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loblollyboy | 5 years ago

My dad had MS, they knew that MS was caused by demyelination years ago. Is this study important because they found the gene (or a gene?) that corresponds to that?

MS is not inherited, but it looks like they’ve already identified genes as well that increase risk, and risk increases if a family member has it.

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gopalv|5 years ago

> Is this study important because they found the gene (or a gene?) that corresponds to that?

The paper only concludes that the gene is inactive when there's demyelination, the paper doesn't actually say that it causes it.

The previous research I've read says that it is expressed during repair (i.e it is the repair tool, so is in play during repair of the cells).

So even for those of us who have GPR17, making sure it is expressed for repair (if it does repair) would mean a longer active brain life.

I've got half-a binder full of research on PRRT2 from a family incident & then the opposite with conductivity research for SCN1A.

The developmental myelination defects are really weird to read about, because if they are about expression rather than presence of a gene & often a single CNV doesn't mean anything (or everything, argh), the environmental factors overwhelm things ("what kind of fat and how much did you eat during your childhood synaptic pruning period").

dreamcompiler|5 years ago

Yes, this quote is very misleading:

> Scientists discover the loss of a substance called ‘myelin’ can result in cognitive decline and diseases like Multiple Sclerosis and Alzheimer’s.

MS is pretty much defined as degeneration of the myelin and that has been true for decades.

elric|5 years ago

The word "discover" is a bit of a stretch here, but I suspect they mean that the "discovery" was that the loss of myelin is a part of age-related cognitive decline as well as MS.

But MS is not the only disease is in which demyelination occurs, not by a long shot. Even the definition of MS (when it comes to getting a diagnosis) is a lot more complex than just "degeneration of myelin".

ddoolin|5 years ago

> This new study found that the cells that drive myelin repair become less efficient as we age and identified a key gene that is most affected by ageing, which reduces the cells ability to replace lost myelin.

FYI. Sounds like it's related but maybe not directly.

xkcd-sucks|5 years ago

A whole bunch of genes and environmental risk factors correlated but current knowledge is basically "something causes autoimmune attack of oligodendrocytes (myelin) for some reason"

dsign|5 years ago

That's the entire state of bio-medicine; nothing is known for sure and everything is too complicated to understand. And all treatments are based on general statistics. I can't wait for this stage to end.