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‘Grey’s Anatomy’ star joins rally for LGBTQ equality at Texas Capitol – KEYE TV

Former "Grey's Anatomy" star Sara Ramirez spoke out for LGBTQ equality in Texas at the Capitol on Monday. (Photo: CBS Austin)

Actress Sara Ramirez, star of ABC's "Grey's Anatomy," joined groups rallying for pro-LGBT equality at the Texas Capitol on Monday.

Ramirez was joined by members of the Texas LGBTQ and faith communities, along with representatives from the ACLU of Texas, Equality Texas, Human Rights Campaign, Texas Freedom Network, and Transgender Education Network of Texas.

In a speech, Ramirez took aim SB 6, Texas' so-called "bathroom bill," calling it "a solution in search of a problem."

Demonstrators gathered to advocate for policies that would "improve the lives of LGBTQ Texans and to speak out against legislative proposals that would amount to state-sanctioned discrimination."

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'Grey's Anatomy' star joins rally for LGBTQ equality at Texas Capitol - KEYE TV

Anatomy Of A Decision, Part 1: The C-Suite – Benzinga

Professional networking leader GLG has produced a new series of videos focused on decision making in the business world. As part of the series, GLG has interviewed a number of business leaders to ask about what considerations go into making important decisions.

In the first installment, GLG speaks with former Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE) CEO Jeff Kindler.

Kindler said a key ingredient in his meteoric rise was an open mind.

I started saying I should be open to whatever comes along, Kindler said. And that led me down all kinds of different paths I never would have predicted.

Kindler joined Pfizer as the pharma giants general council, but he admits that he had always had ambitions to be CEO. Once he assumed the role, he was presented with an opportunity to work with former President Barack Obama on the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

Kindler said many of the provision being discussed at the time were politically polarizing but would have been universally bad for the pharmaceutical industry. Rather than fight the change, Kindler and a handful of other pharma CEOs decided to take a more constructive approach.

We formed a small group of five of us who were CEOs of different companies in pharmaceuticals with different interests and a different focus, and we decided that within the right boundaries, if we could achieve acceptable policy solutions, we would support the bill, Kindler recalled.

To this day, there are people who dont like what we did, even within the pharmaceutical industry. But my view is I got attacked by both the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times editorial page, and I think when that happens you know youre in the sweet spot.

Kindler sees his participation in the process as a valuable lesson in the power of compromise. While the pharmaceutical industry made a number of financial sacrifices as part of the process, he and his colleagues were also able help shape the bill to maximize potential industry benefits.

Kindler said the success of Obamacare to this day depends on perspective. In terms of increasing health insurance coverage, the program was a complete success. In terms of fixing the underlying problems of rising healthcare costs, Kindler believes Obamacare hasnt delivered.

He closed the interview by discussing one key regret he has about his time as CEO.

I think I fell prey to something thats in human nature, which is I didnt block enough time for personal development. I think a lot of [people] that are Type A personalities end up in big jobs, and theyre so focused on both the fact that they have achieved that and the things that they need to do on it that they just dont pay attention enough to the things that are of long-term importance.

Kindler said time management, prioritization and mentorship were three of the biggest challenges of such an important professional role.

Related Link:

6 Outsider CEO Hires That Flopped

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Anatomy Of A Decision, Part 1: The C-Suite - Benzinga

Grey’s Anatomy: Caterina Scorsone Is Just as Frustrated with Amelia as Fans Are – TV Guide (blog)

Now Playing Grey's Anatomy: Caterina Scorsone Wants Fans to Keep Rooting for Amelia and Owen

For Grey's Anatomy fans who have been frustrated by Amelia (Caterina Scorsone) essentially going into hiding after suddenly leaving her husband Owen (Kevin McKidd) with a Dear John letter earlier this season, you're not alone.

"I feel you. I feel you," Scorsone empathized, when TVGuide.com caught up with her at the PaleyFest Grey's Anatomy panel this past weekend. "There are so many layers to her, and I think Owen is maybe not the easiest person to talk to all the time."

The tension between Amelia and Owen will come to a rather unpleasant head on this week's episode, when they're forced to work together on a medical case. But the nail might not be in the coffin of their relationship just yet, and Scorsone is hoping that fans haven't given up on the relationship -- because she hasn't.

Grey's Anatomy: Justin Chambers weighs in on the Jo vs. Meredith debate

"I'm rooting for you guys to keep rooting for us," she tells us.

Check out the interview to see what else Scorsone says we can expect from Amelia and Owen this season.

Grey's Anatomy airs Thursdays at 8/7c on ABC.

(Reporting by Megan Vick)

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Grey's Anatomy: Caterina Scorsone Is Just as Frustrated with Amelia as Fans Are - TV Guide (blog)

‘Grey’s Anatomy’s Jesse Williams & Sarah Drew on That Japril … – Entertainment Tonight

There might be hope for Jackson Avery (Jesse Williams) and April Kepner (Sarah Drew) after all!

Last week's episode of Grey's Anatomy saw the divorced pair open the door for a rekindled romance with a sexy hookup while in Montana on a case -- where they also met Jackson's estranged father (Eric Roberts). While the couple's future is still uncertain, Drew assured fans at PaleyFest on Sunday that Japril will always be together -- whether romantically or otherwise.

RELATED: 'Grey's Anatomy': Jackson Meets His Father and Reunites With April -- Are They Back Together?

"I think the main takeaway from that experience in Montana is that these two people... there's so much love there, there's so much respect there. They know each other so well," Drew said during the Grey's Anatomy panel. "Whether it continues and moves towards romance or stays platonic, we know for sure that these two are going to be okay, and that they're always going to depend on one another, and they will always be one another's person."

"At the end of the day, who knows [what will happen]?" she added.

Williams also commented on the pair's connection, calling April Jackson's "best friend."

"He has a great support system and an absolute failure in the same experience," he shared of the tense scene when Jackson comes face-to-face with his father. "He's doing it with the full support of his person, his best friend, April Kepner."

EXCLUSIVE: Sarah Drew on Juggling Greys Anatomy With Motherhood, Her TV Twins & Future of 'Japril'

"I was excited [for the scene]. It's been a big cloud over the character for his entire life, and my entire career playing him," Williams confessed. "It's been like, a big gaping hole, so being able to fill that in with a human being, with a person you can make eye contact with and ask all these questions... was a very exciting process."

"I really prepared myself by making sure I went over and understood my timeline, and what this character has been through, but also I was just really laid the table to be able to listen and be honest in the moment," he added.

Williams and Drew shot the episode on location in Montana, with Kevin McKidd (Owen Hunt) directing.

"We went off with Kevin to shoot episode 16 while all the rest of these guys were shooting episode 10 or 11, so we were shooting with the Scandal crew. We were working with a completely different crew, in a completely different set, on location. We were in the mountains," Drew revealed. "It really did feel like we were shooting a movie. It was really neat to get the chance to kind of get out of the hospital and follow just one specific story all the way through to the end, because we got the opportunity to really take time to listen."

"So much happened in the silence in that episode, which we just don't have the luxury for when we're servicing so many different storylines," she said. "So it was really amazing."

Photo: Getty Images

RELATED: Jesse Williams Slams Hollywood Whitewashing: 'The More Diverse a Movie Is, the More Money It Makes'

"I was so proud of Jesse and Sarah, and everyone... the work that we did," McKidd offered. "When I read that script, I wanted it to feel like an independent movie -- a really high end, quality independent movie. That was my approach."

"I really encouraged the actors to just breathe," he added, "and I think it turned into something beautiful."

While Jackson and his father hashed it out on Thursday's episode, there's clearly much more to the pair's story -- which Williams said he "would love" to explore.

"I really hope so, not just selfishly, for being able to work with such an incredibly talented actor [in Roberts]," he said. "I would love to. I think there's a lot left to do there."

RELATED: 'Grey's Anatomy,' 'Scandal' Picked Up for New Seasons

"We've planted a lot of seeds this season -- and that's one of them -- that resonate in a lot of ways," added Debbie Allen, who executive produces the series in addition to starring as Jackson's mother, Catherine Avery. "But there's more coming."

