User Tag List

Pagina 296 di 320 PrimaPrima ... 196246286295296297306 ... UltimaUltima
Risultati da 2,951 a 2,960 di 3200
  1. #2951
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    questo è l'ultimo articolo sugli amori tra antiche specie rilevabili dal DNA, quindi non solo tra Sapiens e Neanderthal/Denisova, ma da parte dei predecessori di Neranderthal/Denisova con ominini ignoti di due milioni di anni fa.
    https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aay5483
    Ultima modifica di Eridano; 22-10-21 alle 17:16

  2. #2952
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    Ultima modifica di Eridano; 22-10-21 alle 17:16

  3. #2953
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    anche l'epigenetica ha qualcosa da dire sul covid


    Epigenetic Signatures May Indicate COVID-19 Infection and Predict Disease Severity
    Sep 28, 2021
    By Illumina

    Save for later
    Kathleen C. Barnes
    Kathleen C. Barnes is the director of the Colorado Center for Personalized Medicine and head of the Division of Biomedical Informatics and Personalized Medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

    Epigenetic analysis of patient blood samples may help diagnose SARS-CoV-2 infection and predict the severity of disease, according to a preprint of new research. Infection leaves a specific DNA methylation signature in hosts, wrote the scientists behind the finding, which can be used to provide insights for COVID-19 diagnosis and prognosis.

    Traditional COVID-19 testing performed using PCR-based techniques provides diagnostic information but not prognostic information. However, epigenetic tests have the potential to diagnose patients, triage them, and help clinicians manage patient care, said Kathleen Barnes, director of the Colorado Center for Personalized Medicine (CCPM) and senior author on the preprinted paper.

    “The relationship between methylation patterns in the presence or absence of a disease is potentially as informa­tive as other diagnostics platforms, and we imagined that this could be scaled to address the pandemic,” said Barnes. She and her team found that, in conjunction with machine learning techniques, DNA methylation profiling can identify a SARS-CoV-2-specific epigenetic signature.

    "We’ve been able to demonstrate high sensitivity and specificity in predicting an infection, and also in-hospital clinical deterioration,” said Barnes. “Our findings suggest that measuring methylation signatures during and after SARS-CoV-2 infection can provide clinicians with the ability to detect viral infection, as well as predict that patient’s clinical course.”

    Barnes said she developed and leads the CCPM to “disentangle the genetic underpin­nings that contribute to health disparities.” One of the center’s goals is to link extensive electronic medical records with multiomics information to accelerate discoveries that will improve human health and change the way medicine is practiced. To this end, CCPM established a CLIA- and CAP-cer­tified biobank in collaboration with UCHealth at the University of Colorado.

    Prior to the pandemic, the CCPM team had partnered with Illumina to explore options for introducing clinical methylation-based testing for tumor classification and diagnostics into the CCPM Biobank. When the COVID-19 pandemic began, this biobank allowed Barnes and her col­leagues to continue their research efforts while looking for ways to battle the SARS-CoV-2 virus. On the day shutdowns began in earnest, Barnes read an article about the epigenetics of COVID-19 and immediately shifted her research to focus on methylation and infectious disease.

    “There was a mad scramble to access biospecimens from COVID patients,” said Barnes, noting that one of the biggest challenges to this study was obtaining samples. With a biobank-fueled collaboration, the team theorized that it could use blood samples for its purposes. Acquiring blood turned out to be easier than capturing leftover nasal pharyngeal samples. The team also had a reliable health data warehouse through which it could track whether sample donors were tested for COVID-19 and, if so, whether they were positive or negative for the virus.

    As experienced Illumina microarray users, Barnes’ team began its COVID-19 studies by customizing the Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip Kit, which allows researchers to investigate methylation at over 850,000 sites across the genome at single-nucleotide resolution.

    To customize the kit, Barnes and her team added about 7,800 additional CpG sites representing genes they thought were relevant not just for COVID-19 infection, but for infectious disease in general. They called the resulting BeadChip “EPIC+.”

    “Even though there’s been a lot of work to study infectious disease, we felt like the methylome hadn’t been fully exploited,” Barnes said, “… and meth­ylation quantification using the EPIC+ BeadChip is actually pretty affordable at scale.” This customized BeadChip enabled the classification of differential host DNA methylation patterns of SAR-CoV-2, which Barnes said she hopes can inform diagnosis and prognosis in clinical settings.

