Major Depression and Chromosome 15, Paternal Age Derived?
OLDER FATHER, GRANDFATHER, GREATGRANDFATHER WHERE DOES THE PROPORTED GENE ON
CHROMOSOME 15 COME FROM? IS THIS GENE MUTATION OF PATERNAL ORIGIN?
YET ANOTHER DISORDER THAT PROBABLY IS CREATED BY TINY MUTATIONS OR LARGE MUTATIONS IN SPERM DNA DUE TO PATERNAL AGE 33 AND OVER AT THE TIME OF CONCEPTION IN THE CURRENT OR PAST GENERATIONS AND PASSED ON
Scientists Identify Gene Region Linked to Severe Depression
NARSAD researcher among those involved in the gene hunt
(Great Neck, NY - March 07, 2007) — Some people appear to be genetically predisposed to developing severe depression, but researchers have yet to pin down the genes responsible. Now, a specific region rife with promise has been located on one chromosome by a consortium of researchers working under Douglas Levinson, M.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
“This finding has a very good chance of leading to the discovery of a gene that could yield important information about why some people develop depression,” said Levinson. If problematic genetic variations could be identified, it would open the door to a whole new world of investigation, and eventually, treatment possibilities. The team’s results are reported in two papers published in the February issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
Levinson’s group, comprising researchers from six universities, achieved this breakthrough by studying 650 families in which at least two members suffered from repeated bouts of severe depression that began in childhood or early adult life. The first of the studies was a genome-wide scan that looked for evidence of genetic “linkage” within families between depression and DNA markers on the various chromosomes. The linkage study identified regions worthy of more intensive examination.
The second study was a more detailed look at the most suspicious of these regions, located on chromosome 15. Levinson said the team studied six DNA markers in this region in the first study, and an additional 88 in the second. “We found highly significant evidence for linkage to depression in this particular part of chromosome 15,” he said. “This is one of the strongest genetic linkage findings for depression so far.”
“It’s an important paper,” said Peter McGuffin, MD, dean of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College in London, who was not involved in the study. McGuffin wrote a commentary on the research that appears in the same issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry in which the research is published. “This is one of the
CHROMOSOME 15 COME FROM? IS THIS GENE MUTATION OF PATERNAL ORIGIN?
YET ANOTHER DISORDER THAT PROBABLY IS CREATED BY TINY MUTATIONS OR LARGE MUTATIONS IN SPERM DNA DUE TO PATERNAL AGE 33 AND OVER AT THE TIME OF CONCEPTION IN THE CURRENT OR PAST GENERATIONS AND PASSED ON
Scientists Identify Gene Region Linked to Severe Depression
NARSAD researcher among those involved in the gene hunt
(Great Neck, NY - March 07, 2007) — Some people appear to be genetically predisposed to developing severe depression, but researchers have yet to pin down the genes responsible. Now, a specific region rife with promise has been located on one chromosome by a consortium of researchers working under Douglas Levinson, M.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
“This finding has a very good chance of leading to the discovery of a gene that could yield important information about why some people develop depression,” said Levinson. If problematic genetic variations could be identified, it would open the door to a whole new world of investigation, and eventually, treatment possibilities. The team’s results are reported in two papers published in the February issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
Levinson’s group, comprising researchers from six universities, achieved this breakthrough by studying 650 families in which at least two members suffered from repeated bouts of severe depression that began in childhood or early adult life. The first of the studies was a genome-wide scan that looked for evidence of genetic “linkage” within families between depression and DNA markers on the various chromosomes. The linkage study identified regions worthy of more intensive examination.
The second study was a more detailed look at the most suspicious of these regions, located on chromosome 15. Levinson said the team studied six DNA markers in this region in the first study, and an additional 88 in the second. “We found highly significant evidence for linkage to depression in this particular part of chromosome 15,” he said. “This is one of the strongest genetic linkage findings for depression so far.”
“It’s an important paper,” said Peter McGuffin, MD, dean of the Institute of Psychiatry at King’s College in London, who was not involved in the study. McGuffin wrote a commentary on the research that appears in the same issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry in which the research is published. “This is one of the
Labels: consortium, genetic mutation, Major Depression
1 Comments:
Thank you for your interesting post!
I thought perhaps you may also find this related scientific study interesting to you:
Human Longevity and Parental Age at Conception
http://longevity-science.org/Parental_Age_2000.pdf
By Dr. Leonid Gavrilov, Ph.D., At April 21, 2007 at 8:34 PM
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