As for Williams and Drew's relationship in real life, the 35-year-old actor said it's "much more stable" -- though Ellen Pompeo and Justin Chambers arguably had the most chemistry on stage, as Chambers sweetly gave up his coat for his shivering co-star.

"We don't fight, and it's really helpful. I think that generally, it's a really lighthearted set. We crack a lot of jokes and have a lot of fun and try to save the drama for what's on screen," Williams admitted. "We're carrying that with us for weeks at a time to deliver, to serve it up to you, so it's a lot of heavy weight, a lot of drama, and drama that we're trying to figure out how to articulate for you. So we try to keep it light."

EXCLUSIVE: 'Grey's Anatomy' Stars Jesse Williams and Sarah Drew Say Jackson and April Will Find 'Happiness'

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'Grey's Anatomy's Jesse Williams & Sarah Drew on That Japril ... - Entertainment Tonight

Go inside an abandoned Iowa prison full of beauty, sadness – DesMoinesRegister.com

This is a 360 video experience. Use your mouse or the arrow keys on your keyboard to see the entire 360 view.

Take a 360-degree video tour inside the former Iowa State Penitentiary at Ft. Madison with Ret. Lieutenant Judy Milks. Brian Powers/The Register

Judy Milks worked as a lieutenant at the now closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison for 16 years. She was the prison's first female lieutenant. Here she poses for a photo in the prison's gym.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)Buy Photo

FORT MADISON, Ia. Leonard Harveyspent a lot of time in the dark, narrow crevice behind inmate cells. It was a favorite tactic of unruly inmates to plug a toilet and flood their cell. Harvey, plant operations manager at the Iowa State Penitentiary,navigatedthe walkway behind the cell to get at the plug. When aninmate heard the pipe uncapped, he flushed and sent fluidsflying, usually on a new hire who didn't know better.

This was worse than getting spit at, another inmate favorite.

Lacking freedom, they used body fluids as weapons.

The stories of darkness and mystery are rich at the oldprison, its first stones laid before Iowa was a state. At lastit sits entirely empty, themedical wing closed a couple weeks ago, leaving it a relic of human behavior and structures to correct it. And now a group is trying to save it.

Only wind whips through the prison yard where the most violent of criminals at the maximum-security fort once did sit-ups inside chain-link exercise cages. Stone walls surround the vast emptiness, razor wire shining in the sun, and corner battlement towers are vacant of trained weapons specialists who for 178 years watched inmates below.

Here, near the banks of the Mississippi River in Fort Madison, a historical group of structures begins its deterioration while the state pays $1,000 a day to keep the utilities running and its grounds secure.

Some inmates housed in the new prison for men that opened in 2015 would love to see the old hellhole crumble down, said Judy Milks, a retired prison lieutenant who was part of a group to take us inside the walls last week.

She does not.There is too much history here in the structures, some dating to 1839 andon the National Register of Historic Places, too many stories of inmates and guards who lived, worked and died in what was the nation's oldest continuously operating prison.

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Milks is part of the nonprofit Historic Iowa State Penitentiary, a group that is trying to save the prison and potentially create a museum andtourist attraction as they have in prisons in other states.

Somebody needs to come along with some money to do it. So far that isnt happening.

As we venture into the nooks and crannies of a place that might give some people the willies, its as if the last renters had just upped and moved out, leaving toilet paper rolls on metal bunks and scrawled messages on cell walls.

This was their whole world, Milks said. They never got outside these walls, unless they went to Iowa City for medical care.

The new place has no stories, added Patti Wachtendorf, who started work here in her 20s and was named the penitentiarys first female warden in 2017.

This old place has stories, she said. I can almost hear them walking around, all the noises.

Words scribed into a cell wall at the closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)

The first exterior limestonewall of ancient cell block17 has grown light with age. Back in 1839, prisoners helped construct it, and guards dug holes in the ground for them to sleep at night, said Jean Peiton, a volunteer with the nonprofit, whose mission is to save the prison for education, economic and historical purposes.

At the time, new incarceration methods were spreading nationwide, called the Auburn system. Instead of prisoners being held in large rooms before paying a fine or facing flogging or execution, the system was designed to reform prisoners with strict habits, silence and discipline while separating them into private cells at night.

A four-tiered block of cells center the stone walls, flanked by a cement walkway called a range, which correctional officers patrolled, often ducking thrown objects and insults. Most cells are roughly six feet wide, twice as long, and contain a solid metal bed frame attached to the floor and walls, a sink, toilet and two metal plates attached to the wall that act as a desk and chair.

On the toptier, another cell became famous among guards. A prisoner had painted a large frog around a sink inits open mouth. New guards were often told to find the frog to really know the prison.

New officers were often told they have to find the lizard and the frog at te closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison on Wednesday, March 8, 2017, in Fort Madison. The lizard was built into an exterior wall in one of the original buildings and the frog was painted by an inmate in their cell.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)

Behind the block of cells is a metal utility walkway where Harvey did his plumbing. Wachtendorf said correctional officers used to quietly stand back there and listen to inmates talk. You can learn a lot, she said.

To the east of the oldest structureare cell blocks 18, 19 and 20, built in the Romanesque Revival style from 1913 to 1942, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Historically significant structures that are owned by the state must be maintained, per Iowa Code. Tearing them down may be difficult.

The nonprofits first step in its preservation is an environmental assessment that costs from $120,000 to $180,000 before deciding what buildings could be used for ahistorical attraction, education and even small business opportunities.

The group has asked the state to fund it. With budget shortfalls at the state and the Iowa Department of Corrections, Wachtendorf said the money just isnt there.

But we need to preserve this history, she said.

Entering cell block 19, Milks had visions of her past work life here.

One of the old cell blocks at the closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)

It was bedlam, she said. I liked the excitement.

They called them cons for a reason. I was 50 when I started; Im 70 now. They thought they could get something over on me. Being around a while, they couldnt. Its the only way you got respect around here.

She had to quit looking up their crimes.

Baby rapers, mom killers. I had one inmate who took his mother out to eat and then killedher, she said. He loved to talk about it.

The stories behind the historical walls tell not only of correctional methods but those of men and their crimes, the group said. The old timers who lived half a century here and died. The communities that formed within the walls. The practice of religion and the moments of human decency that accompanied the deviant behavior.

Thats why Mark Fullenkamp is involved. The web director at the University of Iowa grew up in Fort Madison. His mom worked at the prison and ordered the last hanging rope in 1963. When he knew it would soon close, he toured the facility and found old wooden boxes filled with glass-plate negatives of prison mugshots dating back 150 years. He has tirelessly embarked on a preservation of those mug shots ever since, as well as compiling written and oral histories of the inmates.

Photo negatives create snapshot of prison's past

The reverse of the decades-old negative at right produced the image above of an Iowa inmate. Mark Fullenkamp has inverted and digitized more than 11,200 glass-plate negatives.(Photo: Special to the Register/Mark Fullenkamp)

The group has studied preservation efforts at penitentiaries in Pennsylvania, Missouri and Ohio. The old Mansfield, Ohio, prison has been a popular attraction because of the movie The Shawshank Redemption. Others, such as the prison in Jefferson City, Mo., have used ghost tours to help make money to maintain it.

The ghost hunters are all after them, Fullenkamp said. They show up at meetings with T-shirts from paranormal groups.

None in the group want to go down that road.

You have a lot of families of people who lived here or who were victims of the people who lived here, so we need to do it respectfully, Wachtendorf said. People died here. People lived here. This isnt a joke.

As we exit the cell block, toilet paper balls are still stuck 10 feet high on the walls across from the cells. Prisoners had wet them or peed on them to toss on the walls, a sort of mummified parting message to the old place.

The exercise cages at the closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)

Into the next cell block, 20, we stand inside a tight cell. Even without the front barsclosed, the walls close in quickly.

On one wall, an inmate had painted the Hawkeyes logo of the University of Iowa. This is where Milks stands to tell her stories.

She had to call for forced cell extractions byofficers with shields and stab-proof gear. She had to take down a man who had hanged himself.

