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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Re-Conceptualizing Genetic Influence in GxE Studies: Does Inherited Sensitivity to Environmental Influence Moderate the Indirect Effect of Parent Knowledge on Future Drinking?

January 2020 (has links)
abstract: Excessive drinking in adolescence is a public health issue with major consequences on both an individual and societal level. Elucidating genetic and environmental influences could be particularly informative for prevention efforts. One potential source of genetic influence is sensitivity to environmental influences. It was hypothesized that parent knowledge would interact with genetic sensitivity to the environment to indirectly reduce risk for alcohol problems through less adolescent rule breaking behavior. Participants (N=316) provided genetic data and reported their rule breaking behavior and past year frequency of heavy drinking, and participants’ custodial parents reported their perceived knowledge of their child’s activities. A novel index of genetic sensitivity to environmental influence was created using published methylation quantitative trait locus data from the frontal lobe. Study hypotheses were mostly not supported. The study results likely reflect the poor distribution of study variables and the limitations of the current study’s sensitivity gene score. The current study underscored the importance of adhering to methodological rigor and explored alternate conceptualizations and methods that future research could use to elucidate the role of inherited to sensitivity to environmental influences in adolescent drinking. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Psychology 2020
2

Genetics of Nutrient Consumption and an Evolutionary Perspective of Eating Disorders

Mayhew, Alexandra Jean 11 1900 (has links)
Obesity prevalence continues to increase worldwide, yet few safe and effective treatment options are available suggesting there needs to be a greater emphasis on preventing rather than treating obesity. This research investigated the association of obesity predisposing SNPs and a gene score with nutrient consumption patterns including total energy intake and macronutrient distribution in a European ancestry population as well as discussing an evolutionary perspective on eating disorders using current epidemiological evidence to identify genes which may be involved. The association of two of the 14 obesity predisposing SNPs and the gene score with BMI was confirmed in the EpiDREAM population. Novel associations between two SNPs located in or near BDNF (rs6265 and rs1401635) were found with total fat, MUFA, and PUFA intake. Rs1401635 was also associated with total energy and trans fat intake. Novel associations of rs6235 (PCSK1) and the gene score were found with total energy intake. The novel associations found indicate that food related behaviours are one of the mechanisms of action through which obesity predisposing SNPs cause obesity and therefore warrant further investigation. The lack of association among all genes and the modest association of the gene score show that mechanisms other than food consumption are important. The investigation of the evolutionary history of eating disorders revealed that the adapted to flee famine hypothesis is a plausible theory explaining anorexia nervosa while the thrifty genotype hypothesis provides a possible explanation for bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder. These evolutionary theories can be applied to identify new candidate genes as well as phenotypic traits to investigate to better understand the genetic architecture of eating disorders. Understanding genes associated with disordered eating patterns may highlight future areas for obesity prevention. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / A large percentage of the risk of developing obesity or an eating disorder (anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder) is determined by genetics. For obesity, many genes have been identified as influencing risk, but the mechanisms through which the genes work are largely unknown. For eating disorders, gene identification efforts have been mostly unsuccessful and no mechanisms of action have been determined. In the first component of this thesis we found an association between previously identified obesity risk genes and food intake, specifically the total number of calories consumed per day and the percentage of calories from total fat and fat subtypes. These results support that food related behaviours are possible mechanisms of action which need to be further investigated. In the second half of the thesis we viewed eating disorder behaviours from an evolutionary perspective. We concluded that there are theories that possibly explain eating disorder behaviours including being able to live off of small quantities of food as well as binging. These evolutionary theories can be applied to identify new genes to study in the context of eating disorders as well as different definitions of eating disorders.
3

Identification de nouveaux mécanismes de carcinogénèse et facteurs pronostiques des tumeurs hépatocellulaires / Identification of new mechanisms of carcinogenesis and new prognostic biomarkers in hepatocellular tumors

