Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Economy of American Samoa
Image via Wikipedia

Click here to listen to the free NPR podcast: “Uwe Reinhardt, professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University, calls the health care sector the “strongest economic locomotive working for us.” He estimates that by 2015, health care will be one-fifth the size of the U.S. economy and says this is a good time to expand health insurance coverage for the uninsured.”

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

imaging-genetics_graph

Just playing around with Joe D‘s new PubMed analysis tools – Thanks Joe ! My own area of research involves linking genetic data to functional neuroimaging data to begin to understand how genetic variation influences neural network dynamics and cognitive development in general. The term “imaging-genetics” was initially used for this purpose at the first Imaging-Genetics conference in 2005 and since then. I like the figure generated by Joe’s term trending tool since it shows the early blips of activity in this nascent field.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

U.S.

Image via Wikipedia

re-posting from NARSAD news … FDA approves an amazing new form of non-invasive magnetic brain stimulation for treatment resistant depression.

Great video demonstrates the methodology and its ability to interfere with neural processing with a high degree of temporal and spatial specificity.  A new treatment that one day might be guided by genomic markers ? Perhaps.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

My Promethease Unbound

Vulcan Chaining Prometheus, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Image via Wikipedia

Thanks so very much to the folks at SNPedia for developing and sharing the Promethease analysis tool. What a delight to delve into my 23andMe profile ! I stumbled onto the usual dreary risks for this and that, and yes, I know I’m at risk for baldness, but did come up with a few bonus IQ points and moreover an allele that protects me from cannabis dependence (will have to return to Nijmegen sooner than later I suppose).

Just a sampling from the report … what’s in YOUR genome ?

rs2165241(T;T)  >10x increased risk of exfoliation glaucoma (LOXL1)
rs2180439(T;T)  2x increased risk of baldness
rs1136287(T;T)  3.9x increased risk of wet age related macular degeneration (PEDF)
rs1426654(A;A)  probably light-skinned, European ancestry
rs601338(A;A)  resistance to Norwalk virus infection
rs324650(A;T)  somewhat higher IQ (CHRM2)
rs1815739(C;T)  mix of sprinting & endurance muscles (ACTN3)
rs16891982(C;G)  if European, 7x more likely to have black hair (SLC45A2)
rs806368(C;C)  lower risk of the development of substance dependence
rs1954787(T;T)  ~10% less likely to respond to citalopram (HTR2A)
rs17822931(C;T)  wet earwax
rs237025(A;A)  MET/MET increased diabetes susceptibility
rs6449213(T;T)  ~4x higher risk for hyperuracemia
rs1015362(C;C)  2-4x higher risk of sun sensitivity if part of risk haplotype (ASIP)
rs1800497(G;G)  A2/A2 bupropion effective (DRD2)
rs363039(A;G)  2+ IQ points (SNAP25)
rs2383207(A;G)  increased risk for heart disease
rs2987983(G;G)  increased risk for prostate cancer
rs1800955(C;C)  increased susceptibility to novelty seeking (DRD4)
rs2279744(G;G)  generally more cancer prone (MDM2)
rs10260404(C;C) rs10239794(C;C) haplotype strongly associated with ALS
rs283413(A;C)  3.2x higher risk for PD (ADH1C)
rs1024611(G;G)  increased risk of exercise induced ischemia (CCL2)
rs1328674(T;T)  higher risk for RA (HTR2A)
rs2107301(A;A)  2.47x higher risk for prostate cancer
rs1801270(A;C)  increased risk for lung cancer
rs1571801(T;T)  >1.36x risk for prostate cancer
rs1799724(C;T)  weak risk for Alzheimer’s Disease
rs733618(C;T)  1.87x risk for myasthenia gravis (CTLA4)
rs7480010(G;G)  increased susceptibility to Type II Diabetes
rs3018362(A;A)  increases susceptibility to Osteoporotic fractures
rs4870044(T;T)  increases susceptibility to Bone mineral density variations
rs806380(G;G)  protection from cannabis dependence
rs17696736(G;G)  associated with type-1 diabetes

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Scale of the debt …

Just thought this NY Times graphic nicely captured the outlays of debt taken on during the recent weeks by the US Central Bank. Healthcare spending is usually the big item(s), but the new debt really dwarfs it.  Immense new pressure on the financing of healthcare.

