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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Dog DNA study maps breeds across the world – Science News (blog)

Posted: April 27, 2017 at 1:37 am

Mapping the relationships between different dog breeds is rough (get it?), but ateam of scientists at the National Institutes of Health did just that using the DNA of 1,346 dogs from 161 breeds. Their analysis, which appears April 25 in Cell Reports, offers a lot to chew on.

Here are five key findings from the work:

As human lifestyles shifted from hunting and gathering to herding to agriculture and finally urbanization, humans bred dogs (Canis familiaris) accordingly.Then over the last 200 years, more and more breeds emerged within those categories. Humans crossed breeds to create hybrids based on appearance and temperament, and those hybrids eventually became new breeds.

Genetic backtracking indicates that, for example, mixing between bulldogs and terriers traces back to Ireland between 1860 and 1870. That timeframe and location coincides with historical records indicating a dog-fighting fad thats linked with crossing breeds to make better fighters.

While herderdog breeds showed a lot of genetic diversity, they fallinto two general groups from the rural United Kingdom and the Mediterranean on the breed family tree. When humans switched from hunting to farming, herding breeds may have emerged independently in different areas. Geography could also explain why these two groups use different herding tactics.

A genetic legacy of America's early canine inhabitants lives on in some of today's breeds. Dogs trekked to the Americas from Asia with peoplemore than 10,000 years ago, but when European groups started to colonize the Americas, they brought European dog breeds with them. Past studies suggestthat outside breeds largely replaced New World dogs, but the new dataset shows New World dog DNA actually does persist in a few modern New World breeds, such as Chihuahuas.

European mastiffs and Mediterranean sheepdogs dont share recent changes in their DNA, meaning their size traits arose separately and for different reasons. While both breed groups specialize in guarding things, mastiffs use their size to intimidate humans, while sheepdogs use their size to overpower animal predators. Larger size may have been one of the first traits that human breeders zeroed in on, the researchers suspect.

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DNA Could Identify the Sailors (Including Women) of the Doomed Franklin Expedition – Smithsonian

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smithsonian.com April 26, 2017 1:07PM

Researchers recently extracted DNA from the remains of 24 sailors from the doomed Franklin Expedition to find the Northwest Passage, reports Megan Gannon at LiveScience. The new DNA database will allow the team to learn more about the sailors and possibly identify the remains by connecting them to living descendants.

The Franklin Expeditionset sail fromthe United Kingdom in 1845 with a crew of 134 sailors aboardtwo ships, the H.M.S. Erebus and the H.M.S. Terror.They headedto Arctic Canada to look for the fabled route between the Atlantic and the Pacific. But by 1846, Franklin and his129 crewmembers (five sailorshad earlier been discharged and sent back home) were iced in. Though the expedition was stocked with enough food to last for several years, a note discovered over a decade later indicated that Franklin and 23 crew members died of unknown causes by 1847. The other 105 sailors abandoned the ships in 1848. None of them survived.

It wasnt until the 1980s that researchers started finding remains of the sailors, reports Gannon. Corpses were found on Beechey Island and remains of other individuals were found at various sites. According to the study in theJournal of Archaeological Science: Reports,Nunavut's Department of Culture and Heritage conducted DNA testing on 39 bone and teeth fragments from around Erebus Bay as well as samples from Booth Point, King William Island, Todd Island as well as Wilmot and Crampton Bay. The were able to get results from 37 of the fragments, determining that they came from 24 different individuals.

One of the most interesting findings was that four of the remains may have come from European women, which is surprising since the crew was reported as all male. The researchers ruled out the possibility that the remains came from local Inuit women. While degraded DNA can give false female readings, the researchers say its not out of the realm of possibility that women were on the expedition and that there are records of women sneaking onboard British ships. Some of these women were smuggled onboard [the] ship, and others disguised themselves as men and worked alongside the crew for months or years before being detected or intentionally revealing themselves to be female, they write in the study.

They hope that the DNA will allow them to positively identify some of the remains. We have been in touch with several descendants who have expressed interest in participating in further research, Douglas Stenton, lead author of the study, tells Gannon. We hope that the publication of our initial study will encourage other descendants to also consider participating.