The inmates took to calling her Eva Gabor when I was 50 pounds lighter and 20 years younger, she said. She got sick of it because every time she came on the range, they all started whistling the theme from Green Acres, an old TV show Gabor starred in. One day, she demanded they call her Phyllis Diller, a comic and actor popular in the 1960s that only the old lifers knew. Somehow it stuck.

She could get along with them with BS and not taking crap. One day when an inmate in a top tier began yelling brutal sexual insults at her, she walked to the middle of the range in full view of the cells, spread her arms wide and leaned back to yell with a wicked smile: Now this is prison!

They all laughed, even the guy yelling the insults, she said.

God I love this place. Isnt it awful?

In the theater, Fullenkamp said he recently found a receipt for what he considers the last movie shown there, Death Games, about an inmate using martial arts to clean up a corrupt prison. More importantly, the Art Deco seatsand historical nature of the 1930s-era U-shaped structure that also housed the chow hall are in peril.

The theater sits silent in an 1930s-era building that was damaged in a 2015 storm.(Photo: Special to The Register)

Its deteriorating with a roof problemand window damage from a 2015 storm.

The group Preservation Iowa has the penitentiary on its 2017 list of most endangered properties.

The city doesnt want it, the state doesnt want it, but people in these rust belt towns need something, Fullenkamp saidof one of Iowas most economically struggling counties (Lee). I think we are opening minds. At first, people said you cant do anything with that place. Then you see them thinking about it.

Go into a bar around here at 1 a.m., added Harvey, you hear all kinds of ideas.

Historical photographs tell many stories. Fullenkamp has ideas of projecting inmates historical photographs on cell walls with an audio oral history for tour groups. There are stories of the 1981 riot, when inmates took over the prison, orthe 2005 escape, when two inmates fashioned a makeshift rope out of upholstery fabric and used to it climb over razor wire and leap from the stone walls, only to be captured later in nearby states.

There are the hanging gallows, right on the southeast corner of the prison walls, where Fullenkamp saw the photo of ahangmans lowered head as he preparedan execution.

A crowd gathers at the Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison before the Nov. 24, 1922, hanging of Orrie Cross, who had slain Des Moines grocer George Fosdick.(Photo: Register file photo)

We stand there quietly looking at the cornerwhere people far and wide came, even onriver boats,to watch men hang.

Its the unknown, Peiton said of the appeal inside these walls. Wondering how one survives in little cages. The vast aura of despair and occasional enlightenment of the men who lived here.

A section of the now closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison that was once used for hangings .(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)

The ring of an old sweat lodge that native Americans used outside the chapel attests to past hopes. Those inmates, said the prison officials and preservationist on the tour, were not always the monsters portrayed in film. They could be normal, absentdrugs or alcohol, or with medication for a mental illness.

I stood there talking to these guys like Im talking to you,Harvey said. Its not like on TV, all those popular prison shows now. But I have to admit, I go home and watch them, and Im in here living it every day. Doesnt make sense.

Many of the old inmates who fiercely protected their routines, playing dominoes on the tables aside the gymnasium floor, have passed on. The young guys who played basketball have staked out their territories in the new prison.

All thats left here is a lot of emptiness, not a sound for the first time in 178 years.

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Go inside an abandoned Iowa prison full of beauty, sadness - DesMoinesRegister.com

Cancer Genetics Overview (PDQ)Health Professional Version …

Introduction

[Note: Many of the medical and scientific terms used in this summary are found in the NCI Dictionary of Genetics Terms. When a linked term is clicked, the definition will appear in a separate window.]

[Note: A concerted effort is being made within the genetics community to shift terminology used to describe genetic variation. The shift is to use the term variant rather than the term mutation to describe a difference that exists between the person or group being studied and the reference sequence. Variants can then be further classified as benign (harmless), likely benign, of uncertain significance, likely pathogenic, or pathogenic (disease causing). Throughout this summary, we will use the term pathogenic variant to describe a disease-causing mutation. Refer to Table 1, Variant Classification for Pathogenicity for more information.]

The etiology of cancer is multifactorial, with genetic, environmental, medical, and lifestyle factors interacting to produce a given malignancy. Knowledge of cancer genetics is rapidly improving our understanding of cancer biology, helping to identify at-risk individuals, furthering the ability to characterize malignancies, establishing treatment tailored to the molecular fingerprint of the disease, and leading to the development of new therapeutic modalities. As a consequence, this expanding knowledge base has implications for all aspects of cancer management, including prevention, screening, and treatment.

Genetic information provides a means of identifying people who have an increased risk of cancer. Sources of genetic information include biologic samples of DNA, information derived from a persons family history of disease, findings from physical examinations, and medical records. DNA-based information can be gathered, stored, and analyzed at any time during an individuals life span, from before conception to after death. Family history may identify people with a modest to moderately increased risk of cancer or may serve as the first step in the identification of an inherited cancer predisposition that confers a very high lifetime risk of cancer. For an increasing number of diseases, DNA-based testing can be used to identify a specific pathogenic variant as the cause of inherited risk and to determine whether family members have inherited the disease-related variant.

The proportion of individuals carrying a pathogenic variant who will manifest the disease is referred to as penetrance. In general, common genetic variants that are associated with cancer susceptibility have a lower penetrance than rare genetic variants. This is depicted in Figure 1. For adult-onset diseases, penetrance is usually described by the individual carrier's age and sex. For example, the penetrance for breast cancer in female carriers of BRCA1/BRCA2 pathogenic variants is often quoted by age 50 years and by age 70 years. Of the numerous methods for estimating penetrance, none are without potential biases, and determining an individual carrier's risk of cancer involves some level of imprecision. EnlargeFigure 1. Genetic architecture of cancer risk. This graph depicts the general finding of a low relative risk associated with common, low-penetrance genetic variants, such as single-nucleotide polymorphisms identified in genome-wide association studies, and a higher relative risk associated with rare, high-penetrance genetic variants, such as pathogenic variants in the BRCA1/BRCA2 genes associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer and the mismatch repair genes associated with Lynch syndrome.

Genetic variants, or changes in the usual DNA sequence of a particular gene, can have harmful, beneficial, neutral, or uncertain effects on health and may be inherited as autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, or X-linked traits. Pathogenic variants that cause serious disability early in life are usually rare because of their adverse effect on life expectancy and reproduction. However, if the pathogenic variant is autosomal recessivethat is, if the health effect of the variant is caused only when two copies (one from each parent) of the altered gene are inherited carriers of the pathogenic variant (healthy people carrying one copy of the altered gene) may be relatively common in the general population. Common in this context refers, by convention, to a prevalence of 1% or more. Pathogenic variants that cause health effects in middle and older age, including several pathogenic variants known to cause a predisposition to cancer, may also be relatively common. Many cancer-predisposing traits are inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, that is, the cancer susceptibility occurs when only one copy of the altered gene is inherited. For autosomal dominant conditions, the term carrier is often used in a less formal manner to denote people who have inherited the genetic predisposition conferred by the pathogenic variant. (Refer to individual PDQ summaries focused on the genetics of specific cancers for detailed information on known cancer-susceptibility syndromes.)

Increasingly, the public is turning to the Internet for information related both to familial and genetic susceptibility to cancer and to genetic risk assessment and testing. Direct-to-consumer marketing of genetic testing for hereditary breast and colon cancer is also taking place in some communities. This wider availability of information related to inherited cancer risk may raise concerns among persons previously unaware of the implications inherent in their family histories and may lead some of these individuals to consult their primary care physicians for management advice and recommendations. In many instances, the evaluation and advice will be relatively straightforward for physicians with a basic knowledge of familial cancer. In a subset of patients, the evaluation may be more complex, calling for referral to genetics professionals for further evaluation and counseling.

Correctly recognizing and identifying individuals and families at increased risk of developing cancer is one of countless important roles for primary care and other health care providers. Once identified, these individuals can then be appropriately referred for genetic counseling, risk assessment, consideration of genetic testing, and development of a management plan. When medical and family histories reveal cardinal clues to the presence of an underlying familial or genetic cancer susceptibility disorder (see list below),[1] further evaluation may be warranted. (Refer to the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information about the components of a genetics cancer risk assessment.)

