http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jan2008/tc2008019_887629.htm?campaign_id=rss_daily

Chromosome Abnormality Linked to Autism
The New England Journal of Medicine says researchers have found a link
between a genetic anomaly and the complex developmental disorder

Scientists have discovered the strongest link yet between specific
chromosomal abnormalities and an increased risk of autism, the neurological
disorder that affects up to one in every 166 children in the U.S.

The abnormalities were linked with certainty to only 1% of autism cases. But
the researchers, reporting in the latest issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine, say their work points the way to finding other genetic changes
linked to the disease, as well as potential treatments—and prenatal
screening tests that could spark ethical questions.

Using a very large genome scan, the researchers also discovered that the
genetic abnormalities—either a deletion or a duplication of a section of
chromosome 16—were not directly inherited from either parent. Instead they
developed spontaneously during the embryonic stage of development, possibly
due to interplay of various genetic factors inherited from the parents.

Through the use of new and very costly chromosome micro-array tests, doctors
can detect the abnormalities in autism patients and their parents and then
predict the risk of recurrence in subsequent pregnancies. "We are beginning
to develop a full understanding of the autism spectrum disorder genome
which…ultimately will lead to the discovery of treatments that have the
greatest promise," says Eric Lander, director of the Broad Institute of MIT
and Harvard, which took part in the research.
Genetic Pathways Hard to Identify

The discovery marks another win for deCODE Genetics of Iceland, which also
conducted some of the research. The company has used its population
screening technology, and its extensive database of Icelanders' genomes, to
locate the genetic links to a huge range of diseases.

Autism spectrum disorder, as it is formally known, is a profound
developmental disease that affects speech, behavior, and cognition. Doctors
know the disease runs in families—90% of cases may be genetic—but the
genetic pathways have been extremely difficult to identify, likely because
more than one is the culprit. Only in 10% of cases can it be linked to
specific and well-known genetic anomalies, such as fragile-X syndrome.

Many parents long feared thimerosal, a preservative once contained in many
childhood vaccines, was the culprit, but study after study has failed to
find any link. Most recently, an extensive federal
study<http://www.businessweek.com/print/lifestyle/content/healthday/611489.html>(
BusinessWeek.com, 1/7/08) released Jan. 7 found autism rates in California
have continued to rise over the last several years, long after thimerosal
was removed from almost all vaccines in 2001.
Largest Genome Scan To Date

The New England Journal study was conducted by a team put together by the
non-profit Autism Consortium. The other participants were Children's
Hospital in Boston and Massachusetts General Hospital. The consortium
initially screened the genomes of more than 3,000 people, including 1,441
diagnosed with autism, and found a deletion of the same section of
chromosome 16 in five of the autism patients. Children's Hospital scientists
found five more cases of that genetic deletion in testing of 512 people
suspected of having autism, and deCODE found the same in 3 out of 299 autism
patients. The researchers also discovered 11 patients had extra copies of
genes in the same region of chromosome 16 where others were missing genes.

Other researchers have identified chromosome 16 anomalies in patients with
autism, but this study is by far the largest genome scan for the disease to
date. The region of chromosome 16 missing or duplicated contains some 25
genes whose functions are not known. David Miller of Children's Hospital, a
co-author of the New England Journal paper, says his team plans further
study of the region to identify exactly which of these genes is most closely
linked to autism.

"The immediate benefit, though, will be to help us clarify the diagnosis
when a determination of autism is difficult to make," says Miller. He
cautions, however, that any prenatal test, such as the one that screens for
Down's syndrome, is years away, as more precise knowledge of the genetic
causes of autism is needed. Some parents of autistic children have already
been vocal in their opposition to routine prenatal screening for autism,
should such a test come about, because it may lead prospective parents to
abort fetuses that, as children, could have been treated successfully, or
might never have developed the disease at all.

Arnst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is a senior writer for
*BusinessWeek*based in New York .


-- 
Intan Dima
http://muslimahjelita.multiply.com (jilbab dan busana cantik)
http://wahlucubanget.multiply.com (baju dan sepatu anak)
http://studiosatuthewedding.multiply.com (jasa fotografi)

Atau silahkan japri untuk melihat katalog terbaru (saat ini hanya ada
katalog jilbab dan busana).

Kirim email ke