City
Epaper

Researchers find novel genes linked to rare childhood diarrhoea

By IANS | Updated: April 3, 2025 11:36 IST

New Delhi, April 3 A team of Canadian researchers has identified three novel genes linked to rare childhood ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 3 A team of Canadian researchers has identified three novel genes linked to rare childhood diarrhoea.

The rare condition called CODE (congenital diarrhoea and enteropathies) disrupts the function of cells in the intestine, causing diarrhoea. It also prevents infants from absorbing the nutrients they need to grow and thrive.

The team from The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) conducted genome sequencing on 129 infants with suspected CODE.

The scientists characterised the function of novel CODE genes using advanced computational methods and zebrafish models

The analysis was remarkably successful, providing a diagnosis for 48 per cent of cases.

The findings, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found three new genes associated with CODE -- GRWD1, MYO1A , and MON1A -- and provided answers to 62 families.

“Undiagnosed infantile diarrhoea can be fatal, but even when it isn’t, early diagnosis of rare conditions can help provide much-needed answers for families,” said Dr. Aleixo Muise, Staff Gastroenterologist and Senior Scientist in the Cell and Systems Biology programme at SickKids.

“As a result of this study, we can now provide a diagnosis to more families and move closer to precision treatments tailored to their child’s specific genetic variant,” Muise added.

ODEs are associated with high morbidity and mortality. Although the treatment of these disorders is largely supportive, emerging targeted therapies based on genetic diagnoses include specific diets, pharmacologic treatments, and surgical interventions.

A genetic diagnosis alone can provide relief to many families, said the team.

They noted that understanding the genetic and functional underpinnings of the conditions, including three new pathways, can also move scientists closer to targeted treatments.

In addition to the genes, in the case series of 129 infants with suspected congenital diarrhoeal disorders, the team identified causal variants, including a new founder NEUROG3 variant, in 62 infants (48 per cent).

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessHow Bag2Bag Is Making India’s ‘Pay-as-you-Stay’ Culture Mainstream

BusinessSuperstar Mahesh Babu to Launch Zee Studio, Prerna Arora's and Sudheer Babu's JATADHARA Trailer -- A Milestone Event

InternationalNestle Layoffs: FMCG Giant to Cut 16,000 Jobs Globally

InternationalUN still reflects "realities of 1945, not of 2025": Jaishankar calls for urgent reforms at UNTCC chiefs conclave

Other SportsWant to build momentum: Gujarat Giants assistant coach urges team to find consistency

Health Realted Stories

HealthStudy warns high-fat keto diet may drive breast cancer risk

HealthAyurveda Aahara integral part of global nutrition, will ensure disease-free future: Minister

HealthAyushman Bharat benefited over 45 crore citizens: National Health Authority

HealthAir pollution dips to ‘very poor’ in Delhi-NCR ahead of Diwali

HealthIndia’s food security system ensuring food, nutritional equity for 81 crore citizens: Govt