Children with Down's syndrome are more likely to get leukaemia: stem-cells hint at why

患有唐氏综合症的儿童更容易患白血病:干细胞揭示了原因

Nature Podcast

科学

2024-09-25

21 分钟

单集简介 ...

In this episode: 00:46 Unravelling why children with Down’s syndrome are at a higher risk of leukaemiaChildren with Down’s syndrome have a 150-fold increased risk of developing leukaemia than those without the condition. Now, an in-depth investigation has revealed that changes to genome structures in fetal liver stem-cells appear to be playing a key role in this increase. Down’s syndrome is characterised by cells having an extra copy of chromosome 21. The team behind this work saw that in liver stem-cells — one of the main places blood is produced in a growing fetus — this extra copy results in changes in how DNA is packaged in a nucleus, opening up areas that are prone to mutation, including those known to be important in leukaemia development. The researchers hope their work will be an important step in understanding and reducing this risk in children with Down’s syndrome. Research Article: Marderstein et al. News and Views: Childhood leukaemia in Down’s syndrome primed by blood-cell bias 11:47 Research HighlightsHow taking pints of beer off the table lowers alcohol consumption, and a small lizard’s ‘scuba gear’ helps it stay submerged. Research Highlight: A small fix to cut beer intake: downsize the pint Research Highlight: This ‘scuba diving’ lizard has a self-made air supply 14:12 Briefing ChatHow tiny crustaceans use ‘smell’ to find their home cave, and how atomic bomb X-rays could deflect an asteroid away from a deadly Earth impact. Science: In the dark ocean, these tiny creatures can smell their way home Nature: Scientists successfully ‘nuke asteroid’ — in a lab mock-up Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
更多

单集文稿 ...

该单集暂无文稿,联系我们制作?