Science - Scientists develop new analytical method
[ Oct 27 2005 7:13PM ]
A
multidisciplinary team at Israel's Weizmann Institute of Science says it
has developed a new analytical method that can trace the lineage of cells.
The scientists say they hope their work will lead to answers for such questions as: Where do stem cells originate?
and How does cancer develop?
The
accomplishment started with a challenge to common wisdom, which says every
cell in an organism carries an exact duplicate of its genome. Although mistakes
in copying occur when cells divide -- with the errors passed to the next
generation of cells as mutations -- such tiny flaws in the genome are thought
to be trivial and mainly irrelevant.
But research students Dan Frumkin
and Adam Wasserstrom of the Institute's Biological Chemistry Department raised
a new possibility: although biologically insignificant, the accumulated mutations
might hold a record of the history of cell divisions.
Together with
Professor Uriel Feige and research student Shai Kaplan, they proved such
mutations can be treated as information and used to trace lineage on a large
scale.
Their findings are detailed in the current issue of the journal PLoS Computational Biology.
United Press International