Saturday February 10 7:44 PM ET
Men Get Blame For
Most Inherited Diseases and Genetic Mutations
By MALCOLM RITTER, AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a pair of landmark studies that offer the
first detailed look at virtually the entire human genetic code,
scientists say they see remarkably few genes - not all that many
more than in a fruit fly.
The research also revealed new leads for finding roots of disease
and confirmed that men can take the blame - or credit - for creating
most inherited genetic mutations.
The analyses were performed by the two teams that made headlines
last year for determining nearly all the ``letters'' of the human
DNA code. That 3-billion-letter code, called the genome, is a
chemical sequence that contains the basic information for building
and running a human body.
``We suddenly have the global view, the view of the earth from
the moon, and it's pretty thrilling,'' commented Dr. Harold Varmus,
a former director of the National Institutes of Health (news
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web sites) who now heads the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York.
The genome work is expected to help scientists find
disease-promoting genes, develop better drugs, tailor therapies to
particular patients, evaluate environmental hazards and study human
evolution and migration.
One scientific team, a consortium of federal and institutional
researchers in the United States and scientists in five other
countries, is publishing its results in Thursday's issue of Nature.
The other team, centered at Celera Genomics (news
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web sites) in Rockville, Md., is publishing in Friday's issue of
Science.
The two teams, which worked independently, estimated roughly the
same number of human genes: about 26,000 to 39,000 according to
Celera, and about 30,000 to 40,000 according to the consortium.
Scientists with both groups said the best bet is something fewer
than 35,000.
That's surprisingly low, leaders of both scientific teams said.
While the result agrees with some recent estimates, it's in the
lower range of what scientists have thought. Some researchers put
the count above 100,000 genes.
The new estimates are fairly close to the 25,000 genes in the
small flowering plant called Arabidopsis thaliana, the 19,000 genes
in the tiny worm C. elegans, or the 13,600 genes in the fruitfly
Drosophila.
``There are many people who are bothered by the fact that they
don't seem to have (many) more than twice as many genes as a fruit
fly,'' said Eric Lander, director of the Whitehead Institute Center
for Genome Research in Cambridge, Mass., and a member of the
international consortium.
``It seems to be some kind of affront to human dignity.''
So why are humans so much more complex than a fruit fly or worm?
That remains a mystery. But scientists stress that the sheer
number of genes is only a starting point for creating complexity.
Most genes exert their effects by telling the body make certain
proteins, and human genes are more likely than fly or worm genes to
give rise to multiple proteins rather than just one. What's more,
human proteins are more versatile, scientists say.
And the timing of when genes turn on and off, and in what tissues
they are active, can also make a big difference in their effect.
Both groups also say their data have already helped scientists
find genes that promote disease. The consortium's paper lists about
30 such genes found with the help of its data, and J. Craig Venter,
president of Celera, said his group's database has led to finding of
such genes as well.
Venter recalled that he had spent 10 years trying to find a
particular gene, a task ``that now can be done with a 15-second
computer search.'' So scientists can quickly focus on studying a new
gene rather than having to spend lots of time tracking it down, he
said.
The consortium also confirmed a recent finding that men's bodies
create inheritable mutations at about twice the rate of women's.
Prior estimates had suggested the disparity was even greater.
The gender difference is a mixed message for men: It suggests
they provide the greater force for evolutionary change, but also
that they create more glitches that may promote disease.
Nature: www.nature.com
Science: www.sciencemag.org
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