These findings are part of a renaissance of Franklin Expedition discoveries taking place recently, which are finally piecing together what went so wrong. In 2014, after 180 years of of looking, searchers found the shipwreck of the Erebus and last September they located the Terror. A study released in December which examined the toenails of one of the mummies found on Beechey Island showed that he suffered from a zinc deficiency, which may mean the canned food onboard the ships spoiled or the crew was unable to find fresh meat in the Arctic.

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Jason Daley is a Madison, Wisconsin-based writer specializing in natural history, science, travel, and the environment. His work has appeared in Discover, Popular Science, Outside, Mens Journal, and other magazines.

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PTSD risk may be passed down through our DNA – CNN

Posted: at 1:37 am

During and after the war, he used alcohol to numb the pain; as Presley grew up, so did she.

"I've always felt like I inherited this sadness that wasn't my own," said Presley, 38, now a teacher in Atlanta.

Presley was diagnosed with PTSD in 2010, and the idea that trauma can be passed down generations has long hit close to home.

For those who develop PTSD, the fear and stress of trauma doesn't go away.

"But I have not put all my eggs in the genetic basket," she said.

While the vast majority of the people in the study had experienced trauma, only a quarter of them had been diagnosed with PTSD.

Using common genetic markers, the study found evidence of a genetic risk for PTSD, but Koenen said she would need an even bigger group of people to identify the specific genes involved.

Her goal for the next study is to include up to 75,000 people, with roughly a third carrying a diagnosis of PTSD.

"Were looking at millions of places along the genome," Koenen said. "You need a lot of people" to see a clear signal for individual genes.

But for white men and all African-Americans, the researchers were unable to tease out statistically significant results from their DNA -- even though African-Americans comprised roughly half of the people in the study. This may be because prior research has largely focused on white populations, the authors noted.

The difference between men and women in this study may not be entirely explained by gender, Koenen said.

Many men in the study, but very few women, came from the military -- where service members may have experienced very different types of trauma from the general population, she said.

"Is it a military-civilian difference, or is it a male-female difference?" Koenen asked.

By unraveling the link between genetics and mental illness, researchers hope to find new ways to diagnose, prevent and treat disorders like PTSD, Koenen said.

While the research is still in its early stages, Koenen and her colleagues -- some of whom hold patents and have ties to pharmaceutical companies -- hope that they might one day identify new targets for drug development. Because of the potential genetic overlap with other psychiatric conditions, like schizophrenia, researchers are also on the lookout for shared pathways.

They also hope to find molecules that might allow doctors to measure and track the progress of mental illness. These molecules are known as biomarkers.

"Everybody has been searching for biomarkers for PTSD, but maybe the inability to find a single biomarker is because you have to stratify people according to their genetics," said Yehuda.

But looking at genetic risk has not been without some controversy, she said.

"People criticized me like you can't imagine," Yehuda said. "The minute you throw in that it's not about the trauma, (people worry that) we're jeopardizing veterans' benefits, torts cases, victims' rights -- it has to be about the event."

"You couldn't stay on that perch too long," she added. "There's too many individual differences in responses (to trauma)."

"Maybe genetics can help us clean that up a bit," said Yehuda.

However, some experts caution that focusing too much on common genetic variants may not have the therapeutic payoff these researchers are hoping for.

Willsey's research at UCSF focuses instead on rare genes, not common ones. While common genes as a group may have a greater impact on our health, he said, some researchers suspect that each rare variant holds more weight by itself.

"Rare variants are not going to be present in every patient, but the effect is going to be higher," he said, adding that neither set of genes tells the whole story by itself.

"At the end of the day ... what is really necessary is a complete picture of both common and rare variants so that we can have an integrated understanding of the biology."

After she published the book, responses from veterans' families came pouring in.

"It was such a huge epiphany to me that I wasn't alone," Presley said. "There has been such a focus on veterans and PTSD in the media, which is great, but somehow the missing piece is how that PTSD also affects a person's family."

Presley said that, through her difficult experiences, there have been additional positives. As a schoolteacher, for example, she said that her "hypersensitivity" has allowed her to read her students and be a more effective educator.

"It was like I was born with that," she said. "I have worked in some of the most challenging schools in Georgia, and I do not have classroom management problems because of my ability to read situations before they happen. That's been a huge positive that has come out of this."

