In Cystic Fibrosis  Sep 11, 2009
    They found that more cystic fibrosis patients with liver disease had a particular version of the SERPINA1 gene -- called the Z allele than patients without liver disease, indicating that the gene variant plays a role in the development of this ailment. The researchers confirmed their results in a separate set of cystic fibrosis patients, 136 with liver disease and 1088 without. (Science Daily)

    Sixty percent of adults can't drink milk  Sep 2, 2009
    But the computer model suggests that dairy farmers carrying this gene variant probably originated in central Europe and then spread more widely and rapidly than non-dairying groups. Author of University College London's dept of Genetics, Evolution and Environment says: "In Europe, a single genetic change...is strongly associated with lactase persistence and appears to have given people with it a big survival advantage.". (USA Today -- Tech)

    Children With Autism Use Alternative Keyboard To Communicate With Their Families And Their World  Sep 2, 2009
    4, 2009) A specific gene variant that links increased genetic risk for autism with gastrointestinal conditions has been. (June 9, 2005) Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center study links regions of two chromosomes to susceptibility for a type of autism characterized by regression in. (Science Daily)

    Milk Drinking Started Around 7,500 Years Ago In Central Europe  Sep 2, 2009
    1, 2009) The ability to digest the milk sugar lactose first evolved in dairy farming communities in central Europe, not in more northern groups as was previously thought, finds a new study led by UCL (University College London) scientists published in the journal PLoS Computational Biology. The genetic change that enabled early Europeans to drink milk without getting sick has been mapped to dairying farmers who lived around 7,500 years ago in a region between the central Balkans and central... (Science Daily)

    Gene Variant Linked To Effectiveness Of Popular Anti-clotting Medication Plavix  Aug 27, 2009
    26, 2009) Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine have identified a common gene variant carried by as many as a third of the general population that is believed to play a major role in determining why people do not respond to a popular anti-clotting medication, Plavix ... "We didn't detect any other common gene variants that appear to be as significant as CYP2C19, but our research suggests that people's response to clopidrogel is largely inherited and additional common and... (Science Daily)

    Monkeys booze because of genes  Aug 18, 2009
    A study has shown that having a particular gene variant causes some macaque monkeys to drink more alcohol in experiments ... Writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), the scientists found that some monkeys with the gene variant drank more alcohol, possibly to relieve their anxiety. (BBC News -- Science)

    Gene variant aids hepatitis C care  Aug 17, 2009
    People with a certain gene variant are far more likely to respond to treatment, and that variant is more common in people with European ancestry than African-Americans, researchers report ... Blacks who had the gene variant showed a better response rate than Whites who didn't have it, indicating that the gene is a better predictor than ethnicity, the researchers said. (AZCentral -- News)

    Full Story »  Aug 17, 2009
    Gene variant predicts hepatitis treatment success - Yahoo ... Gene variant predicts hepatitis treatment success. (Yahoo News -- Technology)

    Amazonian Tribe Sheds Light On Causes Of Heart Disease In Developed Countries  Aug 12, 2009
    16, 2009) New research looks at whether a gene variant may affect the link between migraine and stroke or heart attacks. The study involved 25,000 women who answered a questionnaire about their history of. (Science Daily)

    Study: Redheads' extra pain may cause...  Aug 3, 2009
    Gene variant may play a role and influence pain sensitivity. By Madison Park CNN. (CNN -- Law)

    Genetic marker linked to problem behaviors in adults with developmental disabilities  Jul 22, 2009
    Forty-three percent of those with developmental/intellectual disabilities and behavior problems had the gene variant, compared to 20 percent of the same group with no behavior issues and 20 percent of a typically developing control group. The same MAOA variation has also been linked to autism in children, autism severity and communication problems. (EurekAlert!)