Features of hereditary cancer include the following:

Concluding that an individual is at increased risk of developing cancer may have important, potentially life-saving management implications and may lead to specific interventions aimed at reducing risk (e.g., tamoxifen for breast cancer, colonoscopy for colon cancer, or risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy for ovarian cancer). Information about familial cancer risk may also inform a persons ability to plan for the future (lifestyle and health care decisions, family planning, or other decisions). Genetic information may also provide a direct health benefit by demonstrating the lack of an inherited cancer susceptibility. For example, if a family is known to carry a cancer-predisposing variant in a particular gene, a family member may experience reduced worry and lower health care costs if his or her genetic test indicates that he or she does not carry the familys disease-related variant. Conversely, information about familial cancer risk may have psychological effects or social costs (e.g., worry, guilt, or increased health care costs). Family dynamics also may be affected. For instance, the involvement of one or more family members may be required for genetic testing to be informative, and parents may feel guilt about passing inherited risk on to their children.

Knowledge about a cancer-predisposing variant can be informative not only for the individual tested but also for other family members. Family members who previously had not considered the implications of their family history for their own health may be led to do so, and some will undergo genetic testing, resulting in more definitive information on whether they are at increased genetic risk. Some relatives may learn their carrier status without being directly tested, for example, when a biological parent of a child who is a known carrier of a pathogenic variant is identified as an obligate carrier. Founder effects may result in the recognition that specific ethnic groups have a higher prevalence of certain pathogenic variants, knowledge that can be either clinically useful (permitting more rational genetic testing strategies) or potentially stigmatizing. Testing may reveal the presence of nonpaternity in a family. There is the theoretical possibility that genetic information may be misused, and concerns about the potential for insurance and/or employment discrimination may arise. Genetic information may also affect medical and lifestyle decisions.

Refer to individual PDQ summaries for available evidence addressing all ancillary issues.

Genetic counseling is a process of communication between genetics professionals and patients with the goal of providing individuals and families with information on the relevant aspects of their genetic health, available testing and management options, and support as they move toward understanding and incorporating this information into their daily lives. Genetic counseling generally involves the following six steps:

Genetic evaluation involves an interaction with a medical geneticist or other genetics professional and may include a physical examination and diagnostic testing, in addition to genetic counseling. The principles of voluntary and informed decision making, nondirective and noncoercive counseling, and protection of client confidentiality and privacy are central to the philosophy of genetic counseling.[1-5] (Refer to the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information on the nature and history of genetic counseling.)

From the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s, genetic counseling expanded to include discussion of genetic testing for cancer risk, as more genes associated with inherited cancer risk were discovered. Cancer genetic counseling often involves a multidisciplinary team of health professionals that may include a genetic counselor, an advanced practice genetics nurse, or a medical geneticist; a mental health professional; and various medical experts such as an oncologist, surgeon, or internist. The process of counseling may require a number of visits to address medical, genetic testing, and psychosocial issues. Even when cancer risk counseling is initiated by an individual, inherited cancer risk has implications for the entire family. Because genetic risk affects an unknown number of biological relatives, contact with these relatives is often essential to collect accurate family and medical histories. Cancer genetic counseling may involve several family members, some of whom will have had cancer and others who have not.

The impact of risk assessment and predisposition genetic testing is improved health outcomes. The information derived from risk assessment and/or genetic testing allows the health care provider to tailor an individual approach to health promotion and optimize long-term health outcomes through the identification of at-risk individuals before cancer develops. The health care provider can thus intervene earlier either to reduce the risk or diagnose a cancer at an earlier stage, when the chances for effective treatment are greatest. The information may be used to modify the management approach to an initial cancer, clarify the risks of other cancers, or predict the response of an existing cancer to specific forms of treatment, all of which may alter treatment recommendations and long-term follow-up.

Individual PDQ summaries focused on the genetics of specific cancers contain detailed information about many known cancer susceptibility syndromes. Although this is not a complete list, the following cancer susceptibility syndromes are discussed in the PDQ cancer genetics summaries (listed in parentheses after the syndromes):

The methods described in this section are intended to provide a brief background about the genetic analysis and discovery approaches that have been used during the past 10 to 15 years for identifying disease susceptibility genes. These methods led to important cancer gene discoveries such as BRCA1 and breast cancer risk. Since then, genetic analysis techniques have transitioned to next-generation sequencing methods as described in the Clinical Sequencing section of this summary.

The recognition that cancer clusters within families has led many investigators to collect data on multiple-case families with the goal of localizing cancer susceptibility genes through linkage studies.

Linkage studies are typically performed on high-risk kindreds, in whom multiple cases of a particular disease have occurred, in an effort to identify disease susceptibility genes. Linkage analysis statistically compares the genotypes between affected and unaffected individuals and looks for evidence that known genetic markers are inherited along with the disease trait. If such evidence is found (linkage), it provides statistical data that the chromosomal region near the marker also harbors a disease susceptibility gene. Once a genomic region of interest has been identified through linkage analysis, additional studies are required to prove that there truly is a susceptibility gene at that position. Linkage analysis is affected by the following:

An additional issue in linkage studies is the background rate of sporadic cancer in the context of family studies. For example, because a mans lifetime risk of prostate cancer is one in eight,[1] it is possible that families under study have both inherited and sporadic prostate cancer cases. Thus, men who do not inherit the prostate cancer susceptibility gene that is segregating in their family may still develop prostate cancer.

One way to address inconsistencies between linkage studies is to require inclusion criteria that defines clinically significant disease.[2-6] This approach attempts to define a homogeneous set of cases/families to increase the likelihood of identifying a linkage signal. It also prevents the inclusion of cases that may be considered clinically insignificant that were identified by screening in families.

GWAS are identifying common, low-penetrance susceptibility alleles for many complex diseases,[7] including cancer. This approach can be contrasted with linkage analysis, which searches for genetic-risk variants cosegregating within families that have a high prevalence of disease. While linkage analyses are designed to uncover rare, highly penetrant variants that segregate in predictable heritance patterns (e.g., autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, X-linked, and mitochondrial), GWAS are best suited to identify multiple, common, low-penetrance genetic polymorphisms. GWAS are conducted under the assumption that the genetic underpinnings of complex phenotypes, such as prostate cancer, are governed by many alleles, each conferring modest risk. Most genetic polymorphisms genotyped in GWAS are common, with minor allele frequencies greater than 1% to 5% within a given population (e.g., men of European ancestry). GWAS capture a large portion of common variation across the genome.[8,9] The strong correlation between many alleles located close to one another on a given chromosome (called linkage disequilibrium) allows one to scan the genome without having to test all 10 million known single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). With GWAS, researchers can test approximately 1 million to 5 million SNPs per study and ascertain almost all common inherited variants in the genome.

In a GWAS, allele frequency for each SNP is compared between cases and controls. Promising signalsin which allele frequencies deviate significantly in case compared to control populationsare validated in replication cohorts. To have adequate statistical power to identify variants associated with a phenotype, large numbers of cases and controls, typically thousands of each, are studied. Because up to 1 million SNPs are evaluated in a GWAS, false-positive findings are expected to occur frequently when using standard statistical thresholds. Therefore, stringent statistical rules are used to declare a positive finding, usually using a threshold of P < 1 10-7.[10-12]

To date, hundreds of cancer-risk variants have been identified by well-powered GWAS and validated in independent cohorts.[13] These studies have revealed consistent associations between specific inherited variants and cancer risk. However, the findings should be qualified with a few important considerations:

The implications of these points are discussed in greater detail in the PDQ summaries on Genetics of Breast and Gynecologic Cancers; Genetics of Colorectal Cancer; and Genetics of Prostate Cancer. Additional details can be found elsewhere.[18]

Broad-scale genome sequencing approaches, including multigene (panel) testing, whole-exome sequencing (WES), and whole-genome sequencing (WGS), are rapidly being developed and incorporated into a spectrum of clinical oncologic settings, including cancer therapeutics and cancer risk assessment. Several institutions and companies offer tumor sequencing, and some are developing precision medicine programs that sequence tumor genomes to identify driver genetic alterations that are targetable for therapeutic benefit to patients.[1-3] Many of these tumor-based approaches use germline DNA sequences as a reference to discriminate between DNA changes only within the tumor and those that are potentially inherited. In the genetic counseling and cancer risk assessment setting, the use of multigene testing to evaluate inherited cancer risk is becoming more common and may become routine in the near future, with institutions and companies offering multigene testing to detect alterations in a host of cancer riskassociated genes.

