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DNA Science Blog is One Year Old!

Birthdaycake_1_yearI’m coming up on the 52nd entry of the DNA Science Blog, and so below is a linked list of my sometimes skewed view of human genetics and genomics. I’m a hybrid of sorts – geneticist, journalist, instructor, genetic counselor, cat lover, and parent — and I strive to cover topics and treatments that the news feeds and aggregators miss.

First, a few observations.

The two most-trafficked posts correspond to the two most stressful situations I’ve faced the past year. #1 was Genetics Errors in Supreme Court Decision. I’d already turned in that morning’s post, on disgusting tumors, when my PLOS editor emailed to drop everything and write about the just-released Supreme Court decision on DNA patents. That I did, spotting the initial error in the decision calling complementary DNA composite DNA.

I wrote that blog post in the apheresis unit at Albany Medical Center, where my daughter was being treated for what would become life-threatening dehydration following surgical complications. Surrounded by kids getting chemo, I tapped out the blog.

 (Gary Moore photo)
(Gary Moore photo)

The second most highly-read blog indulged my goal to find unusual stories. I’d noted a paper about hypertrichosis far down in the table of contents of the American Journal of Human Genetics, and realizing what this might mean, did some digging and turned the report into The Curious Genetics of  Werewolves.

I wrote the werewolf post in the wintertime serenity of Martha’s Vineyard. But then a blizzard trapped me and my loved ones in a scarily skidding car somewhere in the wilds of Connecticut, trying to get a daughter to JFK for a morning flight (long story). We ended up at an establishment that made the Bates Motel look like the Ritz, and so the next morning, my editor had to rescue and post the werewolf blog.

(Dr. Wendy Josephs)
(Dr. Wendy Josephs)

Many of the posts are about my passion, families dealing with rare genetic diseases. They are amazing. Sometimes I whine about genetic testing, mostly to get a rise out of readers. Why I Don’t Want to Know My Genome Sequence garnered the most grief. And I love to write about research, from drug discovery to a woman in a clinical trial who had human embryonic stem cells in her eye.

Once in awhile I’m enticed by breaking news, like growing brains in lab dishes from a few weeks ago, but that thrill is ephemeral. I much prefer to find the ignored werewolves.

romeoThe most useful posts were probably the two about feline immunodeficiency virus. I heard from several cat owners and the sagas of my infected pets may have saved a few kitties. My most disturbing post questioned the Havasupai Indian case, for which I received a nasty personal threat from an arrogant attorney who, despite his stated attempt to ruin my career, did not understand genetics.

So here the posts are, from most recent back to the beginning.

A Very Special Birthday for a Young Man with Trisomy 18

10 Reasons Why Growing a Human Brain in a Dish is Terrific

Cholesterol-ups-and-downs

Is the Havasupai Indian Case a Fairy Tale?

HeLa, the Havasupai and Informed Consent

Polar Bear Genome Reflects Climate Change

 

(Dept. of Energy)
(Dept. of Energy)

Let’s Slow-the Race to Sequence Everyone’s Genome: 3 Views

Complex Controls to Make a Mouse Limb

DNA Forensic Profiling Anniversaries in-June/July

Whena Disease is Genetic But Not Inherited: Bea Rienhoff’s Story

Gene Therapy Kids Update

A Brief History of DNA Patents

Genetics Errors in Supreme Court Decision

Two Intriguing Tumors: Fibroids and Teratomas

Battling Batten Disease

Juvenile Huntington’s Disease: The Cruel Mutation

Toms River: A New Classic in Epidemiology-Writing

A Little Girl With Giant Axons: A Deranged Cytoskeleton and Gene Therapy

dnaCelebrating Gleevec and Basic Research

Confessions of a D-Orbital

DNA Day and World Malaria Day:-The Sickle-Cell Malaria Link Revisited

DNA Day and 20 Years of Writing a Human Genetics Textbook

A GPS View of the Human Genome

Genetic Modifiers: Healthy Mutants Fuel Drug Discovery

Mayonnaise Taxonomy

Second Gene Causes Retinoblastoma

Do Cats With FIV Foretell HIV’s Future?

Personalized Medicine: Read the Chart

GavinRare Disease Day-What 5 Kids With Low Vision CAN do

Do You Know Genetics?

A Fruit Fly Love Story-The Making of a Mutant

Genetic Testing: Carrier Confusion and Generation Reversal

Another Bump in the Road to Gene Therapy

My Cat Has AIDS

Retinal Stem Cells and Eye of Newt

The Crud: Viral or Bacterial?

Comparing Adam Lanza’s DNA to Forensic DNA Databases: A Modest Proposal

The Curious Genetics of Werewolves

max alexGene Therapy for Canavan Disease: Max’s Story

When an Arm is Really a Leg

XYY Men

Cialis Comes Full Circle: Help for Muscular Dystrophy

JIM – More Compelling Than GATTACA

Mice With Human Liverlets Test New Drugs

Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing: A New View

Why I Don’t Want to Know My Genome Sequence

Male DNA in Female Brains Revisited

chromosomesPrenatal Genetic Testing: When Is It Toxic Knowledge?

From Rapid Aging to Common Heart Disease

Progress For Progeria

Human Embryonic Stem Cells Finally Reach Clinical Trials-Maurie’s Story

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