Nault, Jean-Charles 20 October 2015 (has links)
Les adénomes hépatocellulaires (AHC) sont des tumeurs hépatiques bénignes rares se développant chez la femme jeune suite à la prise de contraceptifs oraux et pouvant se compliquer d’hémorragie et de transformation maligne en carcinome hépatocellulaire (CHC). Une classification génotype/phénotype a mise en évidence trois groupes d’AHC : les AHC inactivés pour le facteur de transcription HNF1A, les AHC mutés pour la β-caténine et les AHC dit « inflammatoires » ayant une activation de la voie JAK/STAT. Nous avons identifiés des mutations activatrices du gènes GNAS, codant pour la sous unité alpha de la protéine Gs, dans un sous-groupe d’AHC inflammatoires ainsi que chez des patients avec des AHC et atteints d’un syndrome de McCune Albright, une maladie rare combinant des tumeurs endocriniennes, une dysplasie fibreuse osseuse et des taches cutanés café au lait. Cette découverte confirme les interactions entre la voie de l’AMP cyclique induite par les mutations GNAS et la voie JAK/STAT. Les CHC sont les tumeurs primitives du foie les plus fréquentes, survenant souvent sur un foie cirrhotique exposé à différents facteurs de risque comme l’hépatite B chronique, l’hépatite C chronique, l’alcool ou le syndrome métabolique. Le CHC est le résultat de l’accumulation d’altérations génétiques et épigénétiques. Premièrement, nous avons identifiés les mutations du promoteur de TERT (Telomerase reverse transcriptase) comme les altérations génétiques somatiques les plus fréquentes des CHC. Ces mutations ont été aussi retrouvées dans des lésions prénéoplasiques développées sur cirrhose suggérant leurs rôles précoces dans l’initiation tumorale et la transformation maligne. A l’inverse l’étude des mutations du promoteur de TERT et la réalisation de séquençage haut-débit dans les AHC et les transformation d’adénome en CHC nous a permis de disséquer les mécanismes de transformation maligne sur foie sain avec la présence de manière précoce d’une mutation de la β-caténine et dans un second temps l’apparition d’une mutation dans le promoteur de TERT. Par la suite, nous avons mis en évidence une signature moléculaire pronostique transcriptomique chez les patients avec CHC traités par résection hépatique. Cette signature moléculaire prédisant à la fois la récidive tumorale et le décès a été validée dans des cohortes de patients à l’étranger. Enfin, nous avons mise en évidence le rôle oncogénique de l’adeno-associated virus de type 2 dans la survenue de CHC sur foie sain via un mécanisme de mutagénèse insertionnelle dans des gènes clés de la carcinogénèse comme TERT, CCNA2, MLL4 ou TNFSF10. Ces résultats ont permit de mettre en évidence de nouveaux facteurs de risque viraux de survenue du CHC, d’identifier de nouvelles altérations génétiques impliquées dans la transformation maligne sur cirrhose et sur foie sain et permit de développer une signature moléculaire pronostique qui pourrait être utiliser dans le futur comme une aide à la stratification thérapeutique chez les patients atteint de CHC. / Hepatocellular adenomas (HCA) are rare benign liver tumors occuring in young women taking oral contraception and complications as haemorrhage or malignant transformation in hepatocellular carcinomes (HCC) could occur. A genotype/phenotype classification has defined different subgroups of tumors : HCA with inactivating mutations of HNF1A, HCA with activating mutations of β-catenin and inflammatory HCA with activation of the JAK/STAT pathway. We have identified activation mutations of GNAS, that codes for the alpha subunit of the Gs protein in a subgroup of inflammatory HCA and in patients with HCA and McCune Albright syndrom, a rare disease that combined endocrine tumor, bone fibrous dysplasia and « cafe au lait » skin macula. These findings highlight the crosstalk between the cyclic AMP pathway induced by GNAS mutation with the JAK/STAT pathway. HCC are the most frequent primary liver tumors worldwide and mainly occur on cirrhosis due to various risk factor as hepatitis B and C virus, alcohol consumption and metabolic syndrome. HCC is due to the accumulation of genetic and epigenetic alterations in the malignant hepatocytes. We have identified TERT (telomerase reverse transcriptase) promoter mutations as the most frequent somatic genetic alterations in HCC. These mutations were also found in cirrhotic premalignant nodules underlying their role in tumor initiation and malignant transformation. In contrast, the study of the different steps of malignant transformation of HCA into HCC using next generation sequencing and TERT promoter screening have shown that activatiing mutation of β-catenin is an early genetic alteration whereas TERT promoter mutation is required in a second step to promote a full malignant transformation. We have also identified a prognostic molecular signature, the 5-gene score, in patients with HCC treated by liver resection. The 5-gene score predicts tumor recurrence and disease specific survival and has been validated in different cohorts of patients worldwide. Finally, we have shown that adeno-associated virus type 2 is involved in liver carcinogenesis on normal liver through insertional mutagenesis in key cancer genes as TERT, CCNA2, MLL4 and TNFSF10. These results have underlined a new oncogenic virus involved in HCC development, identified new genetic alterations involved in malignant transformation on cirrhosis and normal liver and a new prognostic molecular signature that will help to guide treatment of patients with HCC in the future.

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