These advances in gene sequencing technologies also identify variants in genes related to the primary indication for ordering genetic sequence testing, along with findings not related to the disorder being tested. The latter genetic findings, termed incidental or secondary findings, are currently a source of clinical, ethical, legal, and counseling debate. The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) and the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues have published literature that address some of these issues and provide guidance and recommendations for their use.[4-7] However, controversy continues about when and what results to provide to patients and their health care providers. This section was created to provide information about genomic sequencing technologies in the context of clinical sequencing and highlights additional areas of clinical uncertainty for which further research and approaches are needed.

DNA sequencing technologies have undergone rapid evolution, particularly since 2005 when massively parallel sequencing, or next-generation sequencing (NGS), was introduced.[8]

Automated Sanger sequencing is considered the first generation of sequencing technology.[9] Sanger cancer gene sequencing uses polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of genetic regions of interest followed by sequencing of PCR products using fluorescently labeled terminators, capillary electrophoresis separation of products, and laser signal detection of nucleotide sequence.[10,11] While this is an accurate sequencing technology, the main limitations of Sanger sequencing include low throughput, a limited ability to sequence more than a few genes at a time, and the inability to detect structural rearrangements.[10]

NGS refers to high throughput DNA sequencing technologies that are capable of processing multiple DNA sequences in parallel.[11] Although platforms differ in template generation and sequence interrogation, the overall approach to NGS technologies involves shearing and immobilizing DNA template molecules onto a solid surface, which allows separation of molecules for simultaneous sequencing reactions (millions to billions) to be performed in a parallel fashion.[10,12] Thus, the major advantages of NGS technologies include the ability to sequence thousands of genes at one time, a lower cost, and the ability to detect multiple types of genomic alterations, such as insertions, deletions, copy number alterations, and rearrangements.[10] Limitations include the possibility that specific gene regions may be missed, turnaround time can be lengthy (although it is decreasing), and informatics support to handle massive amounts of genetic data has lagged behind the sequencing capability. A well-recognized bottleneck to utilizing NGS data is the lack of advanced computational infrastructure to preserve, process, and analyze the vast amount of genetic data. The magnitude of the variants obtained from NGS is exponential; bioinformatics approaches need to evaluate genetic variants for predicted functional consequence in disease biology. There is also a need for user-friendly bioinformatics pipelines to analyze and integrate genetic data to influence the scientific and medical community.[11,13]

The following terms are defined to better understand the clinical application of NGS testing and implications of results reported.

NGS has multiple potential clinical applications. In oncology, the two dominant applications are: 1) the assessment of somatic alterations in tumors to inform prognosis and/or targeted therapeutics; and 2) the assessment of the germline to identify cancer risk alleles.

There are multiple approaches to tumor testing for somatic alterations. With targeted multigene testing, a number of different genes can be assessed simultaneously. These targeted multigene tests can differ substantially in the genes that are included, and they can be tailored to individual tumor types. Targeted multigene testing limits the data to be analyzed and includes only known genes, which makes the interpretation more straightforward than in whole exome or whole genome techniques. In addition, greater depth of coverage is possible with targeted multigene testing than with WES or WGS. Depth of coverage refers to the number of times a nucleotide has been sequenced; a greater depth of coverage has fewer sequencing errors. Deep coverage also aids in differentiating sequencing errors from single nucleotide polymorphisms.

WES and WGS are far more extensive techniques and aim to uncover variants in known genes and in genes not suspected a priori. The discovery of a variant that is unexpected for a particular tumor type can lead to the use of a directed therapeutic, which could improve patient outcome. WES generates sequence data of the coding regions of the genome (representing approximately 1% of the human genome), rather than the entire genome (WGS). Consequently, WES is less expensive than WGS.

Noncoding variants can be identified using WGS but cannot be identified using WES. The use of WGS is limited by cost and the vast bioinformatics needed for interpretation. Although the costs of sequencing have dropped precipitously, the analysis remains formidable.[14]

Although the goal of WES and WGS is to improve patient care by detecting actionable genetic variants (mutations that can be targeted therapeutically), a number of issues warrant consideration. This testing may detect pathogenic variants, variants of uncertain significance (VUS), or no detectable abnormalities. In addition, pathogenic variants can be found in genes that are thought to be clearly related to tumorigenesis but can also be detected in genes with unclear relevance (particularly with WES and WGS approaches). VUS have unclear implications as they may, or may not, disrupt the function of the protein. The definition of actionable can vary, but often this term is used when an aberration, if found, would lead to recommendations against certain treatments (such as variants in ras) for which a clinical trial is available, or for which there is a known targeted drug. Although there are case reports of success with this approach, it is unlikely to be straightforward. Studies are ongoing.

Some commercial and single-institution assays test only the tumor. Clearly pathogenic variants found in important genes in the tumor can be somatic but could also be from the germline. In situations in which somatic analysis is paired with a germline analysis, it can be determined whether an identified alteration is inherited. A study that estimated the prevalence of germline variants from patients undergoing tumor sequencing with matched, normal DNA sequencing reported that cancer susceptibility genes were identified in 198 of 1,566 individuals (12.6%). Only 81 of these 198 individuals (40.9%) had pathogenic variants in cancer susceptibility genes concordant with their tumor type. When expanding to include known noncancer-related Mendelian disease genes, 246 of 1,566 individuals (15.7%) had pathogenic or presumed pathogenic germline variants identified.[15]

Sequencing tumors may lead to the identification of hereditary (germline) pathogenic variants.[16] Founder pathogenic variants in well-characterized cancer susceptibility genes are highly suggestive of a germline pathogenic variant. Hypermutated tumor phenotype may suggest an underlying constitutional defect in DNA repair. Clinical characteristics that fit with a particular genetic predisposition, such as family history, young age at diagnosis, or specific tumor type, may also raise the suspicion of a germline variant correlating with a tumor variant. A high variant allele fraction may also indicate a germline variant. All of these factors signify a potential need for patients to undergo genetic counseling and to consider confirmatory germline genetic testing.

The absence of a variant in a gene assessed as part of somatic testing does not rule out the presence of an inherited susceptibility. All patients whose personal and family histories are suggestive of hereditary cancer should consider germline testing regardless of their somatic results.

Ongoing clinical trials, such as the NCI Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH) Trial, are examining the value of somatic sequencing to find actionable targets. Germline sequencing is occurring as a component of this study.

The goal of germline testing is to identify pathogenic variants associated with an inherited risk of cancer and to guide cancer riskmanagement decisions. Also, germline testing can aid in some management decisions at the time of diagnosis (e.g., decisions about colectomy in Lynch syndromerelated colon cancer and contralateral mastectomy in carriers of BRCA1/2 pathogenic variants). In addition, there are emerging data that germline status may help determine systemic therapy (e.g., the use of cisplatin or PARP inhibitors in BRCA1/2-related cancer).

To date, most germline genetic testing has been performed in a targeted manner, looking for variants in the gene(s) associated with a clinical picture (e.g., BRCA1 and BRCA2 in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer; or the mismatch repair [MMR] genes in Lynch syndrome). However, targeted multigene tests now available commercially or within an institution contain different sets of genes. Some are targeted to all cancers, others to specific cancers (e.g., breast, colon, or prostate cancers). The genes on the multigene tests include high-penetrance genes related to the specific tumor (such as BRCA1/2 on a breast cancer panel); high penetrance genes related to a different type of cancer but with a more moderate risk for the tumor of reference (such as CDH1 or MSH6 on a breast cancer panel); and moderate penetrance genes for which clinical utility is uncertain (such as NBN on a breast cancer panel). Because multiple genes are included on these panels, it is anticipated that many, and perhaps most, individuals undergoing testing using these panels will be found to have at least one VUS. As it is not possible to do standard pretest counseling models for a panel of 20 genes, new counseling models are needed. Ethical issues of whether patients can opt out of specific results (such as TP53 or CDH1 in breast cancer) and how this would be done in clinical practice are unresolved.

