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- <text id=91TT1792>
- <title>
- Aug. 12, 1991: Ultimate Gene Machine
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 12, 1991 Busybodies & Crybabies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 54
- Ultimate Gene Machine
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A method of multiplying DNA is revolutionizing medical diagnosis,
- speeding forensic work and solving old mysteries
- </p>
- <p>By J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago--With reporting by Anne Constable/
- London and Andrew Purvis/New York
- </p>
- <p> Imagine an amplifier powerful enough to convert the
- inaudible whir of butterfly wings into a mighty roar. That's
- what a new tool called PCR routinely does to the most
- infinitesimal snippets of DNA, the molecule that carries the
- genetic blueprint for all living things. Within the space of a
- few hours, an unprepossessing aluminum box stuffed with test
- tubes can create a billion copies of what started out as a
- single strip of DNA. A dividing cancer cell would take at least
- a month to perform the same stupendous feat. "This technique,"
- marvels Dr. Harley Rotbart, a microbiologist at the University
- of Colorado School of Medicine, "can reproduce genetic material
- even more efficiently than nature."
- </p>
- <p> PCR stands for polymerase chain reaction, polymerase being
- the enzyme that triggers the replication of DNA inside dividing
- cells. All PCR does is reproduce, in a test tube, this basic
- biological process, turning it into a chain reaction that can be
- endlessly repeated by having a machine alternately raise and
- lower the temperature in the test tube. "The beauty of PCR is
- that it's technically so simple," observes cell biologist Peter
- Parham of Stanford University.
- </p>
- <p> Since the first working machine was developed six years
- ago by a team of Cetus Corp. researchers, including biochemist
- Kary Mullis, PCR has enabled researchers to study even the
- faintest, most fragmentary traces of DNA found in specks of
- dried blood, strands of hair, chips of bone. In the journal
- Nature last week, for example, a team of British researchers
- recounted how they successfully identified a teenage murder
- victim from skeletal remains eight years old. First they
- extracted DNA from bone cells in the dead girl's femur. Then
- they obtained DNA from blood samples donated by the couple
- believed to be her parents. Using a PCR machine as their
- microscope, they went on to magnify and examine the unique
- genetic markers the dead girl shared with her parents. The
- evidence helped to convict two men of the crime earlier this
- year.
- </p>
- <p> To date, PCR has been used to compare the DNA of extinct
- animals with their closest living relatives. It has assisted the
- U.S. military in identifying the remains of soldiers who died
- during Operation Desert Storm. It is beginning to help
- physicians detect small numbers of cancer cells circulating in
- the bloodstream and make prenatal diagnoses of genetic diseases
- such as sickle-cell anemia, as well as ensure better matches
- between organ donors and transplant recipients.
- </p>
- <p> PCR may also soon aid scientists in solving a number of
- historical mysteries. Among them: whether the man who drowned
- in Argentina in 1979 really was Nazi war criminal Dr. Josef
- Mengele, and whether Abraham Lincoln suffered from Marfan's
- syndrome, an inherited disease characterized by gangly limbs,
- poor eyesight and a weak heart. "The applications of this
- technology are literally as wide as your imagination!" exclaims
- University of Virginia geneticist Dr. Thaddeus Kelly.
- </p>
- <p> Among the areas where PCR is starting to make important
- inroads:
- </p>
- <p> MEDICAL DIAGNOSTICS. Already PCR has begun to help
- physicians determine which babies born to AIDS-infected mothers
- also harbor the virus. Since all newborns carry their mother's
- antibodies whether or not they are actually infected, standard
- antibody tests are inconclusive. PCR, however, can home in on
- the minute quantities of viral DNA that may be present in only
- 1 out of 100,000 cells. A positive diagnosis means the baby can
- immediately begin therapy with AZT.
