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Guest Article by Pat Carpenter
Seven Newly-
Recent research findings may offer some new hope to 20.8 million individuals in Dallas,
Houston, elsewhere in Texas and throughout the rest of the United States who have
diabetes. While an estimated 14.6 million have been diagnosed, 6.2 million people
(or nearly one-
Researchers
recently identified seven new genes connected to the most common form of diabetes.
The findings, presented in three reports by university scientists and one by a private
company, offer novel insights into the biology of a disease that affects 170 million
people worldwide.
The reports bring the number of well-
DeCode
Genetics, an Icelandic company responsible for one of the reports, has dominated
the genetic-
Several
researchers said that the new diabetes studies, and a soon-
There is considerable
overlap in the diabetes genes identified in the recent four reports, giving the authors
confidence that at last their whole genome association method is producing reliable
results.
Until recently, "there was no sense of progress" in tracking down the genes
of diabetes or other common diseases, Dr. Altshuler said. The logjam started to break
a year ago with DeCode's report of its TCF7L2 gene, and the consistent findings reported
by the academic centers "has to be acknowledged as substantial progress," Dr. Altshuler
said.
Dr. Boehnke agreed, saying, "It's very exciting to have results in which we
truly believe." Up until now, he said, diabetes research has been what his professor
warned would be "a geneticist's nightmare."
The importance of the new genes is that they point to previously unknown pathways
involved in diabetes. Dr. Altshuler agreed with Dr. Stefansson's view that DeCode's
TCF7L2 gene has the greatest effect on diabetes, but said the other genes provide
new insights regardless of the size of their effects. "The fact that none of the
genes found were on anyone's radar screen shows how much there is to learn," Dr.
Altshuler said.
"I tip my hat to DeCode," he said. "But the technology is now widely
available," and, in his view, the only barrier to other teams contributing to gene
discovery would be if they dropped the high standards of statistical rigor developed
by the three academic consortia.
Several of the new variant genes make the pancreatic
beta cells produce less insulin, Dr. Altshuler said. That suggests that diabetes
may start as a disease of too little insulin production, even though patients turn
up in the doctor's office making too much insulin, to which their tissues have become
resistant.
The variant genes found so far account for only two to 20 percent of the
overall risk of diabetes, implying there are many more to be found. The present genes
are not sufficient to distinguish reliably between people at low-
By mapping the human genome, scientists are discovering
which individuals are more prone to certain diseases and conditions. But genetics
are just half the story -
Article source: http://www.articlemetropolis.com
Pat Carpenter writes for Precedent Insurance Company. Precedent puts a new spin on health insurance. Learn more at Precedent.com