...And a gene that causes hair loss.Hair loss can disturb the male psyche, but it's even more upsetting for women. No wonder Angela M. Christiano put her education to use when she was diagnosed with alopecia alopecia (ăl'əpē`shēə): see baldness. areta, a hair loss condition affecting more than 2 million people nationwide. While the effort may not have resolved why she loses hair, Christiano, a geneticist ge·net·i·cist n. A specialist in genetics. geneticist a specialist in genetics. geneticist at Columbia University, has now identified the first gene associated with human hair loss. She and her U.S. colleagues teamed up with scientists in Pakistan to study a family whose members frequently have alopecia universalis alopecia u·ni·ver·sa·lis n. Total hair loss on all parts of the body. , a rare condition that results in no scalp or body hair growth after birth. While closing in on the location of the responsible gene, the investigators began to wonder whether it might be the human version of a mouse gene that, when mutated, results in hairless rodents. Using the DNA sequence DNA sequence Genetics The precise order of bases–A,T,G,C–in a segment of DNA, gene, chromosome, or an entire genome. See Base pair, Base sequence analysis, Chromosome, Gene, Genome. of the mouse gene, they found the human version in the chromosomal region chromosomal region n. The part of a chromosome defined either by anatomical details, especially by banding, or by its linkage groups. they had targeted. In the Jan. 30 Science, the researchers reveal that the gene harbors a mutation in family members afflicted with alopecia universalis. The gene encodes a transcription factor, a protein that regulates the activity of other genes. Christiano and her colleagues hope that their discovery will lead to the identification of more genes involved in human hair growth. Ultimately, such research may suggest new treatments to stem or reverse hair loss. |
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