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1.
Parasitology ; 135(5): 567-74, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18371241

ABSTRACT

A panel of microsatellites mapped to the Leishmania genome might make it possible to find associations between specific loci and phenotypic traits. To identify such loci, a Perl programme was written that scans the sequence of a genome and writes all loci containing microsatellites to a MySQL database. The programme was applied to the sequences of the L. braziliensis, L. infantum and L. major genomes. The database is publicly available over the internet: http://www.genomics.liv.ac.uk/tryps/resources.html 'Microsatellite Locus Extractor', and allows the selection of mapped microsatellites that meet user-defined criteria from a specified region of the selected genome. The website also incorporates a primer design pipeline that will design primers to amplify the selected loci. Using this pipeline 12 out of 17 primer sets designed against the L. infantum genome generated polymorphic PCR products. A tailed primer protocol was used to label all microsatellite primers with a single set of labelled primers. To avoid the culture of parasites prior to genotyping, sets of nested PCR primers were developed to amplify parasite DNA eluted from microscope slides. The limit of detection was approximately 1.6 parasite equivalents. However, only 6/56 DNA from slides stored at ambient temperature for over 6 months gave positive PCR results.


Subject(s)
Leishmania braziliensis , Leishmania donovani , Leishmania major , Microsatellite Repeats/genetics , Parasitology/methods , Animals , Computational Biology/methods , DNA Primers , DNA, Protozoan/analysis , Humans , Iran , Leishmania braziliensis/classification , Leishmania braziliensis/genetics , Leishmania donovani/classification , Leishmania donovani/genetics , Leishmania major/classification , Leishmania major/genetics , Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/parasitology , Leishmaniasis, Visceral/parasitology , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Sensitivity and Specificity
4.
Bull World Health Organ ; 42(2): 185-94, 1970.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5310137

ABSTRACT

An international collaborative study has been carried out to test the hypothesis that prolonged lactation protects women against cancer of the breast. While pregnancy itself seemed to confer some protection against breast cancer in all areas studied, no consistent differences in duration of lactation were found between breast cancer patients and unaffected women, once the fact that breast cancer patients have fewer pregnancies had been allowed for. Even in areas where some women had lactated for a total of 5 years or more, such women occurred proportionately no less frequently among breast cancer patients than among unaffected women. In the light of this and other recent evidence, it is unlikely that lactation has any protective effect against breast cancer in women, and other explanations must be sought for the remarkable international differences in the frequency of this disease.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/prevention & control , Lactation , Adult , Aged , Boston , Brazil , Breast Neoplasms/epidemiology , Breast Neoplasms/etiology , Female , Greece , Humans , International Cooperation , Middle Aged , Pregnancy , Taiwan , Time Factors , Tokyo , Wales , Yugoslavia
5.
Bull World Health Organ ; 43(2): 209-21, 1970.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-5312521

ABSTRACT

An international collaborative study of breast cancer and reproductive experience has been carried out in 7 areas of the world. In all areas studied, a striking relation between age at first birth and breast cancer risk was observed. It is estimated that women having their first child when aged under 18 years have only about one-third the breast cancer risk of those whose first birth is delayed until the age of 35 years or more. Births after the first, even if they occur at an early age, have no, or very little, protective effect. The reduced risk of breast cancer in women having their first child at an early age explains the previously observed inverse relationship between total parity and breast cancer risk, since women having their first birth early tend to become ultimately of high parity. The association with age at first birth requires different kinds of etiological hypotheses from those that have been invoked in the past to explain the association between breast cancer risk and reproductive experience.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/etiology , Maternal Age , Parity , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Boston , Brazil , Breast Neoplasms/epidemiology , Epidemiologic Methods , Female , Greece , Humans , Socioeconomic Factors , Taiwan , Tokyo , Wales , Yugoslavia
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