    Colorectal Cancer Risk Increased By Single-base Change In The Human Genome  Jul 8, 2009
    The high frequency of the gene variant makes it a very common cause of cancer at the population level. At the individual level, however, the variant does not cause significant disease predisposition because that can often be considerably reduced by lifestyle changes. (Science Daily)

    DNA Variations Linked To Brain Tumors  Jul 6, 2009
    27, 2009) People with a particular gene variant may be more likely to develop brain tumors, and at an earlier age, than people without the gene, according to a new. (May 10, 2005) Researchers at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center have found promising new molecular targets and treatment approaches for some of the most malignant brain. (Science Daily)

    Life & Style  Jul 5, 2009
    You could be right, a gene variant associated with addiction has been found to increase the risk of obesity. --> Topics. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Business)

    Living Alone Increases Odds of Developing Dementia  Jul 4, 2009
    In addition to looking at the association between marital status and dementia, the researchers also examined the link between living alone and being a carrier of the apolipoprotein E e4 gene variant, a known risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. The study found the highest risk of developing Alzheimer's disease among people with the gene variant who live alone after losing their partner. (MEDLINEplus)

    Men's Supplements: Healthy or Harmful?  Jul 2, 2009
    Those claims came under fire from the watchdog group the after two studies on selenium came out in June in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, one of which showed selenium provided no benefit and one which showed that for men with a certain gene variant -- one found in three quarters of men -- selenium supplements made the prostate cancer worse. The authors of the second study, from the University of California, San Francisco, concluded that their findings "indicate caution against broad use of... (ABC News)

    Risky Business: Stressed Men, But Not Stressed Women, More Likely To Gamble And Takes Risks  Jul 2, 2009
    But among men, the same gene variant appeared to be protective against depression. In fact. (Science Daily)

    Discovery Points to Regulation of Calcium Metabolism  Jul 1, 2009
    MONDAY, June 29 (HealthDay News) -- A gene variant that contributes to both kidney stones and osteoporosis has been identified by scientists who said the variant offers a promising target for new drugs to better regulate calcium metabolism. The single-letter variation (SNP) occurs in the gene encoding claudin 14 (CLDN14), a protein expressed in the kidney, according to a news release. (MEDLINEplus)

    Boys May Feel a Genetic Pull Toward Gangs  Jun 19, 2009
    Though the study included both boys and girls, only boys with the MAOA gene variant showed an increased propensity for violence. The gene variant had little impact on the girls, possibly because the MAOA gene is located on the X-chromosome, the researchers said. (MEDLINEplus)

    Schoolboy calls for MS campaign  Jun 16, 2009
    Medical experts have claimed a vitamin D deficiency, combined with a specific gene variant, may increase the risk of MS, which more than 10,000 people in Scotland have. A joint study carried out in February by Oxford University and Canadian experts suggested vitamin D supplementation in pregnancy and childhood may cut the risk of someone developing the disabling and painful neurological disease in later years. (BBC News -- UK)

    Gene variant linked with autism, especially in boys  May 21, 2009
    Gene variant linked with autism, particularly in boys: study_English_Xinhua. Gene variant linked with autism, particularly in boys: study ... LOS ANGELES, May 20 (Xinhua) -- U.S. researchers have identified a gene variant which might increase the risk of autism, particularly in boys. (Xinhuanet, China)

    World's largest DNA scan for autism uncovers new gene variant for disorder  Apr 29, 2009
    UCLA scientists, in partnership with 30 research institutions across the country, have identified a new gene variant that is highly common in autistic children ... "While this gene variant is common in the general population, we discovered that it occurs about 20 percent more often in children with autism," said study author Dr. Daniel Geschwind, director of the UCLA Center for Autism Treatment and Research ... The scientists evaluated the relationship of more than half a million gene variants... (EurekAlert!)

    New Risk Variant For Atopic Dermatitis Identified  Apr 15, 2009
    ck Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch and Charit; University Medical School, Berlin, Germany, in collaboration with researchers from the Klinikum rechts der Isar of Technical University Munich and Christian Albrecht University, Kiel, have identified a gene variant on chromosome 11 that is associated with an increased risk of atopic dermatitis. See also. (Science Daily)

    Gene Variant Tied to Schizophrenia  Apr 14, 2009
    FRIDAY, April 10 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. researchers say they've spotted a gene variant that may raise the risk of schizophrenia in some people, a finding that may lead to new drug treatments ... More than 40 percent of people in the general population have the gene variant, but only 1 percent have schizophrenia, and not all of those with the illness have the altered gene, Brzustowicz noted ... For example, 55 percent of the schizophrenia patients in this study had the gene variant. (MEDLINEplus)