Harvard's Koenen also comes from a military family. Her grandfather served in World War II, and her father served in Vietnam. Her cousin entered the military right out of high school and was sent to Iraq, where he developed PTSD.

"He never thought he'd be deployed," Koenen said. "It really changed the course of his life."

But Koenen's cousin has found some hope in her research, she said.

"It just makes him feel really encouraged that perhaps future generations of soldiers and veterans won't have to suffer as much as he has," she said.

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New hope for victims after DNA links accused sexual attacker to crime – WPEC

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New hope for victims after DNA links accused sexual attacker to crime. Image from Boynton Beach Police Department.

A Palm Beach County judge denied Bond Wednesday for a man charged with sexually assaulting a teenage girl in 2015.

Boynton Beach Police say Miguel Antonio Guzman, 41, was arrested this week in Boynton Beach by U.S. Marshals.

Guzman was arrested for the September 23, 2015 home invasion and sexual assault of a teenage girl.

Police said DNA evidence proves Guzman is the attacker.

It was very significant, said Thomas McKinlay, a Crime Scene Investigator with Boynton Beach Police Department.

Investigators say the unidentified teenage girl was home alone September 23, 2015 when she heard noise in her house. When she went to check out what the sound was, officers say the girl was then confronted and assaulted by a man now identified as Guzman.

Once he finds there is a young lady there on her own, he then obviously seized the opportunity to try to sexually assault her, McKinlay said. In the struggle, he partly undresses her and in her struggle with him, she scratched him in the groin.

McKinlay said the act of scratching and fighting back produced just enough blood from the suspect for police to test, a crucial piece of evidence that eventually led this week to Guzmans arrest.

It does give victims hope, theres no two ways about it, victims have to be rest assured, in this particular case, this is a young girl, as opposed to an adult whose more experienced with life, this must have been exceptionally terrifying for her, as a result it must make her feel better that her assailant has now been apprehended and will answer for a despicable attack on her, McKinlay said.

Investigators say after initial analysis of the DNA, the information was put into a law enforcement database. In July 2016, Palm Beach County Sheriffs Office got a confirmed hit, a link to an identity. Police tracked down Miguel Antonio Guzman, who in October 2016 provided a DNA sample and his version of what happened.

Guzman stated that he never broke into anyones home, a Probable Cause report states. I showed Guzman a picture of (redacted) and he stated that he knew the girl but never met her. He stated that he used to smoke weed with her father. Guzman knew the house that the victim lived at bus said he was never in the home.

Police say after taking a direct DNA sample from Guzman at that time, results came back April 6, 2017 confirming Guzman is the man who attacked the teenage girl.

It is an arrest a year and a half in the making. McKinlay said despite the time it takes to analyze and wait for results, it should allow victims to keep hope that no matter the days and months that may pass, that there is still hope for them to find peace and justice.

It does give victims hope, theres no two ways about it, McKinlay said. Victims have to be rest assured, and in this particular case, this is a young girlthis must have been exceptionally terrifying for her, and as a result it must make her feel better that her assailant has now been apprehended and will answer for a despicable attack on her.

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Cancer-causing DNA is found in some stem cells being used in patients – STAT

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S

ome human stem cells growing in labs that researchers have used in experiments to treat serious diseases contain serious cancer-causing mutations, scientists reported on Wednesday. The discovery raised alarms that patients could be treated for one disease, such as macular degeneration, only to develop another, cancer.

Harvard scientists obtained samples of most of the human embryonic stem cell lines registered with the National Institutes of Health for use in both basic research and in developing therapies for patients with diseases including diabetes, Parkinsons, and macular degeneration. They found that five of the 140 lineshad cells with a cancer-causing mutation.

At least two of the fivelines have been used in experimental treatments testedin clinical trials in an unknown number of patients. None is known to have developed cancer.

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Youre probably asking:

Actually, a 2011 studyfound the same cancer-causing mutation, in a gene called TP53. But the study examined a single embryonic stem cell line, said biologist Jeanne Loring of the Scripps Research Institute, who led that research.

Three patients blinded by stem cell procedure, physicians say

You start with cells from a days-old human embryo, a hollow ball of 200 or so cells. You remove the stem cells, which are genetically identical, and grow them in lab dishes. The cells divide and proliferate. All of these progeny constitute a cell line. In 2009, President Obama approvedthe use of federal funds to create such lines from embryos that were going to be discarded by fertility clinics or were donated by couples and met ethical criteria.

