Scientists find a gene that makes some people taller
  a.. Ian Sample, science correspondent 
  b.. The Guardian 
  c.. Monday September 3 2007 
The first gene linked to tallness, one of the most heritable of traits, has 
been discovered by scientists, a finding that is expected to shed light on 
human development and further understanding of cancer. An international team 
including researchers at Oxford and Exeter analysed DNA from 35,000 people and 
found that a single letter in the human genetic code was responsible for making 
some people taller than others.

The scientists zeroed in on a gene called HMGA2, of which we inherit two 
copies, one from each parent. Inheriting a form of the gene that has a C 
written into the genetic code instead of a T adds about half a centimetre to a 
person's height, the scientists found, while inheriting two copies adds nearly 
a full centimetre.

The discovery is the first to identify a single gene that directly influences 
natural variation of height. Around a quarter of white Europeans will carry two 
versions of the "tall" version of the gene, with another quarter carrying two 
"short" versions.

Scientists at Harvard University and Children's Hospital Boston joined British 
researchers at Oxford University and the Peninsula Medical School in Exeter to 
scour the genomes of 5,000 white European patients who had volunteered DNA 
samples and details of their height and weight for medical studies into 
diabetes and heart disease. The scientists identified the HMGA2 gene as playing 
a major role in height variation and noted that changing just one letter in the 
genetic code had a significant effect on growth. The discovery was confirmed by 
searching for the same two versions of the gene in a further 30,000 patients.

"Because height is a complex trait, involving a variety of genetic and 
non-genetic factors, it can teach us valuable lessons about the genetic 
framework of other complex traits, such as diabetes, cancer and other common 
human diseases," said Joel Hirshhorn, a senior researcher on the study, which 
appeared in Nature Genetics yesterday.

A study published in 2005 suggests that HMGA2 is fundamental to human growth 
and may play a role in tumour formation. An eight-year-old boy with a damaged 
version of the gene had multiple tumours and stood 5ft 6ins tall, the average 
height of a 15-year-old boy. Tall people are known to be more at risk of 
certain cancers, such as prostate, bladder and lung, and are also more at risk 
of osteoporosis. 

Tim Frayling, a geneticist at Peninsula Medical School and co-author of the 
study, said the team expects that tens to hundreds more genes linked to height 
will be identified within the next year.

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