Mostrando postagens com marcador genética. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador genética. Mostrar todas as postagens

quinta-feira, 14 de agosto de 2008

Genética do fibrinogênio

Linkage Study of Fibrinogen Levels: The Strong Heart Family Study
Lyle G. Best , Kari E. North , Xia Li , Vittorio Palmieri , Jason G. Umans , Jean MacCluer , Sandra Laston , Karin Haack , Harald Goring , Laura Almasy , Elisa T. Lee , Russell P. Tracy and Shelley A. Cole
BMC Medical Genetics 2008, 9:77doi:10.1186/1471-2350-9-77
Published: 12 August 2008
Abstract (provisional)
Background
The pathogenesis of atherosclerosis involves both hemostatic and inflammatory mechanisms. Fibrinogen is associated with both risk of thrombosis and inflammation. A recent meta-analysis showed that risk of coronary heart disease may increase 1.85 fold for each 1g/L of increased fibrinogen, independent of traditional risk factors. It is known that fibrinogen levels may be influenced by demographic, environmental and genetic factors. Epidemiologic and candidate gene studies are available; but few genome-wide linkage studies have been conducted, particularly in minority populations. The Strong Heart Study has demonstrated an increased incidence of cardiovascular disease in the American Indian population, and therefore represents an important source for genetic-epidemiological investigations.
Methods
The Strong Heart Family Study enrolled over 3,600 American Indian participants in large, multi-generational families, ascertained from an ongoing population-based study in the same communities. Fibrinogen was determined using standard technique in a central laboratory and extensive additional phenotypic measures were obtained. Participants were genotyped for 382 short tandem repeat markers distributed throughout the genome; and results were analyzed using a variance decomposition method, as implemented in the SOLAR 2.0 program.
Results
Data from 3535 participants were included and after step-wise, linear regression analysis, two models were selected for investigation. Basic demographic adjustments constituted model 1, while model 2 considered waist circumference, diabetes mellitus and postmenopausal status as additional covariates. Five LOD scores between 1.82 and 3.02 were identified, with the maximally adjusted model showing the highest score on chromosome 7 at 28cM. Genes for two key components of the inflammatory response, i.e. interleukin-6 and "signal transducer and activator of transcription 3" (STAT3), were identified within 2 and 8 Mb of this 1 LOD drop interval respectively. A LOD score of 1.82 on chromosome 17 between 68 and 93cM is supported by reports from two other populations with LOD scores of 1.4 and 1.95.
Conclusion
In a minority population with a high prevalence of cardiovascular disease, strong evidence for a novel genetic determinant of fibrinogen levels is found on chromosome 7 at 28cM. Four other loci, some of which have been suggested by previous studies, were also identified

segunda-feira, 4 de agosto de 2008

Exercício, ansiedade e depressão

Testing Causality in the Association Between Regular Exercise and Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression
Marleen H. M. De Moor, MSc; Dorret I. Boomsma, PhD; Janine H. Stubbe; Gonneke Willemsen, PhD; Eco J. C. de Geus, PhD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2008;65(8):897-905.
Context In the population at large, regular exercise is associated with reduced anxious and depressive symptoms. Results of experimental studies in clinical populations suggest a causal effect of exercise on anxiety and depression, but it is unclear whether such a causal effect also drives the population association. We cannot exclude the major contribution of a third underlying factor influencing exercise behavior and symptoms of anxiety and depression.
Objective To test causal effects of exercise on anxious and depressive symptoms in a population-based sample.
Design Population-based longitudinal study (1991-2002) in a genetically informative sample of twin families.
Setting Causal effects of exercise were tested by bivariate genetic modeling of the association between exercise and symptoms of anxiety and depression, correlation of intrapair differences in these traits among genetically identical twins, and longitudinal modeling of changes in exercise behavior and anxious and depressive symptoms.
Participants A total of 5952 twins from the Netherlands Twin Register, 1357 additional siblings, and 1249 parents. All participants were aged 18 to 50 years.
Main Outcome Measurements Survey data about leisure-time exercise (metabolic equivalent task hours per week based on type, frequency, and duration of exercise) and 4 scales of anxious and depressive symptoms (depression, anxiety, somatic anxiety, and neuroticism, plus a composite score).
Results Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations were small and were best explained by common genetic factors with opposite effects on exercise behavior and symptoms of anxiety and depression. In genetically identical twin pairs, the twin who exercised more did not display fewer anxious and depressive symptoms than the co-twin who exercised less. Longitudinal analyses showed that increases in exercise participation did not predict decreases in anxious and depressive symptoms.
Conclusion Regular exercise is associated with reduced anxious and depressive symptoms in the population at large, but the association is not because of causal effects of exercise.

quinta-feira, 15 de fevereiro de 2007

Projeto no Congresso americano para barrar "discriminação genética".

O Congresso americano avança para impedir que testes genéticos sejam utilizados por empregadores e por empresas de seguro. Se aprovado será um exemplo bom para os demais países. Ao que consta, há locais com teste para doenças como a coréia de Huntington.
Abaixo, trecho de reportagem do The Wall Street Journal.
Genetic-Discrimination BanNears Congressional Approval
By JANE ZHANGFebruary 15, 2007; Page A11
WASHINGTON -- A bill barring discrimination by employers and insurers based on genetic information is moving swiftly through Congress, drawing praise from privacy advocates and objections from business groups that the measure is too broad.
The legislation would be the first federal law prohibiting health insurers from denying coverage or charging higher premiums based solely on genetic information. It also would forbid employers from using the information to make hiring, firing and other job-placement decisions.