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March 9, 2007|Volume 35, Number 21|Two-Week Issue


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Yale will help build DNA databank
to further research on autism

Researchers at the Yale School of Medicine's Child Study Center and 10 other institutions will share a $10 million gift from James and Marilyn Simons of The Simons Foundation to create a databank of DNA samples from autism patients around the country.

The goal is to collect a total of 3,000 samples from U.S. autism patients to help identify different variants of autism and develop treatments. The principal investigators at Yale, Ami Klin and Dr. Matthew State, have received $1.2 million for three years to collect DNA samples from patients completing clinical evaluations or research protocols at the Autism Program at the Yale Child Study Center.

Autism is a complex brain disorder that inhibits a person's ability to communicate and develop social relationships, and it is often accompanied by extreme behavioral challenges. Autism Spectrum Disorders are diagnosed in 1 in 150 children in the United States and affects four times as many boys as girls. Researchers do not know how many subtypes of autism exist.

Klin, the Harris Associate Professor of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, says the gene data might help identify meaningful subtypes of autism, thus advancing knowledge that is critical for behavioral and brain studies, and promoting treatments that will likely be more specific to an individual's variant of autism.

Other universities participating in the DNA databank collection include Harvard, Columbia, Emory, McGill, Boston and Washington-St. Louis universities, and the Universities of Washington, Illinois at Chicago and California-Los Angeles.

The Simons Consortium is the most comprehensive and detailed effort to date to relate genotypic and phenotypic data in autism. Subjects completing the protocol will have the most refined genotypic analyses, which can then be related to a wealth of data on the affected individuals themselves and on their family members. The consortium will house the data in a centralized repository that will be accessible to researchers within and outside the institutions involved in this effort.

The Simons Foundation is a private family foundation based in New York City. The primary mission is to fund advanced research in science and mathematics. A secondary mission is to help children with learning differences. Bridging these two areas, the Simons Foundation has recently undertaken a major initiative supporting research into autism and its treatment. The foundation aims to spend $100 million long-term to find a cure for the developmental disorder.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Major gift to fund construction of Loria Center for the History of Art

Scientists determine ancient Peruvian citadel was earliest solar . . .

For students, spring break will be a time of discovery, service

SOM travel goes green

Researchers discover treatment for lethal kidney disease

Professor and trustee awarded India's highest civilian honor

Study implicates gene defect in early heart disease

Marvin Chun and John Hollander are honored by Phi Beta Kappa

Yale will help build DNA databank to further research on autism

Scientists clarify why colliding ice blocks interlace

Negative health effects of soft drink consumption confirmed in study

Exhibit looks at contributions of early women healers

Yale nurses Linda Pellico and Geralyn Spollett are lauded . . .

Past, present and future Elis are named Soros Fellows

Study finds that yearning -- not disbelief -- is defining feature of grief

Record number of city students taking part in annual science fair on campus

Conference to explore new collaborations with Turkey

IN MEMORIAM

Campus Notes


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