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Scientists discover 'resurrection' of dead gene during course of human evolution

Washington, March 6 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have discovered that a long-defunct gene was resurrected during the course of human evolution.

The study, led by Evan Eichler's genome science laboratory at the University of Washington and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, has provided the first evidence of a doomed gene - infection-fighting human IRGM - making a comeback in the human/great ape lineage.

The truncated IRGM gene is one of only two genes of its type remaining in humans.

The genes are Immune-Related GTPases, a kind of gene that helps mammals resist germs like tuberculosis and salmonella that try to invade cells.

Unlike humans, most other mammals have several genes of this type.

Medical interest in this gene ignited recently, when scientists associated specific IRGM mutations with the risk of Crohn's disease, an inflammatory digestive disorder.

In this latest study, the researchers reconstructed the evolutionary history of the IRGM locus within primates.

They found that most of the gene cluster was eliminated by going from multiple copies to a sole copy early in primate evolution, approximately 50 million years ago.

Comparisons of Old World and New World monkey species suggest that the remaining copy died in their common ancestor.

The gene remnant continued to be inherited through millions of years of evolution.

Then, in the common ancestor of humans and great apes, something unexpected happened. Once again, the gene could be read to produce proteins.

Evidence suggests that this change coincided with a retrovirus insertion in the ancestral genome.

"The IRGM gene was dead and later resurrected through a complex series of structural events," Eichler said. "These findings tell us that we shouldn't count a gene out until it is completely deleted," he added. (ANI)

British scientists develop 'injectable bone' that helps fractures

London, Dec 7 (ANI): British researchers have developed a material which can be squirted into broken bones where it hardens within minutes.Its makers, from Nottingham University, said that the toothpaste-like substance forms a biodegradeable scaffold over which the body's own bone grows.According to the experts, the revolutionary material could help remove the need for painful bone grafts in many cases.The brainchild of Professor Kevin Shakesheff, from the University of Nottingham, the "injectable bone" won a prestigious medical.....
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