Scientists led by Kevin Eggan and Steven McCarroll of Harvard University zeroed in on the 182 supposedly healthy human embryonic stem cell lines that meet Obamas criteria and were registered with the NIH, they reported in Nature online. They obtained those they could (the NIH registry is just a list; you have to get the actual cells from the labs that made and own them) and did DNA sequencing on 114. They also did DNA sequencing on another 26 lines that had been prepared for human experiments. Of these 140, five had cancer-causing mutations in the TP53 gene.

Patients do not receive embryonic stem cells; they get cells that those stem cells turn into, like pancreas cells or neurons or heart cells. The problem, Eggan said, is that as stem cells grow in lab dishes they have a propensity to acquire the same kind of genetic mutations found in human cancers. The final type of cell liver, lung, pancreas, and anything else will inherit the mutations, conferring a very real risk of causing cancer in the patient who received the cells.

You might think otherwise if you received cells from any of the five. In fact, some cell lines have been used more than others, so five out of 140 might understate the risk. Two of the lines most widely used in research, called H1 and H9, both have thecancer-causing mutations. H1 was used in a famous clinical trial by the biotech company Geron for spinal cord injury. That study was abandoned in 2011, after five patients received cells, but picked upin 2014 by Asterias Biotherapeutics. H9 is the source of cells in a clinical trialfor macular degeneration. Other stem cell lines with TP53 mutations are in line for use in other trials. No one knows how many patients have received cells from lines with TP53 mutations.

A spokesman for Asterias told STAT that Geron and now Asterias have followed the original five patients and have seen no evidence of tumor formation. Asterias is giving all participants in the ongoing trial frequent MRIs to look for tumors. WiCell, a nonprofit associated with the University of Wisconsin that owns and supplies the H1 line, said it was unaware of the new findings. We always want to do what is best for the research community, said Robert Drape, executive director of WiCell. Once we have an opportunity to review [the] publication, we will consult leading researchers in the field and determine the appropriate next steps.

They started seeing cancer-causing mutations in stem cells about 10 months ago, McCarroll said, and we shared the results ahead of publication, including telling stem cell scientists about the problem at a meeting last fall. Scientists who control some of the lines have begun their own DNA testing, he said.

Scrippss Loring said there was no reason to say the sky is falling. There are ways to ensure cells are healthy before theyre implanted in patients. But NIH cancer geneticist Dr. Stephen Chanock suggested that TP53 mutations might be just the tip of the iceberg: We cannot rule out the possibility of additional, less frequent acquired [mutations] in other cancer genes, he wrote in Nature in a commentary.

Drive to get more patients experimental stem cell treatments stirs concern

Those are called induced pluripotent stem cells; they come from the cells of already-born people. Unfortunately, any such cells that grow in the lab long enough can accumulate cancer-causing mutations, Loring said. Perversely, cells that do acquire cancer mutations survive better than cells that dont.

Neither the Harvard scientists, nor Loring nor Chanock, believe the discovery of cancer-causing mutations in stem cells should derail stem cell therapies. But the Food and Drug Administration does not require researchers to sequence the DNA of cells before putting them into people, mandatingonly testing for abnormal chromosomes. Thats a mistake, Loring said. We need to use the tools we have to make sure we dont screw up somebody were trying to cure, by giving them cancer. In her own research testing iPS cells as a treatment for Parkinsons disease, we are doing tons of quality control to be sure nothing bad slips into people, she said. You have to check your cells even though the FDA does not require it.

DNAsequencing to catch cancer-causing mutations in stem cells costs about $1,000 per genome. Regulators in both Europe and the US are considering making that mandatory, said Pete Coffey of University College London, who is studying the use of stem cells to treat eye diseases. Although a 5-in-140 risk may seem small, regulators are going to ask [researchers who propose clinical trials] what are you going to do when it goes wrong, not if.

McCarroll and others think not.There is something very different about the environment of cells growing in a lab dish versus the body, he said. But suddenly discovering cancer-causing mutations in cell lines that have been around for nearly two decades is nevertheless enough of a surprise to underscore the need for regenerative medicine to proceed with care, Eggan said.

