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Jussi Taipale, Ph.D. Professor of Medical Systems
Biology
Participants:
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NEWS:
June 29, 2009 REGULATORY GENOMICS scientists discover novel mechanism that increases the risk of common colorectal cancer. Published in: Nature Genetics (article). The high frequency of the gene variant makes it a very common cause of cancer at the population level. At the individual level, however, the variant does not cause significant disease predisposition because that can often be considerably reduced by lifestyle changes. Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer worldwide and a major cause of cancer mortality.
Jan 13, 2006: Scientists in REGULATORY GENOMICS -project report Genome-wide Prediction of Mammalian Enhancers Based on Analysis of Transcription-Factor Binding Affinity. Published in: Cell, Vol 124, 47-59, 13 January 2006 (article)
Press release (in Medical news today): Cracking the code for how gene expression is controlled Molecular biologists, developmental biologists and computer
scientists at the Universtity of Helsinki, Finland, came together
to advance towards cracking the code for how gene expression
is controlled. The results of this work are published in Cell,
in January 2006. t is evident that genes are expressed in tightly controlled spatial and temporal patterns but we do not know the code by which the expression is regulated. In this post-genomic era, the next big goal is to decipher the genetic code of regulation of gene expression. At the University of Helsinki the researchers have been interested in sequences which regulate gene expression. The research group, led by professor Jussi Taipale, Ph.D, has defined the binding specificities of several transcription factors. Transcription factors are DNA-binding proteins which are required to activate gene expression. In collaboration biologists and computer scientists designed a software called EEL (enhancer element locator) which searches genomic sequence for regions where many transcription factors bind DNA side by side. Finding the same region with high frequency of transcription factors in several species indicates that the DNA element regulates gene expression. The researchers showed that the predicted regulatory elements direct organ-specific expression of a marker gene in transgenic mice. Novel experimental and computational methods enabled genome-wide analysis of regulatory elements in several species. Studying the control of gene expression is a growing area of
research at the moment, likely owing to its fundamental importance
to many biological processes. The findings of the Finnish scientists
have implications to the study of cancer, evolution, development
biology and many other areas of biology. The work revealed a
potential mechanism explaining why many different genes are linked
to cancer.
Page updated July 1, 2009 |
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