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sábado, 29 de mayo de 2010
Genetic Mutation Associated With Famous Alzheimer Patient May Have Been Identified
Genetic Mutation Associated With Famous Alzheimer Patient May Have Been Identified
Main Category: Alzheimer's / Dementia
Also Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience; Genetics
Article Date: 26 May 2010 - 1:00 PDT
Writing the latest pages of an anthropological mystery, scientists propose in this month's Archives of Neurology that it is highly possible that Auguste Deter, the first identified Alzheimer disease patient, carried the N141I presenilin-2 mutation-the same one as in present-day U.S. families descended from German emigrants who settled near the river Volga in Russia.
Based on new molecular genetic data, Thomas Bird, University of Washington, Seattle, and colleagues suggest that Volga German descendents and a present-day German family living in Deter's home state, Hesse, share this PS2 mutation, as well as a chunk of chromosome 1 surrounding it. "This means it is extremely likely they have a common ancestor," Bird told ARF. "We think there is interesting circumstantial evidence-historical, social, geographic, and genetic-that Alzheimer's original patient might also have had this mutation."
Go to the Alzheimer Research Forum for the full story.
The Alzheimer Research Forum, founded in 1996, is the web's most dynamic scientific community dedicated to understanding Alzheimer disease and related disorders. Access to the web site is free to all. The Forum's editorial priorities are as diverse as the needs of the research community. The web site reports on the latest scientific findings, from basic research to clinical trials; creates and maintains public databases of essential research data and reagents; and produces discussion forums to promote debate, speed the dissemination of new ideas, and break down barriers across the numerous disciplines that can contribute to the global effort to cure Alzheimer's disease.
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Source
Alzheimer Research Forum Foundation
Genetic Mutation Associated With Famous Alzheimer Patient May Have Been Identified
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