    The next step for the CCPM is to use the EPIC+ chip throughout the entire biobank population, looking for additional prognostic and diagnostic signatures across infectious disease, said Barnes. “We think this is something feasible and novel, and we have existing GWAS data on the population already,” she said. “We’d been having discussions about how we could implement MethylationEPIC into our clinical biobank in the space of oncology, but now we’re thinking much bigger.”

  4. #2954
    Blut und Boden
    Data Registrazione
    03 Apr 2009
    Località
    Lothlorien
    Messaggi
    68,901
     Likes dati
    2,763
     Like avuti
    9,893
    Mentioned
    139 Post(s)
    Tagged
    1 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    Citazione Originariamente Scritto da dimecan Visualizza Messaggio
    anche l'epigenetica ha qualcosa da dire sul covid


    Epigenetic Signatures May Indicate COVID-19 Infection and Predict Disease Severity
    Sep 28, 2021
    By Illumina

    Save for later
    Kathleen C. Barnes
    Kathleen C. Barnes is the director of the Colorado Center for Personalized Medicine and head of the Division of Biomedical Informatics and Personalized Medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

    Epigenetic analysis of patient blood samples may help diagnose SARS-CoV-2 infection and predict the severity of disease, according to a preprint of new research. Infection leaves a specific DNA methylation signature in hosts, wrote the scientists behind the finding, which can be used to provide insights for COVID-19 diagnosis and prognosis.

    Traditional COVID-19 testing performed using PCR-based techniques provides diagnostic information but not prognostic information. However, epigenetic tests have the potential to diagnose patients, triage them, and help clinicians manage patient care, said Kathleen Barnes, director of the Colorado Center for Personalized Medicine (CCPM) and senior author on the preprinted paper.

    “The relationship between methylation patterns in the presence or absence of a disease is potentially as informa­tive as other diagnostics platforms, and we imagined that this could be scaled to address the pandemic,” said Barnes. She and her team found that, in conjunction with machine learning techniques, DNA methylation profiling can identify a SARS-CoV-2-specific epigenetic signature.

    "We’ve been able to demonstrate high sensitivity and specificity in predicting an infection, and also in-hospital clinical deterioration,” said Barnes. “Our findings suggest that measuring methylation signatures during and after SARS-CoV-2 infection can provide clinicians with the ability to detect viral infection, as well as predict that patient’s clinical course.”

    Barnes said she developed and leads the CCPM to “disentangle the genetic underpin­nings that contribute to health disparities.” One of the center’s goals is to link extensive electronic medical records with multiomics information to accelerate discoveries that will improve human health and change the way medicine is practiced. To this end, CCPM established a CLIA- and CAP-cer­tified biobank in collaboration with UCHealth at the University of Colorado.

    Prior to the pandemic, the CCPM team had partnered with Illumina to explore options for introducing clinical methylation-based testing for tumor classification and diagnostics into the CCPM Biobank. When the COVID-19 pandemic began, this biobank allowed Barnes and her col­leagues to continue their research efforts while looking for ways to battle the SARS-CoV-2 virus. On the day shutdowns began in earnest, Barnes read an article about the epigenetics of COVID-19 and immediately shifted her research to focus on methylation and infectious disease.

    “There was a mad scramble to access biospecimens from COVID patients,” said Barnes, noting that one of the biggest challenges to this study was obtaining samples. With a biobank-fueled collaboration, the team theorized that it could use blood samples for its purposes. Acquiring blood turned out to be easier than capturing leftover nasal pharyngeal samples. The team also had a reliable health data warehouse through which it could track whether sample donors were tested for COVID-19 and, if so, whether they were positive or negative for the virus.

    As experienced Illumina microarray users, Barnes’ team began its COVID-19 studies by customizing the Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip Kit, which allows researchers to investigate methylation at over 850,000 sites across the genome at single-nucleotide resolution.

    To customize the kit, Barnes and her team added about 7,800 additional CpG sites representing genes they thought were relevant not just for COVID-19 infection, but for infectious disease in general. They called the resulting BeadChip “EPIC+.”

    “Even though there’s been a lot of work to study infectious disease, we felt like the methylome hadn’t been fully exploited,” Barnes said, “… and meth­ylation quantification using the EPIC+ BeadChip is actually pretty affordable at scale.” This customized BeadChip enabled the classification of differential host DNA methylation patterns of SAR-CoV-2, which Barnes said she hopes can inform diagnosis and prognosis in clinical settings.

