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Date: | Tue, 15 Jan 2002 00:02:20 -0500 |
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Hi,
As I read the note, the researchers have found an area in the DNA
strands that's connected statisticly with lactase deficiency in a large
number of lactose intolerant Finnish families.
The number of unrelated households is significant because this gives a
higher probability that this area of the genome causes most adult onset
LI, rather than just being a small family mutation. The fact that these
codes are spread around so many families indicates that mankind has been
living with this problem for a long (many thousands of years) time.
The size of the area seemed a bit large to me - I suspect that they've
not yet identified the exact areas of the DNA strands that account for
LI, but have narrowed the search by a great deal. (I can easily be
wrong on this one. I haven't worked in this field for about 10 years.)
It's significant in that this is the first time the genetic
underpinnings of adult onset LI has been found.
For our day-to-day lives, this won't matter. I'm not counting on a
genetic-modification to cure my LI before 2020. (Assuming a lot of
lucky researchers.)
Clif
--
........................... Clif Flynt ..........................
... Tcl/Tk for Real Programmers - Academic Press Professional ...
.... http://www.cflynt.com ............ [log in to unmask] ....
. In theory there is no difference between theory and practice .
........................ In practice, there is. .................
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