Sharon Begley can be reached at sharon.begley@statnews.com Follow Sharon on Twitter @sxbegle

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DNA leads to suspected molester’s arrest, Boynton Beach police say – WPTV.com

Posted: at 1:37 am

A man suspected of breaking into a Boynton Beach home and assaulting a 15-year-old girl in 2015 has been tracked down and arrested, Boynton Beach police say.

The alleged victim reported the crime Sept. 23, 2015. She said a man with a knife broke into the residence, intended to rob it and ended up molesting her. She said during the encounter she struggled and thought she scratched him a few times.

After police arrived, investigators collected DNA evidence.

Results were later sent to a database to see if there was a match.

Several months later police said that they learned the DNA matched Frank Williams, an alias for Miguel Guzman.

In late 2016, police eventually found Guzman and obtained his DNA through a search warrant.

In April 2017 police said that they learned the sample from Guzman and the DNA recovered at the scene of the home invasion were a match.

The U.S. Marshal's South Florida Fugitive Task Force arrested Guzman Tuesday.

Police have charged him with burglary while armed and lewd or lascivious battery on a person under 16-years-old. He's being held without bond in the Palm Beach County Jail.

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Mapping the canine genome reveals origin of dog breeds | Cosmos – Cosmos

Posted: at 1:37 am

A toy xoloitzcuintlel, a dog breed that likely descended from dogs that crossed the Bering Land Bridge with the ancestors of Native Americans.

Penny Inan

At least, parts of its genome have, thanks to the first-ever evolutionary tree for dogs, compiled from genetic sequences gathered from 161 modern breeds and published in the journal Cell Reports.

The gene map, created by a team of scientists led by Heidi Parker of the US National Institutes of Health, was created to tease out the complex relationship between breed development and human migration.

Among a number of surprising findings, the sequencing revealed significant differences between the genomes of certain American dogs notably the Peruvian Hairless and the Xoloitzcuintle and the bulk of familiar breeds developed in Europe and Asia.

Archaeologists long ago established that a type of dog, dubbed New World Dog, arrived in the Americas via the Bering Strait thousands of years ago with the ancestors of Native Americans. However, it was assumed that the breed eventually died out.

Weve been looking for some kind of signature of the New World Dog, and these dogs have New World Dogs hidden in their genome, says Parker.

The new study is not fine-grained enough to sort precisely between New World and European-derived genes in, say, the Peruvian Hairless; doing so remains a target for future research.

The dog family tree also shows perhaps not surprisingly that another cohort of dogs, comprising pointers and gun dogs such as Golden Retrievers, share a very tight genetic grouping. These breeds, largely developed in Victorian England and optimised for use in gun-centred hunting, today display little genetic variation.

The evolutionary tree showing the relationship between dog breeds.

NIH Dog Genome Project

In contrast, genomes from dogs bred for a specific purpose herding harbour considerable differences, indicating the animals were developed independently across a wide range of geographic locations and time periods.

When we were looking at herding breeds, we saw much more diversity, Parker says. There was a particular group of herding breeds that seemed to come out of the United Kingdom, a particular group that came out of northern Europe, and a different group that came out of southern Europe.

This shows herding is not a recent thing. People were using dogs as workers thousands of years ago, not just hundreds of years ago.

The scientists regard the canine family tree very much as a work in progress. About half of the worlds recognised breeds have still to be sampled.

The phylogeny, as it grows, will likely be useful for research in both canine and human health, because dogs and people share a number of diseases and neurological conditions.

Says study co-author Elaine Ostrander: Using all this data, you can follow the migration of disease alleles and predict where they are likely to pop up next, and thats just so empowering for our field because a dog is such a great model for many human diseases.

Every time theres a disease gene found in dogs it turns out to be important in people too.

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Sangamo Announces The Retirement Of Its Founder And Genome … – PR Newswire (press release)

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Added Dr. Sandy Macrae, Sangamo's president and CEO: "Edward tirelessly built Sangamo into a leader in the emerging field of genomic therapies. I look to build upon the foundation he established and to realize our shared vision of delivering novel and potentially curative medicines to patients with serious genetic diseases."

Lanphier's career is celebrated for the scientific breakthroughs he enabled at Sangamo and for his public policy and thought leadership in the regenerative medicine and advanced therapies field.

