Tracking Genes on the Path to Genetic Treatment

Before doctors like Matthias Kretzler can begin using the results of molecular research to treat patients, they need science to find an effective way to match genes with the specific cells involved in disease. As Kretzler explains, finding that link would eventually let physicians create far more effective diagnostic tools and treatments.

Written byPrinceton University
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"Among many uses, it would allow us to develop cell-type targeted therapies," said Kretzler, a University of Michigan professor of internal medicine and computational medicine and bioinformatics. He recently collaborated with Princeton University professor Olga Troyanskaya on a way to match genes to cells. "If you identify a [disease] that is in the liver or in the kidney, you could target those areas and not affect other parts of the body," he said.

Although scientists have decoded the human genome — the list of all the genes in human cells — they still have great difficulty determining the specific genes that are activated to make a kidney cell as opposed to a liver or heart cell.

In theory, an easy way to link genes to cells would be to isolate a cell and test it. However, solid human tissue is so closely packed that even the finest surgical techniques cannot separate types of cells efficiently enough for analysis. A kidney biopsy, for example, produces a mix of several different types of cells that Kretzler dismisses as "kidney soup."

That is where computers come in. Troyanskaya and her postdoctoral fellow and graduate students at Princeton have developed a system that allows computers to "virtually dissect" a kidney in a way that surgery cannot. The machine uses data from an array of gene-activity measurements in patients' kidney biopsies to separate cells mathematically and identify genes that are turned on in a specific cell type.

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