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    Home > Biochemistry News > Biotechnology News > "Cell" Chinese scientist: The genetic code of the longer the finger has a "dou" in the fingerprint has been found!

    "Cell" Chinese scientist: The genetic code of the longer the finger has a "dou" in the fingerprint has been found!

    • Last Update: 2022-01-26
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    Image: This image shows that humans have three types of fingerprint patterns: bow, ring, and vortex


     

    In the most comprehensive analysis to date, the researchers found that the shape of fingerprints—whether round, wavy or tangled—was influenced by genes responsible for limb development, not skin patterns


    "People may wonder why our team studied fingerprints," said researcher Sijia Wang, a geneticist at the Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and co-senior author of the paper


    While fingerprints are unique to an individual, they are generally classified into three types: arch, loop, and whorl


    Researcher Wang and his colleagues screened the DNA of more than 23,000 people of different ethnicities and found at least 43 regions of the genome associated with fingerprint patterns


    To test their findings, the team modified the mice's DNA so that the expression of EVI1 was suppressed


    Analysis of human data revealed a genetic correlation between fingerprint patterns and finger length


    "We don't know how genes form fingerprint patterns, but it can be determined by the force of growth on the palm rest of embryonic tissue that plays an important role in the formation of different fingerprint patterns


    It's worth noting, Wang said, that previous studies have shown that EVI1 is associated with the risk of developing leukemia, and some studies have observed that people with more swirls are more likely to develop the disease


    Image credit: Int.


     

    He said: "Many congenital genetic disorders are associated with different dermatoglyphic patterns, such as fingerprints


    The research is part of the International Human Phenotyping Project, led by Fudan University in Shanghai, which aims to map the interrelationships between human phenotypic traits


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    Magazine

    Cell

    DOI

    10.


     

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