遗传学
马赛克
风险因素
染色体
癌症
生物
医学
基因
内科学
历史
考古
作者
Jan P. Dumanski,Chiara Rasi,Mikael Lönn,Hanna Davies,Martin Ingelsson,Vilmantas Giedraitis,Lars Lannfelt,Patrik K. E. Magnusson,Cecilia M. Lindgren,Andrew P. Morris,David Cesarini,Magnus Johannesson,Eva Tiensuu Janson,Lars Lind,Nancy L. Pedersen,Erik Ingelsson,Lars A. Forsberg
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2014-12-05
卷期号:347 (6217): 81-83
被引量:199
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1262092
摘要
Men beware, when smoke gets in your Y's The relationship between tobacco smoking and elevated cancer risk has been recognized for 60 years. Yet what smoking does to our genetic material is still not fully understood. New work suggests that men should be particularly concerned. In a study of over 6000 men, Dumanski et al. find that men who smoke are more than three times as likely as nonsmokers to show loss of the Y chromosome in their blood cells. Whether this is a causal factor in cancer development or simply a marker of more consequential damage on other chromosomes could not be deduced from the study. Science , this issue p. 81
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