Lanphier founded Sangamo in 1995 as a company focused on regulation of gene expression based upon zinc finger DNA binding protein technology. He fostered scientific innovation within the company, enabling development of methods for highly efficient and specific genome editing. Sangamo's scientists were the first to demonstrate the advantages of this approach in plant and animal species, leading to new methods for the production of novel transgenic animal models and crop modification techniques and laying the foundation for research into human therapeutic uses.

Under Lanphier's leadership, Sangamo scientists were the first to evaluate the safety and efficacy of genome editing techniques in human clinical trials, including the Company's legacy clinical research into cell therapies for HIV. Technologies developed through this program now hold promise as a potential cell therapy approach for cancer and monogenic diseases, including sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia.

Lanphier also championed the development of in vivo genome editing techniques for their potential to cure genetically tractable diseases. Sangamo's zinc finger nuclease (ZFN) technology is the most advanced genome editing technology in development and with its demonstrated efficiency, precision and specificity has earned clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for in vivo human clinical studies. This year Sangamo is conducting the first ever in vivo genome editing clinical trials evaluating ZFN-mediated therapeutic genome editing approaches for the treatment of hemophilia B, a rare blood disorder, and two rare lysosomal storage disorders, MPS I and MPS II.

A passionate public company CEO, Lanphier developed strong relationships with a broad base of biotechnology investors and industry collaborators and kept Sangamo well financed throughout his tenure, seeking to minimize shareholder dilution and avoiding the use of debt.

Lanphier served as a member of the board of directors of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM) from 2012 through 2016 and as chairman from 2014 until 2016. During his term as chairman, ARM grew to include more than 245 members and was recognized as the leading international advocacy organization for gene and cell therapies and the broader regenerative medicine sector. Lanphier heralded the promise of curing diseases through genome editing while also advocating for responsible use of the technology, leading the charge in calling for open debate and discussion of germline genome editing with an editorial published in Nature in March 2015.

"The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine would like to recognize and thank Edward for his extraordinary leadership during his tenure as chair and his commitment to expanding the influence of the organization in the U.S. and Europe.We would also like to acknowledge his significant contributions to the gene therapy and gene editing sectors throughout his 30-plus years in the industry," said Morrie Ruffin, managing director of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine. "All of us in this field owe Edward appreciation and gratitude for his unwavering belief in the life-saving potential of these technologies."

About Sangamo Therapeutics Sangamo Therapeutics, Inc. is focused on translating ground-breaking science into genomic therapies that transform patients' lives using the company's industry leading platform technologies in genome editing, gene therapy, gene regulation and cell therapy. The Company is advancing Phase 1/2 clinical programs in hemophilia A and hemophilia B, and lysosomal storage disorders MPS I and MPS II. Sangamo has a strategic collaboration with Bioverativ Inc. for hemoglobinopathies, including beta thalassemia and sickle cell disease, and with Shire International GmbH to develop therapeutics for Huntington's disease. In addition, it has established strategic partnerships with companies in non-therapeutic applications of its technology, including Sigma-Aldrich Corporation and Dow AgroSciences. For more information about Sangamo, visit the Company's website at http://www.sangamo.com.

This press release contains forward-looking statements based on Sangamo's current expectations. These forward-looking statements include, without limitation, references relating to the potential of genome editing technology to cure diseases. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Factors that could cause actual results to differ include, but are not limited to, the dependence on the success of clinical trials of lead programs, the lengthy and uncertain regulatory approval process, uncertainties related to the timing of initiation and completion of clinical trials, whether clinical trial results will validate and support the safety and efficacy of ZFP Therapeutics, and the ability to establish strategic partnerships. Further, there can be no assurance that the necessary regulatory approvals will be obtained or that Sangamo and its partners will be able to develop commercially viable gene-based therapeutics. Actual results may differ from those projected in forward-looking statements due to risks and uncertainties that exist in Sangamo's operations and business environments. These risks and uncertainties are described more fully in Sangamo's Annual Reports on Form 10-K and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Forward-looking statements contained in this announcement are made as of this date, and Sangamo undertakes no duty to update such information except as required under applicable law.

To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sangamo-announces-the-retirement-of-its-founder-and-genome-editing-pioneer-edward-lanphier-from-the-board-of-directors-300445509.html

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DNA Day raises awareness of Human Genome Project – Texas A&M The Battalion

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In celebration of one of the biggest research programs in history, students hosted DNA Day April 25 at the MSC to provide a better understanding of genetics and genomics in healthcare.

