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Biotech / Medical : DECODE GENETICS-*DCGN

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From: mlkr12/17/2009 4:55:29 PM
   of 313
 
Moved up from 3 cents to 17 cents..BK co.
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deCODE Discovers a Major Risk Factor for Type 2 Diabetes Dependent on Parent of Origin
Date : 12/16/2009 @ 1:57PM
Source : PR Newswire
Stock : Decode Genetics (MM) (DCGN)
Quote : 0.1797 -0.0905 (-33.49%) @ 7:22AM
noad



deCODE Discovers a Major Risk Factor for Type 2 Diabetes Dependent on Parent of Origin

A Single SNP That Confers Increased Risk if Inherited From the Father, but is Protective if Inherited From the Mother

REYKJAVIK, Iceland, December 16 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Scientists at deCODE genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:DCGN) publish in the journal Nature the discovery of a version of a common single-letter variant in the sequence of the human genome (SNP) with a major impact on susceptibility to type 2 diabetes (T2D). The impact of the T2D variant is not only large, but unusual: if an individual inherits it from their father, the variant increases risk of T2D by more than 30% compared to those who inherit the non T2D-linked version; if inherited maternally, the variant lowers risk by more than 10% compared to the non T2D-linked version. Nearly one quarter of those studied have the highest risk combination of the versions of this SNP, putting them at a roughly 50% greater lifetime risk of T2D than the quarter with the protective combination. This is the second largest effect of any genetic variant for T2D apart from SNPs in TCF7L2, discovered by deCODE in 2006

"We could make this discovery beacause we are in the unique position of being able to distinguish what is inherited from the mother from what is inherited from the father. This we can do because of the large amount of data we have assembled on the Icelandic population. These data empower us in many ways. For example, using our ability to impute sequence data, we can multiply by 100 times the amount of information generated by sequencing one individual. We can use these tools to discover and integrate rarer variants into our tests and scans, identify drug targets for licensing, and put our know-how at the disposal of our service customers. We believe that this is an important advantage for conducting large-scale whole sequence studies over the next couple of years," said Kari Stefansson, CEO of deCODE

Because the risk is inherited and varies in this way, the SNP, located on chromsome 11, had never been linked to T2D even though it had been genotyped in large, traditional genome-wide association studies (GWAS). These do not distinguish between paternally and maternally inherited SNPs. But deCODE can track the parental origin of virtually any SNP in the genome of the tens of thousands of Icelandic participants in the company's gene discovery work. In this study, deCODE used its population-wide genealogy database and proprietary statistical tools to determine the parent of origin of a number of SNPs in some 40,000 Icelandic participants in the company's gene discovery programs. Some of these SNPs had previously been associated with different diseases and are located near "imprinted" genes - genes in which only the maternally or paternally inherited copy is "switched-on" to encode a protein. Five of these, one each in breast and skin cancer and three in T2D, showed that the parental origin of the variants affects the risk they confer
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