LONDON
NOVEMBER 28 2008 04:14h
Text
The researchers scanned the genes of 284 people and found four linked to determining metabolic rates.
Differences in metabolism can make some people more susceptible to diseases such as diabetes and explain why response to diet, exercise and drugs to treat certain conditions varies from person to person.
Knowing right away how a person's body will break down molecules in the blood that build up muscle and cells and provide energy could lead to better care, said Karsten Suhre, a researcher at the Helmholtz Centre in Munich.
The researchers scanned the genes of 284 people and found four -- FADS1, LIPC, SCAD and MCAD -- linked to determining metabolic rates.
"These genes appear to be involved or play a key role in metabolism," Suhre said in a telephone interview.
This potentially paves the way for more personalised health care in which doctors could use knowledge of a patient's metabolism gleaned from their genetic make-up to determine treatment, he said.
This could prove particularly useful for treating conditions strongly linked to metabolism such as coronary artery disease and obesity, he added.
"These findings could result in a step toward personalised healthcare and nutrition based on a combination of genoytyping and metabolic characterisation," Suhre and colleagues wrote in the Public Library of Science Journal PLoS Genetics.
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