Read Full Post »

Brazillian top model Gisele Bündchen, on Fashi...Image via Wikipedia Just thought it was strange to see the beautiful people drooling into 23andMe spit cups in today’s “Style” section of the NY Times. Strange in a good way.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

female reading emotionsImage by -kÇ- via Flickr Session 4 of our discussion group, “When Basic Neuroscience Meets Psych Rehab” will meet on Sept 25. This session will cover the topic of ‘affect labeling’ which is one strategy for managing one’s emotions. Did you know there are 3,000+ words you can choose from to describe your feelings ? How many can you name right off the bat ? The discussion seeks to flesh out the way in which basic brain mechanisms of emotional regulation work and how brain-based (and genetic) biomarkers might be used in a clinical therapy/rehabilitation setting. Slides and discussion highlights will be posted to the website.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Economic advis...Image by Getty Images via Daylife A recent article in “Technology Review” profiles Austan Goolsbee, a professor at the University of Chicago School of Business & senior economic advisor to Barack Obama. I was surprised by a comment he made suggesting that as healthcare spending continues to expand, he can see it becoming a central driver of economic growth, if not, a major foundation of economic growth. Indeed, the end product of all this bioscience is much more valuable than a new car or big-screen LCD television. I’m hoping we’ll hear more on this new perspective in the coming months (and 4 years).

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Just saw this on engadget … fun and useful – just like chumby but with a medical twist. Who knows, it may someday make housecalls (see link below).Related articles by Zemanta

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

A United Airline...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Just a pointer to a great overview article of trends in medical tourism at Economist magazine. Hope the price of jet fuel doesn’t put a damper on these exciting trends.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

P.S. 1Image by wallyg via Flickr The Manhattan Institute policy think-tank posts some commentary (including one by yours truly) on their Medical Progress Today section pertaining to the recent regulatory steps (backward).

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Image representing Gizmodo as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase, source unknown

Just re-posting from Gizmodo … this looks like a positive step … a medical chumby.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Bernanke in CongressImage by talkradionews via Flickr Amidst his hectic schedule managing the ongoing credit crisis, the New York Times notes that Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke opened a bipartisan symposium which will, “lay the groundwork for what leaders of both parties predict will be a major push for health care legislation next year.” From the article, it seems that since healthcare accounts for such a large (and growing) slice of the federal budget pie, fixing inefficiency and disparity in healthcare will assuredly involve more legislation and regulation on a growing scale. The article bummed me out since I suppose it portends new and shifting regulatory layers that will just make it harder for entrepreneurial consumer-driven and health2.0 innovations to establish themselves. Coincidental bummer that this symposium was taking place on the day NY and CA were stifling a new genetic testing industry.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Dr. Scott Shreeve has a great post on the launch of “Carol” a new, open & transparent healthcare marketplace. With DNA Direct offering services there, its easy to see how biomarkers and biomarker-driven care can work within a consumer-driven business model. Exciting to see the future today !!

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

On 2007's Memorial Day Weekend on Arlington Pa...Image via Wikipedia Welcome to the 24th edition of Gene Genie!! During these grey winter doldrums, it is all too easy to hunker down and withdraw from the blogosphere into the minutiae of grant writing and lab management (brrr– I haven’t posted in weeks). So it is with true delight that I present and thank our contributors for brightening the season.

Firstly, a new paper by Mercer et al., in PNAS showing that presumed spurious transcriptional slop, does not appear to be as sloppy, spurious or incidental as predicted – and hence – may have possible functionality (in the brain at least) has sparked some interesting exchanges among our contributors. Genomicron gives some insightful critiques to the proposition that “God, as they say, don’t make no junk” in his article, Is most of the human genome functional ? After reading Greg Laden’s post, Genes are only part of story: ncRNA does stuff, I think there is good reason to put these neuronally expressed ncRNA’s to use and think harder on their possible functions. Skeptical biologist Larry Moran rightly cautions us in his Sandwalk blog to think clearly about the basic biochemical pathways of the Central Dogma before over-hyping a new paradigm of functionality of spurious transcripts. Junk or no junk – THE CENTRAL DOGMA STANDS !

Next, on to the core mission of Gene Genie – a few articles on personalized genetics and the continued unfolding of genetic functionality of individual genes such as SCH9, CNTNAP2, GDF5, ELA2 and others in healthcare.

In what will certainly be one of the most notable findings of 2008, Ouroboros covers the recent paper showing that mutations in the kinase SCH9, combined with intervention in the RAS and TOR genetic pathways can greatly extend the life cycle of budding yeast. Apparently, there is an important connection between genome stability and longevity and the, as yet undetermined, key regulators of stability in humans will be of tremendous interest to all of us.

