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Researchers create gene expression database to gain new insights into pneumococcal infecti

 E-Mail Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine published one of the most comprehensive analyses of how genes get expressed during infection (known as a transcriptome). The analyses include three different strains of the bacteria Streptococcus pneumoniae, which causes pneumonia, meningitis and middle-ear infections. It also includes analyses of the lungs and four other organs in an animal model where the bacteria resides, multiplies and takes hold in the body. Their findings were published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Our new analysis provides valuable new information about the animal host and pathogen interactions that take place during pneumococcal infections, said study principal investigator Hervé Tettelin, PhD, a Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, and scientist at the Institute for Genome Sciences in the University of Maryland School of Medicine. It could ultimately help researchers develop new treatments for

Hybrid approach reveals details about genes involved in Meier-Gorlin syndrome

Hybrid approach reveals details about genes involved in Meier-Gorlin syndrome Meier-Gorlin syndrome, or MGS, is a rare genetic developmental disorder that causes dwarfism, small ears, a small brain, missing patella and other skeletal abnormalities. In severe cases, MGS results in miscarriages and stillbirths. Igor Chesnokov, Ph.D., and his University of Alabama at Birmingham colleagues study this recessive, autosomal disorder in an unusual way by placing mutant human genes into fruit flies. Specifically, they look at one of the genes involved in MGS called Orc6. In a study published in Genetics, featured as a highlighted article, they used this animal model to probe the function of one human Orc6 mutation a Lysine 23 to Glutamic acid (K23E) substitution that was first reported in 2017. In people with MGS, the K23E mutation causes a similar observable developmental disorder as an Orc6 mutation that the Chesnokov team previously studied, Tyrosine 225 to Serine (Y225S) substi

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