Demystifying MS
A genome-wide association study has identified rs10191329 – located between the genes DYSF and ZNF638 – as a risk allele associated with multiple sclerosis severity. Researchers found that individuals that inherit this variant from both parents have a high chance of needing a walking aid 3.7 years before non-carriers (1).
Flipping the script
A new study has uncovered 16 new risk loci associated with immunoglobulin A nephropathy (IgAN). The results showed that the genetic regulation of IgA production is the key pathogenic pathway in IgAN. This finding confirmed a previous hypothesis that IgAN actually starts outside of the kidney; researchers hope this new information will help contribute to new treatments for the disease (2).

Clearing the path
How does Optineurin (Opt) – an autophagy receptor – remove damaged mitochondria from the brain? Well, the long-standing question has finally been answered by researchers at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute. The team discovered that Opt uses kinase TBK1 to initiate PINK1/Parkin mitophagy, revealing an unconventional pathway of selective autophagy (3).
CRC signature
Diagnosing colorectal cancer (CRC) before it metastasizes is crucial for increasing a patient’s chance of survival. Now, after performing a whole genome-scale DNA methylation and full transcriptome analyses of primary colon tumors and liver metastases from CRC patients, researchers have discovered a new subset of loci that could be epigenetic drivers of CRC metastasis – a potential sign that cancer cells use specific methylation patterns to become more aggressive (4).
Don’t drop the balls
Elephants rarely get cancer. Why? A study has hypothesized that excessive copies of the tumor suppressor gene, TP53, is actually a result of protecting their temperature-sensitive sperm. TP53 is an active participant in germline cell division, and an elephant’s testicles do not descend because, at high temperatures, the possibility of DNA mutation is increased (5).
References
- A Harroud et al., Nature, [Online ahead of print] (2023). PMID: 37380766
- K Kiryluk et al, Nat Genet, [Online ahead of print] (2023). PMID: 37337107
- T N Nguyen et al., Mol Cell, 86, 1693 (2023). PMID: 37207627
- E J Rodger et al., iScience, 26 (2023). PMID: 37378317
- F Vollrath, Trends Ecol Evol (2023). PMID: 37385845