Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Mice hold key to genetic secrets
(China Daily)
Updated: 2005-10-17 05:56

It may be small, furry and too fond by far of the contents of our cupboards, but the humble mouse has great things going for it. It now transpires that Mus musculus is remarkably similar to Homo sapiens. Indeed, each of us shares 99 per cent of our genes with it.

Not only are mouse genes like ours, so are the development of their embryos, their patterns of disease and even their behavioural problems. Mice get stressed, too.

These similarities are about to be exploited by the scientific community. Mice are to become researchers' main vehicles for unravelling humanity's genetic secrets.

In Venice over the weekend, scientists launched a US$180 million EU programme to breed millions of genetically engineered mice. The aim is to recreate all the main human ailments diabetes, heart disease, cancer and mental illness in the mouse. In doing so, the genetic and environmental roots of these conditions will be exposed and new paths to the creation of drugs and treatments revealed.

"The European Union has recognized the power of mouse genetics," said the project's co-ordinator, Professor Wolfgang Wurst, at the launch.

The EuroMouse project has been set up as a successor to the human genome project, which was completed three years ago. That vastly expensive programme of DNA sequencing unravelled the make-up of each of the 20,000 genes that constitute the human constitution. But scientists still do not know what half of those genes do or what proteins they make.

"It was like creating the scientific equivalent of War and Peace, but in a foreign language," said Dr Ewan Birney, of the European Bioinformatics Institute in Cambridge. "All human nature was there on the pages, but we couldn't read them. Now we are finding ways to translate those pages and the mouse is going to be crucial."

The fact that mice and men are so similar is startling, scientists admit. "They are small and furry. We are large and unfurry," said Dr Steve Brown, of the Medical Research Council's mammalian genetics unit in Harwell. "There would certainly appear to be few points of comparison. Yet they often get ill like us and display symptoms of diseases like ours." In addition, each of the 20,000 genes that make up the mouse genome has been sequenced, in detail, as part of a programme that has paralleled the Human Genome Project. "Only mouse and human genes have been studied with this precision," added Birney.

The EuroMouse programme will involve using a strain of mouse known as the BL/6 or Black Six. These are already used extensively in laboratory experiments and are completely inbred. Each male is an exact clone of all other Black Six males, and similarly for females, no matter if used in an Australian or an Austrian laboratory.

From their populations of Black Sixes, EuroMouse scientists will take embryos, delete or modify one of the genes in them, and then put the genetically engineered embryos back into mice wombs to create a new population, one that has a single mutant gene inside each member.

This process will then be repeated for each of the mouse's 20,000 genes. "Eventually, this will give us 20,000 strains of mice, each with a different mutated gene," added Birney.

Each mouse strain will then be observed to see how this mutation manifests itself in the animal's appearance and behaviour. Thus, scientists will find out what each mouse gene does and, from that, what each corresponding human gene does.

But scientists also want to find out what different gene combinations do to different people. The main diseases that afflict humans are influenced not by single genes, but by groups, and environmental factors are also involved.

"To do that, we will let different strains breed with each other, producing offspring that have several mutant genes," added Brown. "And we also add genes that produce different amounts of proteins inside our bodies. The effect will be to create very complex genetic strains that we can study and from which we can tease out the effects of many genes on an individual."

An example of the kind of work that will follow from EuroMouse has already been carried out in the US. Cardiovascular specialists in Boston have found that a version of a gene, called NKX2.5 or the Tin Man gene (named after the Tin Man in The Wizard of Oz, who had no heart), can cause problems in the development of heart walls in both mice and humans.

"But not everyone who has the mutant gene gets heart problems," said Dr Nadia Rosenthal, of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Monterotondo, Italy. "Some other factor must be involved, possibly involving another mutant gene, and mouse genetics should help pinpoint it."

The crucial factor, added Rosenthal, is that genes clearly interact inside the body. "No gene is an island. That is why we have to use whole organisms like mice. Cell cultures will not do." Given that many millions of genetically engineered mice are going to be made as part of the EuroMouse project, scientists stress this last point.

Other research on mice at Rosenthal's institute has shown that a gene for a serotonin receptor in the brain, if not switched on during a period equivalent to human adolescence, can lead to the development of chronic anxiety in adults.

Similarly, work by Karen Avraham, of Tel Aviv University, has shown a mutant version of the gene Connexin 26 produces deafness - in mice and humans by failing to ensure the proper development of cells that support the main part of the inner ear.

"We are only just starting to learn about ourselves from studies of the mouse. It is going to be pivotal to medicine in future," said Brown.

Mice, and rats, have been crucial in the development medicines used today. Scientists based at the University of Boston have even grown a human ear on the back of a mouse - with no adverse effects to the rodent. The aim is to develop techniques that could allow doctors to regrow noses and ears for humans.

(China Daily 10/17/2005 page7)



Blond Bond: Daniel Craig named next 007
Chinese beauty standard released
Affleck urges continued Gulf Coast relief
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Shenzhou VI touches down; astronauts in good conditions

 

   
 

Japanese PM visits Tokyo war shrine

 

   
 

Wolfowitz: China no threat to the world

 

   
 

US presses China for more financial reforms

 

   
 

G-20 calls for balanced, sustainable growth

 

   
 

Canada to export 450,000 bpd of oil in 6 yrs

 

   
  Mice hold key to genetic secrets
   
  US could be set for 'Mrs President' in 2009-but who?
   
  Non-stop sleepless English class a lame show
   
  Women now in training for future spaceflights
   
  Japan's Koizumi to visit war shrine on Monday
   
  Chinese version of Harry Potter hits bookstores
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Could China's richest be the tax cheaters?  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 羞羞视频免费观看| 99久无码中文字幕一本久道| 欧美国产人妖另类色视频| 啪啪网站永久免费看| 怡红院成人影院| 奇米综合四色77777久久| 久久夜色精品国产亚洲| 欧美综合国产精品日韩一| 又黄又爽无遮挡免费视频| 国产美女在线一区二区三区| 在线观看国产成人AV片| 中文字幕黄色片| 最近的2019中文字幕hd| 亚洲网红精品大秀在线观看| 美女胸又大又黄又www的网站 | 乱中年女人伦av三区| 澳门码资料2020年276期| 向日葵app下载视频免费 | 蜜桃视频一区二区三区在线观看 | 国产综合在线观看| 一本一本久久a久久精品综合麻豆| 日韩福利在线视频| 亚洲欧美在线播放| 男女一边摸一边脱视频网站| 国产AV人人夜夜澡人人爽麻豆 | 久草视频免费在线| 国产韩国精品一区二区三区| 一个人看的www免费高清| 日本人妻丰满熟妇久久久久久| 亚洲av第一网站久章草| 浮力影院第一页| 再深点灬舒服灬太大了岳| 荡女淫春护土bd在线观看| 国产无遮挡AAA片爽爽| 18到20女人一级毛片| 大胸美女放网站| 一区二区精品在线观看| 无人高清影视在线观看视频| 久久精品亚洲一区二区三区浴池| 欧美影片一区二区三区| 亚洲精品国产国语|