Genetics and Health Showroom for your holiday gift ideas
November 28, 2008 by Grace Ibay
Filed under Books, Merchandise, Reviews
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The day after Thanksgiving is the most important holiday before Christmas. It’s our signal to start shopping for holiday gifts!
But what do you give someone who is crazy about genetics?
Well, my friend, you came to the right store, if you need a gift for any of the following reasons:
- The holidays! What better way to say Merry XX-Mas! (or Merry XY-Mas!)
- Birthdays and anniversaries, graduate fellowships, employment, promotions, new discoveries, grant approval, postdoctoral work and all the major accomplishments in life!
- Something for your boss; your boss’ boss; your professor; your department head and all the important people who can sign your papers!
- Something for your laboratory head, technicians, the statisticians and programmers, and everyone who makes your life easier.
- Something for your classroom, art walls, bare walls, bathroom walls? and other walls you want jazzed up!
- and don’t forget YOU. You deserve to have the best.
Genetics and Health Showroom has everything most of what you want (shameless promotion) for gift ideas of all occasion.
For starters, your own DNA in Portrait. Yup, submit a cheek swab and DNA 11 will send you a printed canvas of your genetic material. Check out a sampling from the Gift Guide.
Happy Black Friday!
Big shoes
October 7, 2008 by Grace Ibay
Filed under General Genetics and Health
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When I was young my mother would ask me to help her pollinate some of her prized orchids. She would name them ‘var X var’ and the new plant would be slightly different than the one it came from. Little did I know that I was being introduced to genetics.
When I got into high school Biology and fell in love with the Punnett square, the rest was history. I pursued Mendel and trained with the leading scientist /adviser in plant breeding in the Philippines, the same professor who trained my mother in college. It was exciting to study the chromosomes of ancient corn species, and later to find the genes that let rice adapt to flood-prone fields. But it was my love for medicine that brought me away from plants and my jade mountain.
I went 3000 miles away to the east coast, USA to study humans, their genes and diseases, and I concentrated on asthma and allergies, the immune diseases that plague my family. For some reason, my work was good enough to land me a job under one of the best minds in statistical genetics, where I worked on the genetics of myopia for five years. And now here I am at your service, blogging for genetics and health.
In my lifetime (and I’m not that old yet, mind you) there were a plenty of big shoes to fill. With Genetics and Health, two of these have to be Dr. Hsien-hsien Lei and Elaine Warburton. Hsien put this blog on Google and she understands genetics like she breathes it. Really she does. Elaine’s expertise and the vast community in genetics brought this blog into wider focus of health and medicine.
Two big shoes to fill. I hope someday they fit me.
If you’re here and visiting, I would love to hear from you. If you’re a student, I hope I can help with school. If you’re a current reader, welcome from the new writer. I hope you stay and exchange ideas with the rest of us. Feel free to share links, posts and news back and forth. There is so much to discover about “our genes, our lives” and the field is growing like never before, don’t you think?
DNA Testing of Pregnant Teenagers
April 20, 2007 by Lei
Filed under Legislation, Policies, Ethics, Law
A Florida bill to require DNA testing of pregnant girls under the age of 14 has been voted down. The bill would have asked doctors, nurses, and other healthcare workers (including abortion providers) to collect DNA from the girl and her fetus for the purpose of identifying the father for prosecution. Sex with minors under the age of 16 in Florida is a crime.
Opponents are concerned that:
- Young pregnant girls would be discouraged from seeking healthcare for fear their boyfriends would be prosecuted. (Although I wonder how many teenagers keep up with legislation surrounding pregnancy.)
- Confidentiality between a doctor and a patient would be violated. (Healthcare providers already have to report instances of child abuse although presumably they’d use their best judgment as to whether the teenager engaged in consensual sex or not.)
- Sex between two teenagers would be criminalized. (ARGH. As a parent, I dread having to face this issue in the future.)
More on the bill at A Bird and a Bottle.
DNA Testing Spas
April 19, 2007 by Lei
Filed under Genetic Testing, Nutrigenomics
My vacation has thus far not included a spa visit, but if I ever do make it to one again in my lifetime, I might be tempted to find one that offers DNA testing. More in the New York Times:
It is possible to get many things at the Four Seasons Hotel in Westlake Village, Calif., but a blood-and-urine panel that analyzes the condition of your DNA is a relatively new development. The panel, offered through the California WellBeing Institute as part of several luxury-lifestyle packages, including a $2,800 executive physical, is boomingly popular: about 50 people signed up in January, the first month it was available.
My previous post about DNA Tests at Beauty Spas.
HT: Linda
DNA Direct and deCODE Offering TCF7L2 Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes
April 16, 2007 by Lei
Filed under Genetic Testing
Knowing more about your risk of type 2 diabetes is just a keyboard click away at DNA Direct. Together with deCODE diagnostics, DNA Direct is now offering deCODE T2, a genetic test that examines the presence of the “T” allele of SNP rs7903146, located within the transcription factor 7-like 2 (TCF7L2) gene. Almost twice as many people with type 2 diabetes have two copies of the TCF7L2 gene variant. As far as I can tell, the SNP is not known to cause a functional change in the activity of the gene, but is associated with reduced insulin secretion.