- </p>
- <p> PCR-based diagnostic tests are also under development for
- Lyme disease, tuberculosis and viral meningitis. Present tests
- for tuberculosis, which involve culturing and growing the
- bacteria, take up to a month to confirm a diagnosis. PCR can do
- the job in a few hours. Current tests are unable to distinguish
- viral meningitis quickly from the far more dangerous bacterial
- form of the disease, which is most common in infancy. As a
- result, all babies found to have meningitis are treated as if
- they had the more lethal form. With a PCR diagnosis, those with
- viral meningitis could be spared unnecessary hospitalization and
- medication. "There is a big financial saving, a big emotional
- saving, and substantial reduction in risk to the baby," says
- Colorado's Rotbart, who is helping to develop the test.
- </p>
- <p> FORENSIC SCIENCE. Amplified by PCR, the DNA in a single
- sperm cell can link a suspect to a rape victim. Theoretically,
- a single epithelial cell found in saliva can be traced back to
- the person who, say, licked a stamp on a letter bomb. In
- California's San Mateo County, charges against a man arrested
- and jailed for a brutal rape were dropped in 1988 after a PCR
- test showed he could not have been the attacker. A year later
- another man was arrested in another rape case. Not only did a
- DNA marker make him a suspect in the unsolved rape, but the
- victim's jewelry was found in his girlfriend's possession and
- his fingerprint matched one found on the victim's car. Result:
- a conviction.
- </p>
- <p> EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY. Thanks to PCR, it is now possible to
- extract badly degraded DNA sequences from ancient sources and
- enlarge them like photographic prints. Thus far, PCR has been
- used to examine minuscule fragments of DNA taken from the brain
- cells of humans buried 8,000 years ago in a Florida bog.
- Analysis of such DNA can shed light on the emigration patterns
- of ancient peoples and perhaps some of the diseases that
- afflicted them. The technique has also been used to examine DNA
- from animal skins in natural-history museums and from the frozen
- remains of woolly mammoths. Among the unresolved questions that
- PCR may eventually shed light on is whether the Neanderthals
- were an unsuccessful offshoot of the evolutionary tree or the
- direct ancestors of modern humans. It may also be able to
- unravel the mystery of what happened to the ancient Celts, who
- once populated most of Western Europe. "Now," says University
- of Leicester geneticist Alec Jeffreys, "there is a genetic time
- machine for looking back into the past."
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes PCR is compared to a computer that speedily
- executes the most complex calculations. But its significance far
- exceeds a simple increase in efficiency and productivity. Like
- the radio telescope and the electron microscope, it represents
- an advance of a fundamental nature. Before PCR, scientists could
- not consider analyzing the DNA contained in a single cell, much
- less the degraded DNA recovered from dried blood or old bones.
- PCR, says Dr. Barry Eisenstein, chairman of the Department of
- Microbiology at the University of Michigan Medical School, "is
- enabling us to answer questions we only dreamed of five years
- ago."
- </p>
- <p> Ironically, the technology's biggest virtue is also its
- major drawback: it is so sensitive to tiny bits of DNA that even
- the most minute contamination of laboratory samples can lead to
- false results. This sometimes vexing problem, however, has not
- stopped the flow of creative and occasionally wild ideas about
- PCR's applications. Researchers at Hoffmann-La Roche Inc.,
- which recently agreed to pay Cetus $300 million for the rights
- to PCR, are interested in developing a whole series of DNA
- identification tags. To foil counterfeiting, for instance,
- everything from paper currency to designer jeans and compact
- discs might be laced with DNA markers. Oil carried in tankers
- and toxic chemicals carried in trucks might similarly be
- "branded" by molecules of synthetic DNA. With PCR, a spill of
- unknown origin could then be traced back to the responsible
- party.
- </p>
- <p> Like many, Arthur Caplan, director of the Center for
- Biomedical Ethics at the University of Minnesota, believes that
- PCR will revolutionize everything from medicine and biology to
- anthropology and history. It is a prospect he finds both
- exhilarating and disturbing. Technically, it would be possible,
- by examining DNA samples from the descendants of Thomas
- Jefferson and those of his slave Sally Hemings, to determine
- once and for all whether Jefferson, as rumored, fathered some
- of Hemings' children. Would this be an appropriate use of the
- new technology? "Let me put it this way," says Caplan. "Because
- of PCR, I'm not worried about going out of the bioethics
- business anytime soon."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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