Download START Human Population and Life Expectancy THE FUTURE

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Transcript
SYSTEMS
CANCER
BIOLOGY
2007
STRUCTURE
SYSTEMS
How-to 1 REC. DNA
Population
Growth
5
1975
CELL
TYPE
1960
1930
CELL BIOL
HUMAN
DISEASE
1830
LIFE
EXPECTANCY
4
3
Billion
How-to 2
NERVOUS
X
6
3D
PROBLEMS
SYSTEMS
IMMUNE
BIOLOGY
FUTURE
LIFE
FORMATION
SYSTEMS
VIRUSES
BIOLOGY
Human Population and Life Expectancy
STEM
CELLS,
CLONING
86
2
1
50
2000
1950
BIOCHEM
GENETICS
START
MOL. BIO
GENOMICS
FOUNDATIONS
Slide 2 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
THE FUTURE?
Early Humans and Disease
Hunter-gatherers:
?
132
LIFE
EXPECTANCY
• Life was short, death rates were high.
• Main causes of death were accidents, food shortage,
predation, infectious disease.
86
• Non-communicable diseases (cancer, obesity,
diabetes,hypertension) were rare to non-existent.
50
1950
2000
YEAR
Slide 3 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
2050
• Early nomads lived in small bands, infrequently contacting
others. Numbers were not large enough -- and bands were not
dense enough -- to maintain (spread) acutely infectious
diseases, e.g. measles, smallpox, polio, enteric and respiratory
infections.
Slide 4 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Early Humans and Disease
Modern Humans and Disease
Domestication of plants and animals (~6000 years ago):
Highly Developed Countries
• Creation of first !urban" areas with large populations in
continuous close contact. Increase in food supply and
expansion of populations.
• Life expectancy has increased from ~50 yrs in 1950 to 86 yrs
in 2000. For the first time in history a mother knows that the
loss of one of her children before maturity is an unlikely event.
• Main causes of death were accidents, food shortage,
predation, infectious disease, with increases in communicable
diseases.
TB, Measles, Smallpox, Leprosy, Polio
• Main causes of death are non-communicable diseases
(cancer, obesity, diabetes, hypertension).
• Diet was different from that of hunter-gatherer, but still based
mainly on unrefined plant foods.
• Acute infections decline because of improved public health
information, vaccines, medical treatments, and increased
resistance to infection due to nourishment.
• Food plentiful, sedentary lifestyle.
• Non-communicable diseases (cancer, obesity, diabetes,
hypertension) were rare to non-existent.
Slide 5 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Slide 6 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Causes of Death in US
Slide 7 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Cardiovascular Disease:
Genetic and Environmental Contributions
Slide 8 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Source: Dr. Thomas C. Isaacson
Common Diseases Can Have Multiple Genetic
and Environmental Contributions
Positional Cloning: Finding Associated Markers
Colon Cancer
Find Markers associated with disease
- SNPs can be used: 1M SNPs already mapped
- Microarray-based method
Slide 9 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Figure 11.10 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007)
Positional Cloning: Finding the Affected Gene
1) Use Markers (M1 and M2) to identify chromosomal interval
2) Identify genes in known genome sequence
3) Sequence to identify mutation that may be responsible for phenotype
Slide 11 - 7.013 - 4/25/07
Slide 10 - 7.013 - 4/25/07