    The next step for the CCPM is to use the EPIC+ chip throughout the entire biobank population, looking for additional prognostic and diagnostic signatures across infectious disease, said Barnes. “We think this is something feasible and novel, and we have existing GWAS data on the population already,” she said. “We’d been having discussions about how we could implement MethylationEPIC into our clinical biobank in the space of oncology, but now we’re thinking much bigger.”
    Il link.
    Rubano, massacrano, rapinano e, con falso nome, lo chiamano impero; infine, dove fanno il deserto dicono che è la pace.
    Tacito, Agricola, 30/32.

  5. #2955
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    Epigenetic Signatures May Indicate COVID-19 Infection and Predict Disease Severity
    Sep 28, 2021
    By Illumina
    il celestino non lo fanno più

  6. #2956
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    questo video di 9 minuti mi pare interessante per minimizzare l'ambardan del virus (senza contestare la validità della nuova concezione dei vaccini)

    Ultima modifica di Eridano; 01-11-21 alle 22:15

  7. #2957
    Forumista storico
    Data Registrazione
    04 May 2009
    Messaggi
    41,308
     Likes dati
    1,276
     Like avuti
    2,925
    Mentioned
    10 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

  8. #2958
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    https://bit.ly/3AFSoZL?fbclid=IwAR1f...gOK_Y0Jn5V8UG8

    La connessione non è privata
    Gli utenti malintenzionati potrebbero provare a carpire le tue informazioni da bit.ly (ad esempio, password, messaggi o carte di credito).

    è raro che io riesca a trovare un libro che mi interessi davvero, pochi giorni fa però mi è successo. si tratta di : L'alba del linguaggio di Sverker Johansson, Edizioni Ponte alle Grazie, pagine 274, 20 euro. non posso esimermi dal consigliarlo a chi sia interessato all'argomento. è molto recente (2020) e l'autore è un fisico del 1961 che fino agli anni novanta del secolo scorso ha lavorato in Fisica delle particelle, folgorato improvvisamente dal nuovo interesse che gli ha fatto cambiare attività.

  9. #2959
    gigiragagnin@gmail.com
    Data Registrazione
    23 Dec 2011
    Messaggi
    10,532
     Likes dati
    10
     Like avuti
    1,432
    Mentioned
    43 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    anche se nessuno mi legge, voglio spiegare "il fattore di trascrizione" mediante un messaggio in bottiglia nell'oceano.

    il gene FOXP2 (di cui ho già parlato) è codificante per un fattore di trascrizione. i fattori di trascrizione sono proteine la cui unica funzione è legarsi con specifiche porzioni di DNA (per esempio il potenziatore/enhancer HACNS1. in questo modo un gene può controllare l'azione di un altro gene (o di più geni) facendo loro aumentare il lavoro di produzione di proteine fino al livello dovuto e per il tempo prestabilito. se la proteina del fattore di trascrizione cambia per 2/700 come nel caso di HACSN1, probabilmente andrà a legarsi con altri geni, diversificando la produzione rispetto al disegno originario.

  10. #2960
    Forumista storico
    Data Registrazione
    04 May 2009
    Messaggi
    41,308
     Likes dati
    1,276
     Like avuti
    2,925
    Mentioned
    10 Post(s)
    Tagged
    0 Thread(s)

    Predefinito Re: Genetica, razza e differenze

    Ok. scusami dime, ma mi sono un po' perso in queste tue puntate a lungo singhiozzo.
    A quale proposito scrivi questo?

 

 
Pagina 296 di 320 PrimaPrima ... 196246286295296297306 ... UltimaUltima

Tag per Questa Discussione

Permessi di Scrittura

  • Tu non puoi inviare nuove discussioni
  • Tu non puoi inviare risposte
  • Tu non puoi inviare allegati
  • Tu non puoi modificare i tuoi messaggi
  •  
[Rilevato AdBlock]

Per accedere ai contenuti di questo Forum con AdBlock attivato
devi registrarti gratuitamente ed eseguire il login al Forum.

Per registrarti, disattiva temporaneamente l'AdBlock e dopo aver
fatto il login potrai riattivarlo senza problemi.

Se non ti interessa registrarti, puoi sempre accedere ai contenuti disattivando AdBlock per questo sito