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Research suggests genetic links between disease risks and dental formations

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  • Innovation and Research

Finding clues to disease risk could be as simple as a doctor looking inside a patient鈥檚 mouth.

This method is exactly what is studying at the 51精品视频鈥檚 . His studies聽suggest that gene mutations influencing how teeth are formed are also consistent with diseases people face later in life, such as kidney disease, asthma and cancer, among others.

鈥淚f we can figure out what people鈥檚 risks look like with all this genetic dental information, we might be able to tell you to take up a less stressful job or change your diet to avoid these diseases,鈥 said Vieira, the dental school's director of clinical research and of student research. 鈥淵ou can, at some point, personalize the approach that goes from prevention all the way to treatment.鈥

One example is that individuals聽with tooth agenesis 鈥斅爐he congenital lack of one or more teeth 鈥斅爎eport more cancer in their families, particularly of the brain, breast and prostate.聽A 2004 study that Vieira cites found聽that members of a Finnish family with similar tooth agenesis formations also suffered from colon cancer, with that study's researchers finding a mutational gene called AXIN2 in the family.

鈥淔urthermore, some genes that were independently shown to be associated with cancer are also associated with tooth agenesis,鈥 Vieira said. 鈥淥ne important detail 鈥斅爐he tooth agenesis cases included in this study are mostly mild and commonly found in the general population.鈥

Vieira has multiple studies published suggesting this association, including and that suggested enamel-forming genes may play a part in聽the decay or crumbling of a tooth, a common chronic disease in children ages 5 to 17 years in the United States.

His studies also suggest that developmental dental anomalies share common genetic contributors to cleft lip and palate.

鈥淲e could use a definition of clefts that include the presence or not of dental anomalies to improve our chances to identify gene defects that may explain these conditions, which could improve risk predictions,鈥 Vieira said.

While dental formations can give clues to one's underlying genetics, the only way to conclusively verify whether a person has聽mutations in these genes is by聽formal genetic testing, Vieira said. Some common variants could potentially be included in direct-to-consumer panels for DNA testing, often marketed as 鈥渧erification of ancestry,鈥 some of which may provide a report of individual risks for disease as well.

Vieira is also collaborating with researchers at the University of Utah, Cincinnati Children鈥檚 Hospital Medical Center, University of Lausanne in Switzerland and Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania聽to identify how genetic mutations influence a protein pathway responsible for permanent tooth formation. The project recently received a from the National Institutes of Health.

For the next step in his own research, Vieira wants to examine health patterns in individuals over time to see how diseases progress in relation to dental formations, since previous studies聽have focused mainly on younger people with tooth agenesis.