The discovery of new genetic loci gives hope to parents of autistic children. As reported in Mapping new autism gene(s) to chromosome 16, a small region containing about 25 genes in the p11.2 region of chromosome 16 contains a risk factor that will shed light on the developmental origins of this disorder. Furthermore, as has long been observed, there are epigenetic phenomena related to the risk of autism as reported in Autism Vox of a recent study showing that maternal inheritance of CNTNAP2 confers greater risk than paternal inheritance. Such parent-of-origin effects can be tricky to pin down in mapping studies and trickier still to explain evolutionarily. In Sunday syndrome #5: The anarchist that wasn’t, cotch dot net provides some in-depth coverage of these epigenetic phenomena. The new genetics hasn’t quite pinned down the mechanisms of epigenetic regulation (there are ncRNAs involved as in the case of the h19 igf2 system) but personalized genetic services are well advised to offer assessments of epigenetic risk. A sobering account, as reported by DNA and You, of a different type of parent-of-origin effect – that donor sperm from the same individual transmitted a mutation in the ELA2 gene to 5 separate children, giving them a condition called severe congenital neutropenia – heightens one’s awareness of the potential of personalized medicine to screen for severe developmental risk factors. Apparently, insurance companies see the promise and are moving closer to valuation, payment and implementation strategies as reported on by DNA Direct Talk. Congratulations to the state of Wisconsin for their new offering of screening newborns for Severe Combined Immune Deficiency (SCID) as reported in ScienceRoll.

The GDF5 gene, as reported on by Genetics & Health is a regulator of long bone length (height) as well as common variants recently have been tied to susceptibility to osteoarthritis of the hip and knees in Asian and European populations.

Other large population genome association studies found “seven new genes that influence blood cholesterol levels, a major factor in heart disease, and confirmed 11 other genes previously thought to influence cholesterol”. Gene Sherpas covers the possible role of such genes in the context of the recently flopped ENHANCE trial.

If you are interested in these and many other genetic variants and are considering shelling out the cash and diving into the new personalized genetic era in medicine, the Genetic Genealogist provides a great up-to-date summary of folks’ experience with the 23andMe service.

If you happen to be a male with hair (or at least a male with hair seeking a mate who wonders whats in store for said hair), you may wish to forgo the 23andMe expense and put your money down elsewhere as Eye on DNA reports that men can obtain an highly predictive genetic test for baldness. Whew, I’m glad my wife did not know about this test before we were married (and my genetic program subsequently ran its sad inexorable course). More amusing still, is the video on gene chip conspiracies posted by evolgen – amusing, that is, unless Illumina does actually take over the world.

Amidst the rise of personalized medicine, GrrlScientist covers a recent econo-genetic analysis of the pricing of “stud fees” in the high-stakes horse racing marketplace Nature versus Nurture: Are Champion RaceHorses Born Or Made? posted at Living the Scientific Life. The data show convincingly that pricing strictly based on one’s genetic heritage (and ignoring the role of training in performance) is invalid. As an aside, I couldn’t help but chuckle reminded of Eric Roberts in “The Pope of Greenwich Village” who bet it all on a horse whose paternal genome was acquired via – lets just say – handily creative – means. He and Micky Rourke could have used this paper ! Horse racing (and Eric Roberts’ great hair) aside, as personalized medicine continues apace, the basic science lesson should be well heeded amidst the many new personal genome rollouts. THE ENVIRONMENT IS JUST AS IMPORTANT AS THE GENOME !!

And lastly, this edition also received a number of thoughtful articles that highlight the far reaching impact the new genetics is having on the cultural and spiritual well-being of homo sapiens. Our human genome is an amazing historical document. Each gene tells a story of who we are and what we might become – thanks to our contributors for teaching us how to read it !

Mike Haubrich, FCD probes a deep and fundamental human struggle concerning religion and human origins in his review of a recent PLoS article and also of Richard Dawkins’ book in Ancestor Tales and Gene Loss Adaptation posted at Tangled Up in Blue Guy. A valuable resource in gaining perspective on this debate is reviewed by GrrlScientist in Science, Evolution, and Creationism — The Free Download.

Aardvarchaeology covers some of the more recent – albeit equally passionate – issues of genetic history and ethnic identity in his critique on the origins of Slavic people in his Genes and Peoples article. Clearly we all will be re-thinking our ethnic identities as each of us discovers our own genetic legacy. Thanks to Dr. Rundkvist for giving us a great example of how to do this.