Refer to the Multigene (panel) testing section in the PDQ summary on Cancer Genetics Risk Assessment and Counseling for more information about the use of targeted multigene tests.

WES for inherited cancer susceptibility is also commercially available. Secondary findings are likely and management of such findings is evolving.

The ACCE model uses four main components to evaluate new genetic tests: analytic validity; clinical validity; clinical utility; and ethical, legal, and social issues.[17]

The ACCE model's framework has been adopted worldwide for the evaluation of genetic tests.

Several layers of complexity exist in managing NGS in the clinical setting. At the purely technical level, improvements in the sequencing technique have allowed for sequencing across the entire genome, not merely the exome. As the costs decrease, exomic and genomic sequencing of tumor and normal tissue can be expected to become more routine.

With routine use of WGS, major challenges in interpretation emerge. Foremost is the matter of determining which sequence variations in known cancer predisposition genes are pathologic, which are harmless, and which variations require further evaluation as to their significance. This is not a new challenge. Various groups are developing processes for the interpretation and curation of a growing database of variants and their significance. For example, the International Society for Gastrointestinal Hereditary Tumors has developed such a process for the MMR genes in concert with the Human Variome Project and International Mismatch Repair Consortium.

These processes may serve as a framework for the emerging challenge of interpreting the significance of sequence variations in genes of uncertain or unknown function in regulation of neoplastic progression or other diseases. Larger cancer predisposition multigene tests have been developed by commercial laboratories, with their own process for interpretation. To the extent that increasingly larger multigene tests include genes of unknown significance, governance of the interpretation process requires that academic institutions offering their own multigene tests or using external proprietary panels develop a deliberative process for managing the quality assurance for test performance (including Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments [CLIA], where appropriate) and interpretation.

ACMG has issued the following updated guidelines for achieving accountability in interpreting and reporting secondary findings:[4,18]

Concerns remain that the routine reporting of germline variants in the context of tumor sequencing would require laboratories to conduct results review with germline and tumor genome expertise, which would be expected to increase costs, laboratory efforts, and turnaround time for results reporting. The nature of discussions between oncologists and patients would be altered to include the multiple facets involved with germline testing and potential results. Pre- and post-test discussions would also potentially require involvement of genetic counselors and geneticists, who are a limited resource in oncology practices. Recent expert comment stated that more data are needed about the benefits of return of secondary germline findings to cancer patients undergoing tumor sequencing, citing a need for recommendations by experts in the oncology and genetics communities.[19]

It is still very early in the development processes for oversight at the institutional level. As an example, at one high-volume cancer center, the following process has been used:

Informed consent for the sequencing of highly penetrant disease genes has been conducted since the mid-1990s in the contexts of known or suspected inherited diseases within selected families. However, the best methods and approaches for educating and counseling individuals about the potential benefits, limitations, and harms of genetic testing to facilitate informed decisions have not been fully elucidated or adequately tested. New informed consent challenges arise as NGS technologies are applied in clinical and research settings. Challenges to facilitating informed consent include the following:

The increased availability and decreased cost of NGS technology are expanding the use of genome-wide testing of tumors, with the goal of identifying somatic variants as potential targets for cancer treatment. While identifying germline pathogenic variants may be considered secondary to the main purpose of testing tumors, the possibility of identifying actionable secondary findings of pathogenic variants in cancer predisposition genes supports the need for genetic counseling in this context. Approaches for genetic counseling and informed consent in the context of tumor sequencing have been proposed.[20,21]

Advances in genetic sequencing technologies have dramatically reduced the cost of sequencing an individual's full genome or exome. WGS and WES are increasingly being employed in the clinical setting in testing for both somatic and germline variants. In addition, multigene tests are now available commercially or within an institution. Considerable debate surrounds the clinical, ethical, legal, and counseling aspects associated with NGS and gene panels. Future research is warranted to address these issues.

PDQ cancer genetics summaries focus on the genetics of specific cancers, inherited cancer syndromes, and the ethical, social, and psychological implications of cancer genetics knowledge. Sections on the genetics of specific cancers include syndrome-specific information on the risk implications of a family history of cancer, the prevalence and characteristics of cancer-predisposing variants, known modifiers of genetic risk, opportunities for genetic testing, outcomes of genetic counseling and testing, and interventions available for people with increased cancer risk resulting from an inherited predisposition.

The source of medical literature cited in PDQ cancer genetics summaries is peer-reviewed scientific publications, the quality and reliability of which is evaluated in terms of levels of evidence. Where relevant, the level of evidence is cited, or particular strengths of a study or limitations of the evidence are described.

Refer to the Levels of Evidence for Cancer Genetics Studies summary for more information on the levels of evidence utilized in the PDQ cancer genetics summaries.

Health care providers who deliver genetic services, including genetic counseling, can be located through local, regional, and national professional genetics organizations and through NCI's Cancer Genetics Services Directory website. Providers of cancer genetic services are not limited to one specialty and include medical geneticists, genetic counselors, advanced practice genetics nurses, oncologists (medical, radiation, or surgical), other surgeons, internists, pediatricians, family practitioners, and mental health professionals. A cancer genetics health care provider will assist in constructing and evaluating a pedigree, eliciting and evaluating personal and family medical histories, and calculating and providing information about cancer risk and/or probability of a pathogenic variant being associated with cancer in the family. In addition, if a genetic test is available, these providers can assist in pretest counseling, laboratory selection, informed consent, test interpretation, posttest counseling, and follow-up.

The PDQ cancer information summaries are reviewed regularly and updated as new information becomes available. This section describes the latest changes made to this summary as of the date above.

Editorial changes were made to this summary.

This summary is written and maintained by the PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of NCI. The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or NIH. More information about summary policies and the role of the PDQ Editorial Boards in maintaining the PDQ summaries can be found on the About This PDQ Summary and PDQ - NCI's Comprehensive Cancer Database pages.

This PDQ cancer information summary for health professionals provides comprehensive, peer-reviewed, evidence-based information about cancer genetics. It is intended as a resource to inform and assist clinicians who care for cancer patients. It does not provide formal guidelines or recommendations for making health care decisions.

This summary is reviewed regularly and updated as necessary by the PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Board members review recently published articles each month to determine whether an article should:

Changes to the summaries are made through a consensus process in which Board members evaluate the strength of the evidence in the published articles and determine how the article should be included in the summary.

Any comments or questions about the summary content should be submitted to Cancer.gov through the NCI website's Email Us. Do not contact the individual Board Members with questions or comments about the summaries. Board members will not respond to individual inquiries.

Some of the reference citations in this summary are accompanied by a level-of-evidence designation. These designations are intended to help readers assess the strength of the evidence supporting the use of specific interventions or approaches. The PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board uses a formal evidence ranking system in developing its level-of-evidence designations.

PDQ is a registered trademark. Although the content of PDQ documents can be used freely as text, it cannot be identified as an NCI PDQ cancer information summary unless it is presented in its entirety and is regularly updated. However, an author would be permitted to write a sentence such as NCIs PDQ cancer information summary about breast cancer prevention states the risks succinctly: [include excerpt from the summary].

The preferred citation for this PDQ summary is:

PDQ Cancer Genetics Editorial Board. PDQ Cancer Genetics Overview. Bethesda, MD: National Cancer Institute. Updated . Available at: https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/causes-prevention/genetics/overview-pdq. Accessed . [PMID: 26389204]

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Climate, not just genetics, shaped your nose, study says – wtkr.com

Though you undoubtedly inherited your distinctive nose from your parents, its shape was sculpted over time by adaptations to your ancestors local climate, suggests a study published in the journal PLOS Genetics on Thursday.

Theres a great variety in nose variation from person to person, yet if you look at different ethnic populations, you will see differences across groups. For example, the distance between the wings of the nose, also known as nasal alare, are larger in people of West African, South Asian and East Asian ancestry than in people of European ancestry.

