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Changes To Embryonic Stem Cells Caused By Down Syndrome Revealed
ScienceDaily (Sep. 4, 2008) - Scientists investigating the mechanisms of 
Down Syndrome (DS) have revealed the earliest developmental changes in 
embryonic stem cells caused by an extra copy of human chromosome 21 - the 
aberrant inheritance of which results in the condition.
Lead by Dean Nizetic, Professor of Cellular and Molecular Biology at Barts 
and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, the team utilised embryonic 
stem cells from a previously genetically engineered species of mice carrying 
a copy of human chromosome 21.
They discovered that extra chromosome 21 - a genetic state known as trisomy 
21 - disturbs a key regulating gene called NRSF or REST, which in turn 
disturbs the cascade of other genes that control normal development at the 
embryonic stem cell stage. Furthermore, they identified one gene (DYRK1A) on 
human chromosome 21, whose overdose in trisomy (DS) is responsible for the 
observed effects.
Down Syndrome belongs to the group of conditions called 'aneuploidies', 
defined by an abnormal loss or gain of genetic material, i.e. fragments of 
chromosomes or whole chromosomes. Aneuploidies cause congenital anomalies 
that are a prime cause of infant death in Europe and the USA, and are 
currently on the increase with advancing maternal age in European countries. 
The number of people with DS in Europe exceeds half a million.
The condition is more common than muscular dystrophy and cystic fibrosis, 
but the development of new therapeutic concepts is hindered by the fact that 
unlike muscular dystrophy and cystic fibrosis, where a single mutated gene 
causing the disease is known, the entire human chromosome 21 (containing 
around 300 genes) still has to be dissected into individual gene-dose 
contributions to the DS symptoms.
Professor Nizetic, calling for further research into the components of the 
disturbed cascade he and his team have revealed said; "We hope that further 
research might lead to clues for the design of new therapeutic approaches 
tackling developmental delay, mental retardation, ageing and regeneration of 
brain cells, and Alzheimer's disease. In other words, we hope our work will 
open new routes to tackle the genetics of these health disorders, 
approaching them from the "back entrance", as dominant component-symptoms of 
Down Syndrome."
Professor Nizetic's research was conducted in collaboration with scientists 
from UCL, NIMR, and the Institute of Cancer Research, and internationally 
with colleagues from the universities of Geneva, Barcelona, Sydney and San 
Francisco.

Source:   www.ScienceDaily.com

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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