from our friend Gerald Ney...
from January/February 2016 DISCOVER pg 41:
"In
the 12 years since the Human Genome Project was completed, biologists
have linked more than a thousand regions of the genome to disease. 'But
in most cases , we don't actually know how they function,' says Manolis
Kellis, a computational biologist at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
Enter the epigenome. If the human genome is the
book of life, the epigenome is the collection of bookmarks and
highlighting that tells the cell what passages of the book to read.
These marks include chemical tags on DNA that make genes unreadable, as
well as chemical tags on proteins that help expose DNA inside the the
cell nuclei, making genes readable. They're the reasobn that cells from
the liver, heart or brain differ profoundly. The National Institutes
of Health Roadmap Epigenetic Consortium, including Kellis, published the
most comprehensive map of the human epigenome this February.
Kellis
led the data analysis team, which applied machine-learning algorithms
to decode the language of the epigenome. The map serves up important
clues about how a single fertilized egg can develop into the diversity
of tissues in the human body - and how healthy tissue can become
diseased. For example, one team in the consortium reported how
metastatic cancer cells contain an epigenetic fingerprint that reveals
the tissue they came from, which could lead to better targeted cancer
treatments. Another team reported spotting DNA sequences that may
trigger autoimmune diseases."
Cracking Mutations' Disease Code
"Thousands
of mutations are linked to disease, yet only a few cause illness by
directly disrupting proteins, the cell's workhorses. Scientists have
figured out how several of the other mutations spur disease.
Using
thousands of tissue samples from cadavers, researchers on the
Genotype-Tissue Expression project (GTEx) isolated and sequenced DNA and
a variety of protein encoding RNAs from each sample.
Many
disease linked mutations, it turned out lie in stretches of DNA that
don't encode proteins themselves but instead regulate genes elsewhere in
the genome that then go on to disrupt tissue function.
Genomic
makeup also can affect to what extent genes are turned on or off in a
person's tissues, thereby causing disease, , says Kristin Ardle, a Broad
Institute biologist who co-led the analysis published in May."
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