So its easy to understand why many people, past and present, have this sense that human populations are very distinct and have been separated for a long time, said Mark D. Shriver, lead author of the study and a professor of anthropology at Penn State University. Still, he noted, human populations have always split and come back together, split and come back together, so theres no separate origin.

In fact, genetic differences between various population groups is not that great. Using noses as just one example, said Shriver, the surface, the appearance of people in different populations is much greater than what the genetic differences show on average.

So what accounts for the differences in nose shape across population groups?

Comparison of four separate populations

To answer this question, Shriver and his colleagues selected 2,637 individuals from a database of about 10,000.

They selected people from four populations: North Europeans, South Asians, East Asians and West Africans. Shriver and his team looked at 3-D photos of each individual and examined the width of the nostrils, the distance between nostrils, the height of the nose, nose ridge length, nose protrusion, external area of the nose and area of the nostrils.

So we have multiple cameras that image a persons face, either simultaneously or in a carefully constructed series, and from those multiple angles, you can derive the shape of a face as a point cloud, Shriver said. The resulting 3-D image allows you to take careful measurements usually calibrated down to a tenth of a millimeter, he said.

Through complex analysis of the data, the researchers learned that the width of the nostrils and the base of the nose measurements differed across populations more than could be accounted for by genetic drift.

Genetic drift refers to the fact that some people leave behind more descendants (and therefore more genes) than others just by chance and not necessarily because they are healthier or better survivors.

If not genetic drift, then natural selection must have played a hand in the evolution of nose shape in humans. Natural selection refers to the fact that people better adapted to their environment are the ones who survive and reproduce, leaving behind their genes.

Natural selection is usually divided into ecological selection, simple survival and sexual selection aspects of mate choice and competition, Shriver said.

Exploring how local climate might have contributed to differences in nose shape, the researchers looked at the distribution of nasal traits in relation to local temperatures and humidity and found that the width of the nostrils strongly correlated with temperature and absolute humidity.

Your nose and nasal cavity function as your personal air conditioner, warming and moistening air before it reaches your lower respiratory tract. In the late 1800s, British anatomist and anthropologist Arthur Thomson observed that long and thin noses occurred in dry, cold areas, while short and wide noses occurred in hot, humid areas.

Since narrower nostrils allow the nose to humidify and warm the air more efficiently, this was probably essential in cold, dry climates; people with narrower nostrils probably fared better and had more offspring than people with wider nostrils in locations farther from the equator.

Some of the nose variation is really the climate; some of its not, Shriver said, noting that sexual selection played a role, as well, with people choosing mates based on notions of beauty, such as finding a smaller nose more attractive.

The fact that we find such big male-female differences in all of the nose traits is also consistent with sexual selection having a hand, he said. Still ecological selection and sexual selection often reinforce each other, and the study provides evidence that both types of selection have helped shape the nose.

Practical application

The finding might have some practical application, providing important clues in criminal investigations, Shriver said.

We didnt get into it in this paper, but (the research) is highlighting some of the variety of data we have, he said. He and his colleagues have been creating 3-D photos and collecting measurements and other data on thousands of people for over 12 years.

The practical application is something we call forensic molecular photo fitting: making a phenotypic prediction of a person from evidentiary DNA, Shriver said.

In other words, if a crime victims identity isnt known, Shriver can deduce what the person might look like based on DNA from their skeletal remains. The appearance of a perpetrator might be based on DNA from some material left behind at the crime scene.

More than half of my research effort, the end product, will be molecular photo fitting, said Shriver, who offered one example of why there is interest in this application.

A lot of serial rapists, for example, are not in the national database, CODIS, he said of the Combined DNA Index System, a forensic and technological tool for linking violent crimes maintained by the FBI. We can link the rapes together, but (the perpetrators are) not in the database, so you dont have the resources to find them.

If you can make a phenotypic prediction, maybe that face or even that genetic ancestry can be quite helpful in directing the investigation, Shriver said. A lot of good detectives and police officers really understand the range of variation within different populations.

Oversimplification?

Despite grants from the US Department of Defense and other funding sources, some scientists remain skeptical.

Although interesting, I think that the study oversimplifies the possible adaptation that has occurred by simply evaluating the external shape, said Dr. Stella Lee, an assistant professor at University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, who was not involved in the research. The main limitation of this study is that only the external shape of the nose was analyzed rather than actual nasal airflow, humidity and internal nasal measurements.

The inside of the nose is lined by a multitude of cilia (which look like a shag carpet under the microscope) that are constantly providing clearance of mucus, pathogens and inhaled particulates to the back of the nose by beating in a rhythmic motion, Lee said. It is amazing that our noses can differentiate between potentially harmful pathogens and innocuous agents.

Still, Lee noted that the authors themselves acknowledged the possibility of oversimplification.

Seth M. Weinberg, an associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh, said anthropologists have long been interested in the nose as one example of human adaptation.

This study advances our understanding of the complex picture of human facial diversity, said Weinberg, who had no role in this project, though he has collaborated with several of the authors.

The research attempts to connect the shape of the external human nose to geographically relevant ecological factors operating throughout our evolutionary past up to the modern day, he said.

Researchers have only recently begun to uncover the genetic basis of traits like nasal shape in humans, Weinberg said. Studies like this can help us to frame those genetic findings within a broader context.

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Climate, not just genetics, shaped your nose, study says - wtkr.com

My all girls’ school: empowering, feminist and sexist – Varsity Online

Michelle Taute busts the myth that all girls schools are free from sexism

One of the myths surrounding all girls schools is that sexism is non-existent. This is, after all, the subliminal message of marketing campaigns by such institutions, whose rhetoric focuses on the idea that girls are only able to reach their full potential through a dearth of their male counterparts. Many parents and students alike are convinced that discrimination based on gender will be prevented by simply excluding the opposite sex. As someone who has attended three all-girls schools in both England and South Africa, I am not convinced.

What we had failed to notice, was that this sexism was not just the misinformed opinion of a few, but was actually an institutional problem.

In many ways, the school I attended prior to Cambridge was at the forefront of battling sexism. Our headmistress was heavily involved in the Girls School Association and advocated the role of single-sex education in enabling the breaking of the glass ceiling. She espoused the belief that being a woman was not a limiting factor but an empowering one. This doctrine pervaded every level of my schools society. One of its most obvious manifestations was in our PSHE sessions. Overwhelmingly, our guest speakers were women who had come to share their experiences on how they had challenged the limitations put on them by virtue of their gender. Two of our most impressive speakers were Baroness Butler-Sloss and Baroness Warnock. The former is famous for being the first female Lord Justice of Appeal, while the latter helped to advise the government on embryo experimentation and chaired the Committee of Inquiry into Human Fertilisation and Embryology. Both are incredibly influential members of society who are testimonies to the capabilities of women. They are the living proof that women are mens equals. Their avowal that it is possible to be a woman and reach the highest echelons of your chosen profession was an axiom my fellow pupils and I embraced whole-heartedly. Ironically, it was one of the incidents of sexism at my school which made me most aware of this fact.

Tired of how our sixth-form kitchen had become a bio-hazard, teachers decided to put up posters saying: Clean up your mess, your mother doesnt work here! While the epigram had a salient point as to the kitchens hygiene, the student body was outraged by the blatant sexism. Overnight, these posters were embellished with pictures of men and were amended to nor does your father or, in some cases, the latter clause was simply replaced with parents. I was never as proud of my fellow students as I was that week.

Unfortunately, this was not the only incident of sexism. One of the male teachers was famous for his saying: An essay should be like a girls skirt. Short enough to be interesting but long enough to have everything covered. He was not the only member of staff to hold such views. Another teacher told his class how he would not marry a woman who would not cook his dinner for him. At the age of 60, you would have thought he had mastered this skill, but evidently not. Pupils, of course, laughed this off as a product of a bygone era. These were all old, white, male teachers. Their opinions seemed immaterial to us. Yet what we had failed to notice was that this sexism was not just the misinformed opinion of a few, but was actually an institutional problem.

