Posted on 01/29/2007 8:08:24 AM PST by presidio9
Abraham Lincoln may have suffered from a genetic disorder that literally shattered his nerves, a new study on worms suggests.
Many of the president's descendants have a gene mutation that affects the part of the brain controlling movement and coordination, researchers discovered last year. The mutation prevents nerve cells from "communicating" with each other properly, but scientists weren't sure exactly how or why.
The malformed protein could actually be causing nerve cells to break altogether, show the experiments announced today by scientists at the University of Utah.
If Honest Abe had the disease, it would explain the gangly walk for which he was famous, they said.
Humans produce four protein genes called beta spectrin, which help our cells regulate walking and talking and anything else requiring movement. Normally, wire-like axons that connect each nerve cell flex and bend when we do.
The mutation of one of the beta spectrin genes causes the degenerative nerve disorder spinocerebellar ataxia type 5 (SCA5), which researchers at the University of Minnesota found in 90 out of 299 of Lincoln's living descendants in a 2006 test. Those afflicted with ataxia lose coordination and sometimes end up confined to a wheelchair.
Until now, most scientists thought ataxia occurred because nerve cells didn't have beta spectrin linking them together with the same strength they do in a healthy individual.
Nematode worms also produce beta spectrin. When researchers removed the beta spectrin gene from worms, however, the worms' wiry cell axons didn't just malfunctionthey severed.
The very same thing could be happening in humans, the University of Utah biologists speculate.
"It's incredible and so very simple that this one protein is what keeps neurons from breaking in your body," said study author Michael Bastiani, of the University of Utah's Brain Institute. "The entire functioning of the nervous system depends on these wire-like axons between nerve cells."
The whisper-thin axon is the least complex part of a nerve cell, Bastiani explained, so scientists often have looked elsewhere when searching for the cause of nervous disorders such as ataxia.
Lincoln's trademark lumbering and awkward gaitnoted by several historians of his timewould have been a symptom of ataxia, said the University of Minnesota researchers, whose hereditary study pegged his chances of having the disease at about one-in-four.
If he did suffer from ataxia, it was probably in its early stages by the time he was assassinated at age 56 in 1865, said Erik Jorgensen, scientific director of the Brain Institute.
Most nerve cells in the worms studied weren't broken in the embryonic stage, despite the lack of beta spectrin, but began snapping as the worms grew larger. Beta spectrin is only necessary to prevent breakage in mature cells and not to create new ones, the study showed.
Since it is continuous movement over time that causes axons to shatter, without the protective coating of the protein Lincoln's unsteady and irregular way of getting around would probably have gotten much worse had he lived into old age.
The wayward beta spectrin gene could be the culprit in many other neurodegenerative disorders, like Alzheimer's, the researchers said, though further testing is needed.
The study's full findings are published in the most recent edition of The Journal of Cell Biology.
I am a 7th cousin of Lincoln. Do I count??
Maybe 299 is all the relatives the U of Mn could locate, or all that were willing to participate in the study.
Did they contact you, Lurking in Kansas?
I was confused by the article's being displayed on a Yahoo page.
Give all of my Presidents malformed protein.
Sounds like they're not as straightforward a source as your earlier post suggested!
LOL, no, I am not a decedent, we share an common ancestor. Something like, his grandfather is also my 7th great-grandfather.
From the information provided in the posts above, that's true of anyone currently living who is related to President Lincoln ... and none are his "descendants" in the strict sense.
Having to face what Lincoln did whose nerves would not have been shattered?
In fairness, they ususally stick to impeccible sources when they are actually reporting news, as opposed to putting together top-10 lists.
Apart from the fact that he had the most difficult presidency by far, his wife was also a schizophrenic.
bump
That's something, anyway. The site at "Journal of Cell Biology" said there would be new material up today. If I don't forget about it, maybe I'll go read the article and see whom they used for test subjects.
"Historians" who speculate thus should explain why we were better governed in Reagan's last two years in office than we were by Jimmy Carter on his best day. Such "historians" should give up on trying to kick Reagan. They just don't have the stature - their kicks don't even clear the soles of his shoe to reach high enough to mar the shine of his shoes.
And a shopaholic. His young son, Tad, also died when he was President.
Thanks for the ping SB
free dixie,sw
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