    Study: Gene variant might lead to Schizophrenia  Apr 14, 2009
    LOS ANGELES, April 13 (Xinhua) -- A gene variant may be linked with schizophrenia in some people, a discovery that will advance search for better treatments, a new study showed. U.S. researchers spotted the gene variant while analyzing 24 Canadian families that had multiple members with schizophrenia, according to the study published in the April issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry ... More than 40 percent of people in the general population have the gene variant, but only 1 percent have... (Xinhuanet, China)

    Obesity, FTO Gene Variant, and Energy Intake in Children  Apr 9, 2009
    11 issue)1 report that the A allele of the fat mass and obesity associated (FTO) gene variant rs9939609, which has been associated with obesity, is also associated with increased levels of physical activity in children. No differences in resting energy expenditure were observed. (New England Journal of Medicine)

    Gene Variant Associated With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Identified  Mar 30, 2009
    29, 2009) Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have, for the first time, identified a gene variant on chromosome 4 that may be a potential risk factor for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) ... (May 7, 2005) A common gene variant has been identified as the risk factor behind a number of common diseases by research scientists at Karolinska Institutet and the Centre for Molecular Medicine (CMM). (Science Daily)

    South Asians With Diabetes More Likely To Lose Their Eyesight Earlier Than White Europeans  Mar 27, 2009
    29, 2005) A particular gene variant that could serve as a predictor for type 2 diabetes has been identified by researchers at UT Southwestern Medical. (May 15, 2001) In India, members of higher ranking castes are genetically more similar to Europeans, while lower castes are more similar to Asians, according to a study published in this month s issue of. (Science Daily)

    Facial flushing drinkers at higher cancer risk  Mar 25, 2009
    People with two copies of this gene variant have such extreme symptoms that they avoid drinking alcohol. "The concern is for people who have one copy," said Philip Brooks of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, whose study appears in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS Medicine, "because they can tolerate drinking.". (Xinhuanet, China)

    Biological Clue In Brain Tumor Development  Mar 25, 2009
    27, 2009) People with a particular gene variant may be more likely to develop brain tumors, and at an earlier age, than people without the gene, according to a new. (June 1, 2008) Investigators have shown that children under 3 years old who have a brain tumor called diffuse pontine glioma appear to have a better outcome than older children with the same. (Science Daily)

    Is Alzheimer's Disease Actually a Form of Diabetes?  Mar 17, 2009
    PET scan of a brain with Alzheimer's diseaseWhen the brazen James Watson had his genome sequenced, he whether he carried a gene variant that would increase his risk for Alzheimer's disease. for Steven Pinker. (Slate)

    Control your DNA destiny  Mar 13, 2009
    Scientists have pinpointed a gene variant linked to a 30 percent to 40 percent higher risk for heart disease in women under age 60, reports Science ... Sometime in the next decade, we hope to develop screening tests for this and other gene variants ... But even if you have the memory of an elephant, you may be carrying one or two copies of the apoE-e4 gene variant, which increases the risk of developing Alzheimers later in life. (MSNBC -- Health)

    SARS spurs China to act on AIDS  Mar 12, 2009
    People with autism also run an unusually high risk of bowel disorders, and now a gene variant has been found that may contribute to both problems. 04:00 11 March 2009 1 comment. (Yahoo News -- SARS)

    Gene Variant Tied to Cocaine-Induced Paranoia  Mar 6, 2009
    Finding may shed light on physiology of phobias in general, study suggests. Wednesday, March 4, 2009. (MEDLINEplus)

    Gene Variant Associated With Both Autism And Gastrointestinal Dysfunction  Mar 5, 2009
    4, 2009) A study led by researchers at the University of Southern California (USC) and Vanderbilt University have identified a specific gene variant that links increased genetic risk for autism with gastrointestinal (GI) conditions. See also. (Science Daily)

    Gene Variant Allies Autism, Gastrointestinal Woes  Mar 4, 2009
    MONDAY, March 2 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers have identified a gene variant that is associated with both autism and gastrointestinal problems in individuals with autism ... "We wondered if this MET gene variant that we'd identified two years ago might be involved specifically in a subset of these patients who have both autism and a GI problem.". (MEDLINEplus)

