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New lead in autism gene searchScientists have found that autism may be linked to the way cells link together in the developing brain. Writing in this week's Nature, Children's Hospital Philadelphia researcher Hakon Hakonarson and his team have used the power of the human genome project to home in on a series of genetic hotspots that appear to be associated with developing the condition, which affects up to 1% of the population, has a strong genetic basis and is more common in males than females.
To establish how these genes might be involved in the development of autism the team studied brains from twenty-week human foetuses. The CDH9 and CDH10 genes were strongly expressed at this stage of development in the brain's frontal cortex, a region implicated in the condition. This, say the researchers, strongly suggests that cell adhesion molecules and hence a problem with the way that cells link together may be the underlying cause of autism. Further research is now needed to establish exactly how this occurs and how best to treat individuals with the problem.
4th May 2009 |
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