ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Science

Researchers discover jumping genes can lead to rare syndrome in children

The activation of certain genes known to cause the uncommon illness MSL3 syndrome in children is regulated by a novel family of DNA elements.

ANI Jun 12, 2023 22:00 IST googleads

Representative Image

London [UK], June 12 (ANI): The activation of certain genes known to cause the uncommon illness MSL3 syndrome in children is regulated by a novel family of DNA elements.
Researchers at Queen Mary University of London conducted the study, which was published today in kind Structural & Molecular Biology. They hope that by shedding fresh light on the disease's process, it can eventually help develop better therapies for this and other disorders of a similar kind.
Mutations in the MSL3 gene are known to cause a rare disease in children called MSL3 syndrome - a newly discovered disease with only around 50 registered diagnoses worldwide, although scientists predict that more cases are currently undiagnosed.
It is a disease that is in desperate need of attention. The mechanism through which MSL3 mutations lead to this syndrome is not known. There is only one previous study which discovered this disease gene, but it is not clear why mutations in MSL3 cause this disorder.
The researchers identified that a family of mobile DNA known as LINE1 elements could function as a switch to turn on certain genes. Researchers previously thought that the MSL3 complex regulates genes directly. This research shows that the MSL3 complex regulates genes by activating these mobile DNA elements.
Mutations in the MSL3 gene can lead to perturbation of genes involved in development. The developmental genes are intact, but the programme that determines how the genetic information will be fine-tuned is impaired. This could lead to a global delay in the development of multiple organs, including the brain.
"Although these DNA elements are popularly known as jumping genes, most are immobile and not harmful. We only know the tip of the iceberg about how host species are using this virus-like DNA to our own advantage," said lead author Dr Pradeepa Madapura. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Alternate method to study changes during DNA replication process

Alternate method to study changes during DNA replication process

Researchers at Colorado State University discovered an alternative way for studying alterations during the DNA replication process in lab settings using genetically modified yeast. The novel methodology provides a clearer picture than current pharmacological methods for understanding cell cycle arrest, a fundamental mechanism critical to cancer treatment and genetic concerns.

Read More
Science

Study finds new ways to prevent, treat type 2 diabetes

Study finds new ways to prevent, treat type 2 diabetes

Pancreatic cells, like human cells, have a limit to how much stress they can handle before they start to break down. Through overstimulation of these cells, certain stresses like inflammation and hyperglycemia lead to the onset of type 2 diabetes.

Read More
Science

Researchers find how cells recognize, repair DNA damage

Researchers find how cells recognize, repair DNA damage

When cells divide, there is a substantial risk of genetic harm. After all, the cell must repeat its whole genetic material, including billions of genetic letters, before it can divide. This repeatedly produces "reading errors" in the genome. Other factors, including as exposure to sunlight, alcohol, and cigarettes, are also responsible for the buildup of DNA damage over a person's lifetime.

Read More
Science

Fever promotes increased activity, mitochondrial damage

Fever promotes increased activity, mitochondrial damage

Researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Centre showed that fever temperatures increase immune cell metabolism, proliferation, and activity, but they also promote mitochondrial stress, DNA damage, and cell death in a specific subgroup of T cells.

Read More
Science

Study: Connection between gene variants, breast, ovarian cancer

Study: Connection between gene variants, breast, ovarian cancer

Researchers have identified thousands of genetic variants in a gene that could raise an individual's risk of ovarian and breast cancer, opening the door to more accurate risk assessment and individualised treatment.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.