    Gene Variant Associated With Cocaine Dependence, Cocaine-Induced Paranoia  Mar 4, 2009
    3, 2009) Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) and Yale University School of Medicine and the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, have discovered that variants in the -endomannosidase (MANEA) gene are associated with cocaine addiction and cocaine-induced paranoia in European American and African American populations. These findings appear in the March issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry. (Science Daily)

    USC researchers identify gene variant associated with both autism and gastrointestinal dysfunction  Mar 2, 2009
    A study led by researchers at the University of Southern California (USC) and Vanderbilt University have identified a specific gene variant that links increased genetic risk for autism with gastrointestinal (GI) conditions. The findings suggest that disrupted signaling of the MET gene may contribute to a syndrome that includes autism and co-occurring gastrointestinal dysfunction, says principal investigator Pat Levitt, Ph. (EurekAlert!)

    Treating Drug-addicted Doctors Is Good Medicine  Mar 2, 2009
    (June 29, 1998) Some individuals carry a gene variant that may help protect them from becoming addicted to nicotine, according to a new study funded in part by the National Institute on Drug. (Aug. (Science Daily)

    Smart switching could solve communication tangle  Feb 27, 2009
    Positive people may owe their optimism to a gene variant that helps them dwell on the good and ignore the bad. THIS WEEK: 10:53 25 February 2009 10 comments. (Yahoo News -- Instant Messaging)

    Gene Variant Raises Risk of Uterine Fibroids  Feb 26, 2009
    Mutation discovered more common in white women, but different genes might raise risk in black women. Tuesday, February 24, 2009. (MEDLINEplus)

    Exploring Genetic Link Between Migraines, Cardiovascular Trouble  Feb 19, 2009
    TUESDAY, Feb. 17 (HealthDay News) -- In a finding that speaks to the complicated connection between having migraines with aura and an increased risk of cardiovascular trouble, Harvard researchers report that a gene variant that was suspected to be a link between the conditions is not but that two genotypes could well be ... In the Harvard study, the investigators wanted to see if the ACE D/I gene variant somehow played a role in the heightened risk of stroke and heart attacks among women who... (MEDLINEplus)

    Doctors: Stem Cell Transplant Wiped Out HIV in Patient  Feb 15, 2009
    An HIV patient with leukemia appears to have no detectable traces of HIV in his blood after getting a transplant of stem cells from a donor carrying a rare gene variant known to resist the disease, according to a report published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine. The 42-year-old American living in Germany received the transplant to treat his leukemia, not the HIV itself. (FOXNews)

    Stem cells work magic on man with AIDS  Feb 13, 2009
    A German AIDS patient was able to stop taking medication he had been taking for 10 years after getting a transplant of stem cells from a donor with a rare gene variant known to resist the deadly disease. The transplant also cured his leukemia, researchers reported. (India Times, India -- Health/Science)

    MS link to vitamin D deficiency hailed by politicians as giant ...  Feb 7, 2009
    Health food shops in Scotland reported increased sales of the so-called sunshine vitamin, which interacts with a particular gene variant found in some individuals and alters the risk of developing MS. ... " The public appeared to be making its own decision. An assistant in a Glasgow branch of Holland & Barrett, the health food chain, said: We have had a real rush on vitamin D. The scientific breakthrough comes after a groundswell of expert belief in the importance of vitamin D. Last November, at... (Times Online)

    Gene Variant May Hike Women's Risk of Alzheimer's  Feb 7, 2009
    MONDAY, Jan. 12 (HealthDay News) -- Scientists have discovered a gene variant on the X chromosome that appears to increase the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease. The risk was most pronounced in women with the variant on both X chromosomes, although both women and men with just one variant of the gene were also at greater risk. (MEDLINEplus)

    Gene Variant Tied to Smokers' Risk of Lung Cancer  Feb 7, 2009
    MONDAY, Dec. 22 (HealthDay News) -- People may face an increased risk of lung cancer if they have a gene variant that metabolizes the most potent of cigarette smoke carcinogens, a new study says. The ABCB1 and ABCC1 genes normally help protect the lungs by removing inhaled toxins. (MEDLINEplus)


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