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HOPE FOR GENETICALLY DEFECTIVE HEARTS
21 November 2006 - Max Planck Society

It’s a natural dream, given what scientists say about genes being the building blocks of life, the things that form our individual bodies and personalities. Genes even help decide what kinds of illnesses we’ll get.

It’s a natural dream, given what scientists say about genes being the building blocks of life, the things that form our individual bodies and personalities. Genes even help decide what kinds of illnesses we’ll get.

Well scientists have a number of different ways of looking at your genes. One of them is the DNA chip, or microarray. The chip was developed about a decade ago, and it takes some 30,000 genes, arranges them on a slide, and notes which ones are turned „on“ and which ones are „off.“

You see, each cell in your body has the same DNA. But you’ve got different kinds of cells. How do the different kinds of cells grow out from the same DNA? Well, for each cell, a different set of the genes in your DNA is turned „on“ or „off“, that is, are active, or inactive. For a liver cell, or a skin cell, or a heart cell, which genes are „on“ and which are „off“ is different. The process by which genes are turned on or off is called gene regulation.

But for some people, gene regulation isn’t working correctly. The right genes aren’t turned „on“ or „off.“ Those people have genetic defects, for example, a defective heart. Thousands of people are born each year with defective hearts. They are a major cause of cardiovascular disease, and often death.

But scientists at the Max-Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics in Berlin have found a new way to treat defective hearts. They take a piece of a person's heart, and then examine it with the the DNA chip. That way, they can know exactly if, and how, the heart is defective. And then they can develop a treatment just suited to the individual. Click below and Dr. Silke Sperling will give us hope for genetically deformed hearts.

http://www.mpg.de/portal/index.html

About: Max Planck Society
The research institutes of the Max Planck Society perform basic research in the interest of the general public in the natural sciences, life sciences, social sciences, and the humanities. In particular, the Max Planck Society takes up new and innovative research areas that German universities are not in a position to accommodate or deal with adequately. These interdisciplinary research areas often do not fit into the university organization, or they require more funds for personnel and equipment than those available at universities. The variety of topics in the natural sciences and the humanities at Max Planck Institutes complement the work done at universities and other research facilities in important research fields. In certain areas, the institutes occupy key positions, while other institutes complement ongoing research. Moreover, some institutes perform service functions for research performed at universities by providing equipment and facilities to a wide range of scientists, such as telescopes, large-scale equipment, specialized libraries, and documentary resources.


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