Sudip Ghosh reminds us – it will be a sad day indeed when our evolutionary genetic heritage – in the form of “designer” genetic variants – are mere commodities for sale in A Step Closer to the Great “Gene” Sale? posted at GNIF Brain Blogger. Certainly, the value of the genome is worth more when it can enhances our humanity and dignitiy rather than as a monetized commodity. Thanks for this Sudip!

Alvaro Fernandez’s posts an interview in Learning & The Brain: Interview with Robert Sylwester at SharpBrains. As a parent of two very different little tykes (independent assortment is no joke!), I much enjoyed this post and concur that paying more attention to basic mechanisms of how children develop empathy and social-emotional awareness as an interaction between genes and environment leads to a more fulfilling experience for parent, educator and child alike.

Well, this issue was a welcome dose of interest during an otherwise bleak winter! I hope your new year is off to a good start. Please share your thoughts and insights with the next Gene Genie issues by posting here. If you’d like to host an edition, don’t hesitate to contact berci.mesko [at] gmail.com. Thanks to Ricardo Vidal for the Gene Genie logo!

*** Don your crampons and ascend to the summit with Gene Sherpas for the next edition of Gene Genie ***

All the very best, John

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Happy New Year ! and welcome to the 22nd edition of Mendel’s Garden. Moving into the new year, our contributors continue to push forward – equipped with their latest experimental results – sharpening our understanding of the complex interplay between an ever changing genome and environment across developmental space and time. The importance of development seems to undergird each of the posts this month – as a set of genetic programs that interact with the environment and constrain evolutionary change.

Makita covers current models on the evolutionary genetics of host-parasite interaction in Plant Pathology: Gene-for-gene theory posted at Everything and more.

Looking more deeply into the genomic signatures of such interplay, Greg Laden reports Greg Laden’s Blog : More “Junk” DNA is Not posted at Greg Laden’s Blog.

This is just the type of hard science investigation that speaks to broader philosophical questions as noted by Phil B. at Which Came First, the Chicken or the Egg? « Phil for Humanity posted at Phil for Humanity, saying, “What most people do not know is that there are 3 different answers for this question.”

GrrlScientist points to a pivotal developmental time point where genetics and environment interact to shape fitness Bright Blue Tits Make Better Mothers posted at Living the Scientific Life, saying, “Do female birds use bright plumage and elaborate ornaments to advertize their genetic quality to males?”

Human development, where the centuries old “nature vs. nurture” debate remains politicized, despite hard scientific data such as reported on by Greg Laden in Greg Laden’s Blog : Reduced Verbal Ability in African American Children posted at Greg Laden’s Blog, saying, “It turns out its not the genes but the context.”

The complexities of genes vs. environment are never moreso than when it comes to human emotional development as noted by Walter in The Genetics of Panic Disorder posted at Highlight HEALTH.

GrrlScientist strikes a familiar chord in Ebony, Meet Irony posted at Living the Scientific Life, saying, “This is one of the funnier things I’ve read recently. It turns out that 1962 Nobel laureate, James Watson, who recently made some disparaging comments about the intelligence of Africans, probably is of African descent himself.”

And finally, if you’re in the presence of developing children, why not teach them 96well’s ABC of reporter genes song posted at reportergene.com ?

That concludes this edition. Have a great 2008. Good luck with your experiments and blogging!

Submit your blog article to the next edition of Mendel’s Garden using our carnival submission form. Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.

Technorati tags: , .

