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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Ebben JD, Zorniak M, Clark PA, Kuo JS. Introduction to induced pluripotent stem cells: advancing the potential for personalized medicine. World Neurosurg. 2011 Sep-Oct;76(3-4):270-5. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: Genetic Testing a Foggy Crystal Ball at Best?

Comment by:  Svante Paabo
Submitted 4 April 2012  |  Permalink Posted 4 April 2012

In general, this paper is sobering. I would have naïvely thought that monozygotic twins would be more similar in the diseases that afflict them.

Perhaps this may be seen as positive, in that our destiny is not in our genes. Rather, many other things that we can influence, such as our lifestyle and getting medical checkups, may be much more important for reducing our risk of prematurely being affected by diseases.

Even for Alzheimer's disease, one of the cases where genome sequencing has the potential to perform best, according to this study, only two twin pairs out of 10 in the study are "concordant," i.e., in only two out of 10 cases do both monozygous twins have the disease, whereas in the eight cases, only one twin is affected.

Food for thought is also that research approaches other than genomics, in particular, into physiology and epidemiology, may provide more economical routes to a better understanding into how we prevent many diseases.

View all comments by Svante Paabo


  Related News: Genetic Testing a Foggy Crystal Ball at Best?

Comment by:  Paolo Sassone-Corsi
Submitted 4 April 2012  |  Permalink Posted 4 April 2012

The study by Vogelstein and colleagues constitutes a milestone for the field of human genetics, and has critical ramifications both medically and socially. By challenging the long-standing dogma that genetic testing would automatically provide absolute information on the future pathologies of an individual, this study resets the field and gives much more weight to the critical contribution that epigenetic modifications have in interpreting the history, physical status, and lifestyle of the patient.

View all comments by Paolo Sassone-Corsi

  Related News: Genetic Testing a Foggy Crystal Ball at Best?

Comment by:  Michael Snyder
Submitted 4 April 2012  |  Permalink Posted 4 April 2012

This study is quite valuable in that it systematically attempts to ascertain the value of genetic predictions. It is expected that negative predictions are not useful. It was interesting that the authors indicated that they could predict a positive outcome for one of 24 major diseases on average. Such information would be useful to a person at risk for that disease.

However, I expect the real figure will be even higher than that, based on the clinical interpretation of genomes that have been analyzed thus far (the Quake genome, Ashley et al., 2010); the West family, Dewey et al., 2011) and now my genome just published in Cell (Chen et al., 2012). These all show increased risk for several important diseases from the genome sequence. It is true that in many cases a person will only die (or become severely affected) from one of them; when that happens, information from the other diseases is often lost or masked. Also, as noted by the...  Read more


  Related News: Genetic Testing a Foggy Crystal Ball at Best?

Comment by:  Nathan Pearson
Submitted 5 April 2012  |  Permalink Posted 6 April 2012

Below, I'd like to offer some constructive criticism on the paper itself, along with thoughts on the engaging public discussion that it has prompted.

1. The work is conventional, and the findings not surprising.

I agree with Svante Paabo and and Paolo Sassone-Corsi that papers like this are important antidotes to any rash expectation that, for the average fairly healthy adult, precise and accurate genetic risk prediction will be easy. But I doubt that serious geneticists hold such expectations. As a meta-analysis of past twin studies, this paper reheats the old and simple observation that so-called "identical" twins don’t always get the same diseases.

Following in the long twin study tradition, the authors tackle the age-old question of how genetically heritable each disease is overall. And, beyond that, how does genetic risk vary among people? That is, for a given disease, do genomes contribute a portion of risk that varies widely, but smoothly, from person to person—or a portion of risk that varies more sharply from person to person—or some mix in between? If the...  Read more


  Related News: Genetic Testing a Foggy Crystal Ball at Best?

Comment by:  Paul Coleman, ARF Advisor
Submitted 5 April 2012  |  Permalink Posted 6 April 2012

Of course DNA is not immutable destiny. The results of this study should not have surprised anyone, considering the complexities in the regulation of gene expression. The authors have done a great service by conducting a comprehensive study that emphasizes this.

Indeed, the influence of the environment on the epigenetic regulation of the expression of a disease phenotype has already been shown by us in a study of identical twins discordant for Alzheimer's disease (Mastroeni et al., 2009). Nevertheless, there do exist genetic sequences that are highly predictive of disease phenotype, and it is important to distinguish situations in which genes are destiny and those in which they are not.

References:
Mastroeni D, McKee A, Grover A, Rogers J, Coleman PD. Epigenetic differences in cortical neurons from a pair of monozygotic twins discordant for Alzheimer's disease. PLoS One. 2009;4(8):e6617. Abstract

View all comments by Paul Coleman


  Related News: Genetic Testing a Foggy Crystal Ball at Best?

Comment by:  Reed E. Pyeritz
Submitted 6 April 2012  |  Permalink Posted 6 April 2012

The analysis by an esteemed group of genome and cancer scientists at Johns Hopkins takes a novel approach to an important issue: Now that we are on the verge of being able to sequence inexpensively any person's entire DNA sequence, what will the information mean? Certainly, people will learn about variations in their genome that might cause a rare disease in them, or predispose an offspring to a rare disease. Genome sequencing will also provide knowledge of which alleles a person has at the apolipoprotein E (ApoE) gene, a common variant that, when present in one copy, increases the risk of Alzheimer's disease around fourfold, and when present in two copies, increases the risk several times more, depending on ethnicity.

But the Johns Hopkins study asks a deeper question—about the ability to predict risk for common diseases such as various cancers, diabetes, and heart disease. Based on data that have been around for decades on the likelihood that two identical (monozygotic) twins will develop the same common disease, this new study calculates that simply knowing the sequence...  Read more

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