Why getting women in STEM is a feminist issue

The educational programme I studied, the International Baccalaureate, promoted diversity. Yet despite this, only one of the 13 texts we studied for English Literature was written by a woman. Furthermore, all of the authors were white. Our teachers were at liberty to choose the works they wanted but clearly female, ethnically diverse, and LGBT writers were not high on their list. Even at Cambridge, the English course is dominated by male works. While each of these signs on their own can appear innocuous, in the bigger picture, they show a worrying trend to value women at a lower rate than men.

While my experiences at all girls schools were largely positive, sexism does remain an issue. More needs to be done to challenge both this everyday sexism and this institutional disregard for female contribution to academic debate in the wider world. I hope Cambridge will be at the forefront of this

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My all girls' school: empowering, feminist and sexist - Varsity Online

Maria Feeney, Tara Sander Lee and Kathleen M Schmainda: Fetal tissue from abortions is (still) not needed for … – Madison.com

Two bills have recently been introduced in the Wisconsin Legislature to provide a path forward for biomedical research that honors the dignity of the human beings that it is meant to serve. These are the Fetal Remains Respect Act and the Unborn Child Disposition and Anatomical Gift Act, part of the Heal Without Harm Legislative Initiative. Contrary to what some claim, these bills do not stifle research. As scientists, we wholeheartedly support this initiative to support and advocate for biomedical research that benefits all human persons, without sacrificing one for another.

These bills come on the heels of a yearlong investigation of the abortion industry by the U.S. House Select Investigative Panel. The final report corrects many false and misleading statements regarding the role of fetal tissue in science and medicine. In nearly 100 years of unrestricted research, the panel investigation confirms, not a single clinical treatment has been developed from human fetal tissue. Vaccines for polio, measles, and mumps were never produced using human fetal tissue but rather used monkey cells, chicken eggs, and nonfetal human cells. None of the 75 vaccines available in the U.S. is produced using fresh fetal tissue. The continued use of certain cell lines derived from aborted fetal tissue to produce a small portion of vaccines (less than 15 percent) is due more to the high cost of switching than to any scientific reason. In regard to development of new vaccines, greater than 98 percent of research articles published on Zika do not use fetal tissue. Conversely, adult blood cells recently led to a breakthrough in vaccine development for Cytomegalovirus (CMV), a virus affecting brain development in a way similar to Zika.

The panel investigation further discredits the claim that fetal tissue plays an indispensable role in life-saving research. Fetal tissues (or byproduct stem cells) are used in only 0.01 percent of clinical trials currently underway and in merely 0.2 percent of grants funded by NIH between 2010-2014 none of which is investigating Alzheimers disease, where many claim fetal tissue is required and the gold standard. In many cases, aborted fetuses are not the most appropriate tissue source, but these tissues are still used because they are cheaper and easier to obtain than adult tissues. These facts suggest that, in practice, even scientists are not convinced that fetal tissue is critical to research.

In stark contrast, people suffering with cancer, diabetes, heart disease, neurological diseases, and others are benefiting now from clinical trials and treatments using adult stem cell therapies. Adult stem cells have saved the lives of over 1 million people worldwide, but not one person is alive today because of stem cells from aborted fetal tissue.

Therefore, as a next step, the panel provides several recommendations to ensure the advancement of research that is superior both scientifically and ethically, followed by a call for increased federal investment in these areas. Wisconsin risks losing time, money and lives if an ethical approach to research is not advocated and supported. It is within Wisconsins best interest to pass these bills. Science and ethics do work together.

Maria Feeney, of West Bend, has a Ph.D. in pharmaceutical chemistry and conducts research in biochemistry. Tara Sander Lee, of Brookfield, has a Ph.D. in biochemistry and researches molecular and cellular biology. Kathleen M. Schmainda, of Elm Grove, has a Ph.D. in biochemistry and conducts brain cancer research.

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Maria Feeney, Tara Sander Lee and Kathleen M Schmainda: Fetal tissue from abortions is (still) not needed for ... - Madison.com

Anatomy of a crisis – The Times of Israel

Barely two years after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus government was formed, all the papers can talk about on Sunday morning is its apparently imminent demise. A coalition crisis is in full swing, sending Israels preeminent pundits scrambling to find people to blame and issues to make the center of the agenda. With all the attention going to the possibility of fresh elections, relatively little attention is given to the Israeli airstrike on Syria early Friday morning and the rocket fire rupturing southern Israels weekend calm.

To virtually nobodys surprise, the free daily Israel Hayom is sympathetic to Netanyahu, explaining his position on its front page that the existing public broadcaster would cost less than the proposed new one set to be rolled out. What do we need it for? Netanyahu is quoted in the papers headline, setting the tone of the rest of the article. It quotes senior Likud official Yariv Levin saying that with 30 seats, the ruling party can stick to its guns despite pressure from its coalition allies.

The paper exhibits the most balanced manner of reporting by quoting Likud ministers throughout the first five paragraphs of its main report, only getting around to the Kulanu partys counterpoint in paragraph six.

What others perceive as the premiers paranoia is what Mati Tuchfeld calls political sensors on maximum sensitivity, and when Netanyahu detects sparks of non-compliance by one of the coalition partners, he projects [the message] that the master of the house is willing to go all-in, come what may.

Its not just the broadcaster and its not just Kahlon, he writes, arguing that this whole crisis was a brilliant masterstroke by Netanyahu to keep his coalition partners in line. Its also [Jewish Home party leader] Naftali Bennett, who just a couple of days ago said that Netanyahu has neglected religious Zionism. Its also Liberman, who though he appears Netanyahus most trusted partner, nonetheless his comments about closing the yeshiva in [the West Bank settlement of] Eli sent the prime minister down a dead end.

If Israel Hayom takes the defensive stance in Netanyahus favor, Yedioth Ahronoth comes out swinging against the prime minister. It dispenses with any semblance of reportage in the opening pages, leading instead with that fearsome duo of twin op-eds by mainstay pundits Nahum Barnea and Sima Kadmon.

Like Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair, Netanyahu has solidified his grip on his party in his fourth term in office but is cursed to self-destruct, Barnea expounds. The economy is strong, the country is secure, Likud is joined by right wing parties in ruling the country, and hes welcomed in Moscow, Beijing and Washington with open arms, Barnea says.

Crises like thse are born on WhatsApp and die on WhatsApp, he says. All it needs is intervention by the prime minister. Netanyahus sudden interest in the fates of Israel Broadcasting Authority workers is the most baseless crisis, Barnea says.

Netanyahu was the one who passed the bill through the Knesset to disband the corrupt, bloated and unnecessary IBA that had been under his wing for years. Kahlon stands against him not because the public broadcaster is dear to his heart or pocket, but because theres a limit to his willingness to be a mop.

Kadmon likewise calls out Netanyahu for flipflopping on the public broadcasting corporation issue, but says that the broadcaster isnt the real issue at hand at all. She charges that its his wife, Sara Netanyahu, calling the shots because of a personal dislike of certain journalists hired by the new broadcaster. Its clear to everyone close to the prime minister that something is going on when Netanyahu is susceptible to the influence of his relatives.

Ladies and gentlemen, wake up. This is your prime minister. The man making a list of critical decisions, like which response we should take against Gaza, or what to do about Irans power in Syria. Is this the man you would let make fateful decisions? Wait, would you buy a car from this man?

Haaretzs Chemi Shalev compares Netanyahu to Titus. For destroying Jerusalem? No, because Netanyahu also has a mosquito buzzing in his head driving him crazy in the form of the media, he writes. Netanyahu will found and ruin coalitions until he silences the irritating journalists, he charges.

Some analysts connect the flipflop that Netanyahu did over the weekend to his relatives waverings, he writes. Others are certain that its an initiative aimed at somehow saving him from an approaching indictment. There are still others who say that Netanyahu is simply puffing out his chest with Moshe Kahlon specifically, and his coalition partners in general, to bring them back into line, with no real intention to go to the polls.

All these things are right, he says, but they miss the point: Netanyahus treatment of the press is irrational and its eating him up inside.

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Anatomy of a crisis - The Times of Israel