Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Obesity gene networks unveiled

Obesity gene networks unveiled

Posted Tue Mar 18, 2008 9:14am AEDT

Researchers say people who have a higher BMI have characteristic patterns of gene activation in their fatty tissues not seen in DNA taken from blood [File photo].

Researchers say people who have a higher BMI have characteristic patterns of gene activation in their fatty tissues not seen in DNA taken from blood [File photo]. (ABC News)

Overeating disrupts entire networks of genes in the body, causing not only obesity, but diabetes and heart disease, in ways that may be possible to predict, researchers say.

The researchers developed a new method of analysing DNA and used it to discover that obesity is not only complex - something already known - but complex in ways that had not been previously understood.

The findings of two studies have been published in the journal Nature,

"Obesity is not a disease that is the result of a single change to a single gene. It changes entire networks," said Dr Eric Schadt, executive director of Genetics at Merck Research Laboratories.

Dr Schadt's team identified networks of hundreds of genes that appear to be thrown out of kilter when mice are fed a high-fat diet.

"This network is completely rocked by exposure to a high-fat, Western-type diet," Dr Schadt said.

They then turned to a database of Icelandic people being studied and found people have the same networks.

The joint teams did a detailed study of 1,000 blood samples and almost 700 samples of fat tissues from some of the Icelandic volunteers.

This showed that people who have a higher body mass index (BMI) - a measurement of obesity - have characteristic patterns of gene activation in their fatty tissues not seen in DNA taken from blood.

"What it says it that the common forms of these diseases are very complex," Dr Schadt said.

"Simple genetic tests cannot detect these networks," Dr Schadt said.

He said his team hoped to study these networks and identify the genes most key to causing disease.

Dr Schadt said new drugs can be then designed to target their activity.

Immune system

The studies found the diseases of obesity appear to originate in the immune system.

"The network is enriched for genes that are involved in macrophages," Dr Schadt said.

"In a normal state these things are keeping you free of infection and fighting off things that want to harm your body. This network is also significantly changed when you are on a high-fat diet.

"Good diet and exercise is still probably the best treatment or way to prevent the onset of obesity.

"If you are not going to alter your lifestyle, we can identify what network is going to be most significantly altered. Then we can bring that network more into a state to where it looks like when you are on a normal diet."

Some people have networks that predispose them to diabetes when they become obese, others to high cholesterol and clogged arteries.

Some network patterns appeared to predispose some people to so-called metabolic syndrome, in which patients develop a cluster of symptoms including high blood sugar, high blood pressure and clogged arteries.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/11/30/2105983.htm

posted by 41315202

Platypus missing link in the Early History of Mammals

Researches have unraveled the genetic make up of one of the world’s strangest mammals. Teams of researches located in the UK have analysed the DNA blueprint of Australia’s very own Platypus. The platypus is thought to have diverged from a common ancestor shared with humans approximately 170 million years ago.

The species has many features that are unique to mammals; for example it has fur and rears its young on milk. However, it also shows reptile-like characteristics; the females lay eggs and the males produce venom. Some features, such as a specialized system in the platypus bill that uses electricity to detect food under water (electro-reception), are unique to monotremes. The researchers found that these diverse characteristics are mirrored by a patchwork of genes resembling those from reptiles, birds and other mammals.
Lead researcher Chris Ponting from the MRC Functional Genomics Unit at the University of Oxford said "The platypus genome is extremely important because it is the missing link in our understanding of how we and other mammals first evolved. This is our ticket back in time to when all mammals laid eggs while suckling their young on milk. It also provides an essential background to future advances in understanding mammalian biology and evolution."
Student:41750362