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Chromosome Change Points to Autism, Schizophrenia

Amanda Chan, MyHealthNewsDaily Staff Writer

People who possess a specific change in one of their chromosomes are nearly 14 times more likely to develop an autism spectrum disorder or schizophrenia than those without this change, according to a new study.

The change, which is called a deletion, happens when a section of chromosome 17 is missing. The deletion is found only in people who have an autism spectrum disorder, a developmental delay or schizophrenia, said study researcher David H. Ledbetter, a genetics professor at Emory University.

"This is just adding one more to that rapidly growing list of genetic mutations" associated with autism that doctors could use to measure autism and schizophrenia risk in children, Ledbetter told MyHealthNewsDaily.

Not all people with autism, a developmental delay or schizophrenia have this deletion. But all people who have the chromosome change will develop some form of the disorders, whether it's mild or strong enough for a diagnosis, he said.

Schizophrenia and autism are separate disorders, but other recent research has also shown the two have genetic similarities.

"At least in a subset of autism and a subset of schizophrenia, the same [genetic changes] play a major role in both," Ledbetter said. "It will be interesting in the future, because we'll have the ability to identify this type of deletion in young children, and follow them to figure out why some of them do develop autism and some don't."

The new study was published today (Nov. 4) in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

Detecting the deletion

Researchers looked in a genetic database of 15,749 people with a developmental delay, intellectual disability or an autism spectrum disorder.

They found 18 of these people had the deletion on chromosome 17. But not one of the 4,519 healthy people tested had the deletion, according to the study.

Researchers tracked down nine of the 18 people in the database with the genetic deletion. All nine had cognitive impairments, and six of them had autism, the study said.

To confirm these findings, researchers looked at two other databases that had genetic information for 7,522 people with autism or schizophrenia. They found the same deletion in two people with an autism spectrum disorder or cognitive impairment, and four adults with schizophrenia. None of the 43,076 healthy people tested had the deletion.

"That means the deletion has a major phenotypic effect," Ledbetter said. "It can manifest as developmental delay, intellectual disability or autism, or it may not be diagnosed and recognized until adulthood when there are psychiatric manifestations that lead to a diagnosis of schizophrenia."

In line with the research

Some of the people with the deletion also had other health problems, such as renal cysts and diabetes.

"We're starting to appreciate now that oftentimes, when we talk about psychiatric conditions, it doesn't really come just by itself," said Andy Shih, vice president of science for the nonprofit Autism Speaks, who wasn't involved with the study. "A lot of times, you see a host of other conditions that travels with autism."

Previous work has found genes that are associated with autism, but these genes have "low penetrance" - meaning the genes were also found in people who don't have any symptoms of autism, said Patricia Rodier, a professor at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.

"But in this case, it appears that virtually all of the people who have this anomaly of this gene have some symptoms," said Rodier, who wasn't involved with the study.

The new findings could be used in a genetic test that could help people confirm an autism or schizophrenia diagnosis, as well as determine their risk of developing one of these conditions, Rodier said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20101108/sc_livescience/chromosomechangepointstoautismschizophrenia



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這兩篇報導的要點可以和拙作《與麥芽糖兄談「求知」》一文中某些觀點參照。傳統詞彙中的「靈魂」相當於大腦神經科學中的「意識」或「高階人際、情緒、和溝通等功能」。它們不是「憑空而來」,而是基因、大腦形狀/結構、以及生長環境/經驗等「因緣和合而成。由於後者是科學家所說的「物質因素」,也就可以用「科學方法」來研究。

開欄文指出「演化論」所擔負「整合」基因研究和化石記錄研究的功能,它幫助我們了解自己發展過程和演變成現在狀況一些(可能)相關的因素。



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林德索人和現在人類的大腦形狀/結構不同 -- C. Q. Choi
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Brain Scans Reveal Difference Between Neanderthals and Us

Charles Q. Choi, LiveScience Contributor
Neanderthal newborns had similar brains to human infants, though just after birth stark changes began to set in, so that by 1 year old the two children would've had very different noggins and may have even viewed the world differently, researchers now say.

These new findings could shed light on how our closest extinct relatives might have thought differently than us, and reveal details about the evolution of our brain.

Past studies of Neanderthal skulls revealed their brains were comparable in size to ours. This suggested they might have possessed mental capabilities similar to modern humans.

Still, the brains of adult Neanderthals were a different shape than ours - theirs were less globular and more elongated. This elongated shape was actually the norm for more than 2 million years of human evolution, and is seen in chimpanzees as well. [10 Things You Didn't Know About the Brain]

Comparing scans

To learn more about when differences in brain shape first started appearing in development, researchers created virtual imprints of 11 Neanderthal brains, including a newborn, based on CT scans of their skulls.

The brains of newborn Neanderthals and human infants are about the same size, and both had relatively elongated braincases, likely to help fit through the birth canal, which is roughly similar in shape in both species. After birth, however, and especially in the first year of life, our brains and theirs start to diverge, with those of modern humans becoming more globular.

"I was surprised to see how strong that difference was, even though modern humans and Neanderthals are so closely related, and the genetic differences are so minor," researcher Philipp Gunz, a paleoanthropologist at Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology at Leipzig, Germany, told LiveScience.

Modern humans therefore depart from an ancestral pattern of brain development that separates our own species from chimpanzees and all fossil humans, including Neanderthals. The overall shape of the brain probably does not have too much significance in and of itself toward brain function, "but I would say that it does reflect changes in the pattern and timing of the growth of the underlying brain circuitry," Gunz said. This internal organization of the brain is what matters most for mental ability.

"In modern humans, the connections between diverse brain regions that are established in the first years of life are important for higher-order social, emotional, and communication functions," Gunz said. "It is therefore unlikely that Neanderthals saw the world as we do."

Gene differences

This new view on human brain development might help to explain the results of a recent comparison of Neanderthal and modern human genomes.

"Only a few genes separate modern humans from Neanderthals, some of which are related to the brain," Gunz said "What our results suggest is that these genes might be linked with the speed and pattern of brain development."

It is important to note "that all interpretations about Neanderthal cognition will always be somewhat speculative," Gunz cautioned. "What our research could allow is to study what separates modern humans from Neanderthals, to learn something about ourselves and maybe something about Neanderthals as well."

The scientists detailed their findings in the Nov. 9 issue of the journal Current Biology.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20101108/sc_livescience/brainscansrevealdifferencebetweenneanderthalsandus



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