Computational and Biochemical Approaches to Molecular Epidemiology


Autoria(s): Calhoun, Michael; Dysinger, Hannah; Hobbs, Ph.D., David; Hailer, Ph.D., Katie
Data(s)

07/08/2013

Resumo

Mining activity in Butte, Montana has taken place, or continues to take place, within the urban residence of Butte itself. This has led to urban areas with high concentrations of toxic metals such as arsenic, lead, copper, zinc, mercury and cadmium. Advances in protein study and gene sequencing has opened the possibility of finding molecular biomarkers whose presence, absence or morphological changes could indicate disease processes in populations exposed to environmental toxins. While in principle, biomarkers can be any chemicals or metabolites, as well as proteins and genes that are indicative of exposure to xenobiotics, this study seeks to identify changes in cellular pathways that suggest chronic (or acute) exposure to low-levels of metals associated with historical mining activities on the Butte Hill that could cause oxidative stress or other stress to the cell.

http://digitalcommons.mtech.edu/urp_aug_2013/1000/thumbnail.jpg

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.mtech.edu/urp_aug_2013/2

http://digitalcommons.mtech.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=urp_aug_2013

Publicador

Digital Commons @ Montana Tech

Direitos

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Fonte

2013 Undergraduate Research

Palavras-Chave #toxic metals #protein study #gene sequencing #molecular biomarkers #cellular pathways #Biochemistry
Tipo

text