Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Mathematicians identify genes linked to Lou
Gehrig's Disease
Newswise — Michigan Technological University
researchers have linked three genes to the
most common type of amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS), generally known as Lou
Gehrig’s disease.
Professor Shuanglin Zhang leads the team of
mathematicians that isolated the genes from
the many thousands scattered throughout
human DNA. He notes that their discovery
does not mean an end to ALS, but it could
provide scientists with valuable clues as
they search for a cure.
It can’t come any too soon. Zhang started
showing symptoms of the disease himself four
years ago. He now breathes with support from
a respirator and works at home with the aid
of a research assistant and his wife,
Qiuying Sha, an assistant professor and
member of his research team.
“I felt very urgent to find the genes for
ALS,” he says.
“This is very nice work,” said Xiaofeng Zhu,
an associate professor of epidemiology at
Case Western Reserve University’s School of
Medicine.
“It’s
very challenging to map genes for complex
diseases, and while many statistical methods
have been developed, most don’t work well in
practice. Zhang’s group has developed a
method to detect genes and gene-gene
interaction in complex diseases and provided
evidence that it works.
“Their findings will need to be confirmed by
other researchers, but I think this will be
very useful for the investigators who are
trying to find genes underlying complex
diseases such as ALS,” said Zhu.
According to the ALS Association, only about
10 percent of patients have familial ALS, a
directly inherited form of the usually fatal
neuromuscular disorder.
The remaining 90 percent, including Zhang,
are diagnosed with the sporadic form of the
disease.
While scientists have long suspected that
genetics plays a role in sporadic ALS, they
have had no evidence to back it up, at least
until now.
Everyone has the three genes in question.
But in people with sporadic ALS, they differ
from those in people who don’t have ALS.
The mathematicians were not surprised when
they tracked down the genes’ street address.
“Everybody has 23 chromosomes, and the three
genes on chromosomes 2, 4, and 10 interact,”
explained Sha.
“If you have this combination of the three
genes, you are at high risk of developing
the disease.”
“It’s really exciting, especially because my
husband has sporadic ALS,” she adds. “Maybe
they can find a cure by blocking the genes.”
According to the ALS Association,
approximately 30,000 Americans have ALS, and
about 5,600 new cases are diagnosed every
year.
The disease destroys the nerves in the brain
and spinal cord that control voluntary
movement, eventually leading to paralysis.
Zhang’s team used a new statistical method
to analyze the genetic codes of 547
individuals, 276 with sporadic ALS and 271
without.
Their method, a two-locus interaction
analysis approach, allows the researchers to
identify multiple genes associated with a
complex illness.
The data set they analyzed was provided by
National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke (NINDS) Human Genetics Resource
Center at the Coriell Institute (http://ccr.coriell.org/ninds),
a publicly funded "bank" or repository for
human cells, DNA samples, clinical data, and
other information that aims to accelerate
research on the genetics of nervous system
disorders.
“Ideally, we should confirm our results in a
second data set, but we don’t have one
available,” Sha says.
ALS is not the first condition they have
tackled. Using data sets provided by
University of Cambridge, Zhang, Sha and
their colleagues have also identified 11
genes linked to type 2 diabetes, which has
reached epidemic proportions in the U.S.
The team hopes to apply their methods to
other medical conditions, but has been
hampered by the lack of genetic information:
most data sets are not freely available to
researchers.
Zhang found out about the ALS data sets
serendipitously, while searching the ALS
Association website for information on his
condition.
“Unfortunately, we don’t have access to more
data sets,” said Sha. “If we did, we could
analyze even more diseases.”
Their work is being funded by a grant from
the National Institutes of Health. A paper
detailing their work, “Genome-wide
Association Reveals Three SNPs Associated
with Sporadic Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
through a Two-locus Analysis,” is published
in the open access journal BMC
Medical Genetics at http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2350/10/86/abstract .
In addition to Zhang and Sha, the other
coauthors are Zhaogong Zhang from Michigan
Tech and Jennifer Schymick and Bryan
Traynor of the National Institutes of
Health.
... ..
...
...