Kari Stefansson, CEO of deCODE:
Understanding one’s risk of T2D is the first step toward enabling more effective prevention. The principal risk factors for T2D are well known - obesity, unhealthy diet and lack of exercise - and by addressing these individuals can reduce their risk of becoming diabetic. Family history, part of which involves genetic risk factors, also plays a part. deCODE T2(TM) offers a new tool to help individuals and their doctors bring an
understanding of inherited risk into the picture. deCODE T2(TM) is but the first of several DNA-based predisposition tests we have in development for common diseases. We believe that as individuals, doctors and healthcare providers begin to integrate these tests as a part of everyday healthcare - much as cholesterol screening has become a part of understanding and
reducing risk of heart disease - these tests may provide major benefit to public health
Given that type 2 diabetes is a multifactorial disease caused by many different genetic and lifestyle factors, having one genetic test done on one specific gene variant may not tell you much about your risk of type 2 diabetes. If you test positive, your risk of developing type 2 diabetes is twice as high as someone who does not have two copies of the TCF7L2 gene variant but your risk still depends on other risk factors such as weight, lifestyle habits, diet, and other genetic variants. In a clinical trial studying prediabetics, those who have two copies of the TCF7L2 gene variant of interest could reduce their risk of type 2 diabetes through weight loss. These individuals may also benefit from metformin to increase insulin response.
For the informed person, this type of limited genetic information can be empowering. But, please don’t be deluded into thinking that you’re not at risk if you test negative. It takes more than one $500 genetic test to develop a truly accurate health profile.
Genetic Music
April 15, 2007 by Lei
Filed under General Genetics and Health
Yesterday, I joked around about setting my DNA sequence to music. It’s not as crazy as you might think. Dr. MA Clark has done just that with some well known DNA sequences. Here’s genetic music based on SRY, the male determining factor.
powered by ODEO
What’s up with 23andMe?
April 14, 2007 by Lei
Filed under General Genetics and Health
Biotech start-ups utilizing genetic information are nothing new. Could 23andMe be unique? Yesterday, I received a nice email from their recruiting manager, Oliver Ryan. As luck would have it, I’m vacationing in the San Francisco Bay Area and hope to swing a meeting with some 23andMe folks next week, including Anne Wojcicki and Linda Avey. If there’s anything you’d like to me to ask, email me or leave a comment here.
From the little information that’s available on their website, 23andMe sounds like one-stop shopping for personal genomic information.
23andMe is an early stage startup developing tools and producing content to help people make sense of their genetic information. Our goal is to take advantage of new genotyping technologies and help consumers explore their genetics, informed by cutting edge science.
Your annotated DNA on a USB portable hard drive could happen much sooner than any of us expect. What are your plans for all that genetic information? I might set mine to music.
The Genetic Genealogist has more about 23andMe.
Update: We’ve decided to keep the meeting off the record. I’m so sorry! When they’re ready to blast their publicity horn, though, you can bet I’ll be there to record it.
Genetic Privacy in Minnesota
April 12, 2007 by Lei
Filed under General Genetics and Health
DNA is being collected from birth. In Minnesota, blood samples are collected from all newborns unless parents specifically request an exemption. But, these samples cannot be used for research or any other reason not related to disease testing unless the parents sign consent forms.
Genetic privacy advocates think that no blood samples should be taken at all unless parents “opt-in” but if people are not automatically included, screening rates are proven to be lower; Minnesota is opt-out and tests more than 99.5% of all newborns, Maryland is opt-in and tests less than 97%. Samples for research are still opt-in which may increase administrative costs and make it more difficult for studies to be conducted since fewer samples will be available.
The new rules will hopefully ensure that newborn blood samples will be destroyed after necessary disease screening is performed. That might work for now but once whole genome sequencing is readily available, destroying blood samples will be too late since DNA analysis can be performed so quickly.
Gabriel Castro said nurses and other caregivers at the maternity ward seemed baffled by his request to opt out of the screening for his baby girl this February. He worries about security. If credit card data can be stolen, he said, why not his daughter’s genetic information?
“It’s more valuable and precious to me than a credit card,” he said.
You can try protecting your daughter’s DNA now, Mr. Castro, but chances are none of us can keep our DNA safe for much longer. We may not even want to once personalized medicine is developed that allow us to use our genetic make-up to receive better medical care.
Gene Genie Visiting Sandwalk
April 9, 2007 by Lei
Filed under General Genetics and Health

Hello fellow genetics enthusiasts,
I’m on vacation this week and next. So, head on over to Sandwalk where you can get plenty of gene action with issue #4 of Gene Genie. Genetics and Health won’t be completely lifeless while I’m taking a breather but it will be a little quieter while I try to rejuvenate myself.
Party on,
Hsien
Photo: Lilian
Sleep Deprivation and the PER3 Gene
March 10, 2007 by Lei
Filed under General Genetics and Health
Earlier this week, the National Sleep Foundation reported that more than half of American women are suffering from sleep deprivation. These women are too tired to have a good work and personal life and are completely stressed out. (I’m sure many of us can identify!) And if they also happen to have the long version of the PER3 gene, they’d also have issues with cognitive function.
A small study of 24 people, half of whom carried two copies of the long version of PER3 and the other half with two copies of the short version, found that those with the long version performed poorly on cognitive function tests after being deprived of sleep for 24 hours. People with the long version of PER3 also spend more of their sleep time in deep sleep suggesting that they need more of this type of restorative sleep than others.
It’s estimated that 10% of people in the UK have two copies of the long version of PER3. They’re probably more susceptible to sleep deprivation and have trouble working odd hours. Worst of all, bad moods have a lot to do with how little sleep a person gets. So combined with the serotonin receptor 2C gene, mood swings are inevitable in our household.
New Scientist, March 8, 2007



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