Students from a genetics and family health communication course teamed up with genetics graduate students to present A&Ms first DNA Day, which aimed to bring awareness of the importance of genetics and the Human Genome Project, 13-year effort started in 1990 to map and understand human genes. The event featured booths with interactive DNA perspectives and guest speaker Laura Koehly from the National Human Genome Research Institute.

According to the NHGRI, the Human Genome Project allowed researchers to better understand the blueprint of a human being, resulting in more medical advances and better treatment of hereditary diseases. Congress declared April 25 National DNA Day in 2003 to celebrate the Human Genome Project as well as the 1953 discovery of DNAs double helix structure.

In her research at NHGRI, Koehly focuses on how genetic information is translated into family systems. She said she hopes DNA Day will cultivate curiosity in genetics and spark important conversations on family health.

I look at genetics in the context of hereditary cancers, Koehly said. If there is a causative mutation found in a family member, that information needs to flow from family member to family member. My hope is that DNA Day helps those who attend understand the role of genetics and health and hopefully that ripples into family conversations, and gets people discussing what heredity diseases run in their families.

Communication senior Amanda Salerno worked at the forensics booth, which focused on DNA facial recognition, or the use of genes found in DNA to reconstruct what the face may look like. Throughout her semester in genetics and family health communication, Salerno said she was happy with the opportunity to share information about DNA with the public.

We wanted to educate people about why DNA Day is cool and focus on topics such as the Human Genome Project because it is interesting, Salerno said. We want people to see that you dont have to be too interested in science to learn about it.

Assistant communication professor Emily Rauscher teaches the genetics and family health communication class and said she is proud to see how hard the students worked to put on this event.

What I wanted them to get out of this event, was understanding genetics, which is a core component of the class, and also be able to teach it to other people, Rauscher said. They went and got $1,500 in donations by themselves to help with funding the event Ive helped them in terms of giving them deadlines and checking on them but mostly, theyve been really self-sufficient Theyve done a pretty good job.

Communication senior Andrew Bell believes genetic topics are commonly ignored in society today and feels educating people about DNA and how if affects a persons health is useful information for anyone.

It relates to the longevity of your life and the way that you care about your family, Bell said. Weve been given the opportunity to explore those avenues on why it is important to communicate that within the family. Ive had the exposure of learning something that is very important and I think everyone should have the opportunity to learn about.

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DNA Day raises awareness of Human Genome Project - Texas A&M The Battalion

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Adam and the Genome Part Ten – Patheos (blog)

Posted: at 1:37 am

For me, where the problem really comes in in Scots presentation is on pp. 107-08 where Scot says that when the adjective historical is attached to Adam and Eve it means ALL of the following things: 1) 2 actual persons named Adam and Eve existed suddenly as a result of Gods creation; 2) those two persons have a biological relationship with all subsequent human beings; 3) their DNA is our DNA; 4)those two died and brought death into the world; 5) those two passed on their sin natures to their descendants 6) without 5) happening and involving all humans, then not all human beings would be in need of salvation; and 7) therefore if one denies the historical Adam one denies the Gospel of salvation.

Now as a historian myself, to use a British metaphor this is way over-egging the pudding. I agree with Scot that too often we have read the Bible through the lens of Augustine and subsequent interpreters of the Bible, to the detriment of getting at the truth of what the Bible actually says. My own view would be yes to no. 1 with a caveat, that we dont fully know how exactly God created Adam and Eve in his image and this last clause is the crucial one. The account we have in Gen. 2 is poetic, but it is also some sort of historical account, more like a primeval saga clothed in ANE garb, than a modern newspaper report.

I do not think Scots no. 2) is a necessary conclusion from any of the statements about Adam in the Bible; 3) may or may not be true, 4) is true in regard to the death of Adam and Eve, and certainly Paul thinks this affected the rest of our kind. The issue is are we talking about physical death or spiritual death or both? I incline to the view that we are talking about spiritual death here, which leads in fact to premature physical death in various cases. We will say more about Scots sevenfold taxonomy of what historical means in the next post.

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Adam and the Genome Part Ten - Patheos (blog)

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