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Example of a subject in a Ganzfeld experiment.Image via Wikipedia Mind reading, telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition ? Not possible you say ? Or perhaps misunderstood ? You may once have had a premonition or a feeling and later been surprised to find that it coincided with an actual event. Once, for example, when I was 15, my pal and I absconded with his mother’s car for a late night joyride – mortifyingly resulting in a dented front fender and busted radiator. Upon return, we were greeted in the driveway by his disconcerted mom who had apparently woken from a nightmare involving her son in a car crash. Boy, did HE ever get it !! and by ‘it’, I don’t mean a lecture on parapsychology. While many scientists may dismiss parapsychology research as quackery akin to Bill Murray in Ghost Busters, Samuel T. Moulton and Stephen M. Kosslyn of Harvard University provide an interesting update on current research in this field (you can get a copy of the paper by email) entitled, “Using Neuroimaging to Resolve the Psi Debate” (Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (2008) 20:182-192). Because accounts of paranormal events often involve closely related or emotionally close individuals, Moulton and Kosslyn invited identical twins and family members to participate. So-called ‘senders’ were instructed to ‘transmit’ information regarding a specific visual stimulus while ‘receivers’ were instructed to chose between a matching and non-matiching stimulus while laying in an MRI scanner. Not surprisingly, receivers were no more accurate than if they were choosing at random (out of 3,687 responses, the correct matching response was chosen 1842 times (49.99% accuracy) and no significant differences were observed in brain activation in receivers when senders were sending matching visual images. Professor Kosslyn is highly regarded as an expert in visual imagery and so this particular team is well suited to interpret the findings. As the paper inevitably shows however, no evidence of brain activity was found to support telepathy, clairvoyance or precognition. My own extra sensory perception tells me that this is not likely to be the last word in this area of research.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Animation of an MRI brain scan, starting at th...Image via Wikipedia OK, the title of this post is fanciful – even for the blogosphere – but the recent open access paper, “Using fMRI Brain Activation to Identify Cognitive States Associated with Perception of Tools and Dwellings” by Shinkareva and team (DOI) is pretty darn amazing. The authors ask subjects to view pictures of and think about a set of objects: drill, hammer, screwdriver, pliers, saw, apartment, castle, house, hut, and igloo (tools vs. dwellings) while laying in an MRI scanner. The patterns of brain activity associated with each category were then used to train a pattern recognition learning program in order to discriminate between these two categories. Subsequent testing of the pattern recognizer showed that it could accurately predict what category of object a subject was viewing based on the pattern of brain activity. Interestingly, there were striking commonalities across subjects in the locations and activation amplitudes of regions for each category suggesting that the brains of different people are using similar neural pathways to represent semantic information. It is easy to imagine that genetic factors regulating human brain development may contribute to this invariance. I’m not sure if I’ll be surprised when this question is answered – perhaps my brain/genome scan will tell me whether I was or not.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

Brad carves the turkey
Image by Salim Virji via Flickr

It has long been known that complex neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental illnesses have familial patterns of inheritance and that concordance in identical twins is greater than in fraternal twins. The genetic influences of mental illness – whilst apparent – do not, however, provide clues about which genes, of the 20,000 or so to choose from, confer risk. Hallucinations, mania, mood-swings, paranoia, disorganized thinking – to describe some of the difficulties that patients experience – do not immediately suggest specific candidate molecules. In an effort then, to pinpoint the specific neural processes that go awry in one particular complex mental illness, the The Consortium on the Genetics of Schizophrenia has published a landmark analysis of 183 nuclear families consisting of affected and unaffected siblings to address this problem. In their paper, “Initial Heritability Analyses of Endophenotypic Measures for Schizophrenia” (Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2007;64(11):1242-1250) the team examine so-called endophenotypes, often consisting of cognitive assessments designed to engage discrete, anatomically characterized neural networks in order to zero-in on where in the brain the genetic risk exerts an effect. The critical point the authors make is that these endophenotypes must be shown to be reliable, stable, and, most importantly, heritable. In other words, while many neural proceeses may go awry in schizophrenia, not all of these processes will have been influenced by genetic factors. Hence the analogy to carving up the complex system (turkey) along the proper genetic lines (joints). Their analysis showed that a great many of their candidate endophenotypes are indeed heritable, such as pre-pulse inhibition of the startle response, the antisaccade task for eye movements, Continuous Performance Test, California Verbal Learning Test, Letter-Number Sequencing test, Abstraction and Mental Flexibility, Face Memory, Spatial Memory, Spatial Processing, Sensorimotor Dexterity, and Emotion Recognition. Other processes such as suppression of the P50 ERP was not found to be heritable, and thus may not be a process that is affected by genetic risk. Interestingly, as reported by the authors, “The genetic correlations observed between the CVLT and LNS, between Abstraction and Mental Flexibility and Spatial Memory, and between Spatial Processing and the antisaccade task, CPT, LNS, and Abstraction and Mental Flexibility were significant at the P .001 level and remained significant after correction for multiple testing. These results suggest that overlapping genetic architecture (pleiotropy) underlies some of these endophenotypes”. Further dissection of these validated endophenotypes may therefore yield more specific neural processes, and perhaps specific synaptic connections, that would more readily provide clues to the molecular players in these complex developmental disabilities.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

SMI32-stained pyramidal neurons in cerebral co...Image via Wikipedia Just stumbled across this great free resource – NeuroMorpho – man ! neurons are really fun to look at. NeuroMorpho hyper-links up digital reconstructions from several thousand different cell types across many species with information on function, size, connectivity and neural simulation tools. The cell above is a Von Economo neuron, one of the few known specializations to hominoid cortical microcircuitry. Weird and wild to ponder that without this little cell, I lose my sense of “self”.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »