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Friday, January 08 2021 - 03:00
AsiaNet
deCODE genetics: Monozygous but not identical
REYKJAVIK, Iceland, January 7, 2021, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

By sequencing the germline genomes of twins and comparing them to those of 
close relatives, scientists at deCODE genetics found mutations that are present 
in just one of the monozygotic twins and traced them back to the first days 
after conception. 

In the article, Differences between germline genomes of monozygotic twins, 
published in Nature Genetics today scientists at deCODE genetics searched for 
mutations that were present in only one of monozygotic twins.  

In the study of human genetics the genomes of monozygotic twins are often 
assumed to be identical, and differences between them have been pinned on the 
environment rather than genetics. This assumption has been used throughout the 
centuries to disentangle the contribution of genetics and environment to 
disease and other phenotypes.

The scientists found two groups of twin pairs, one where twins share mutations 
and another where the developmental mutations are only present in one of them 
at high frequency.

"Mutations can be formed when cells divide and the daughter cells may carry a 
mutation that marks the descendants of the mutated cell within an individual. 
Mutations that are present in only one of the twins allow us therefore to 
backtrack to the cell divisions that lead to the development of the twins." 
says Hákon Jónsson scientist at deCODE Genetics and author on the paper.

Remarkably this backtracking of the mutations that differ between twins 
suggests that the mutations are formed in the first days of embryonic 
development when the embryo consists of several cells.  

"These two groups of monozygotic twins give insight into development of the 
embryo only few divisions after conception when the embryo consists of several 
cells," says Kari Stefansson CEO of deCODE genetics. "These are exciting times 
that allows us to use mutations to shed light on the development of humans at 
these first stages of development."

Hákon Jónsson and colleagues sequenced the genomes of 387 pairs of identical 
twins and their parents, spouses and children to track mutation divergence. The 
authors found that twins differ by 5.2 early developmental mutations, on 
average. In approximately 15% of twin pairs, one twin carries a high number of 
these mutations that the other twin does not have.

Physical or behavioral differences between identical twins are usually 
attributed to environmental factors, according to the assumption that genetic 
differences between the pair are minimal. However, autism and other 
developmental disorders—which one twin in a pair might have—are linked to 
genetic mutations. The authors conclude that the role of genetic factors in 
shaping such phenotypic differences has been underestimated.

Thora Kristin Asgeirsdottir, PR and Communications deCODE genetics, 00354 -570 
1909, 00354 -894 1909, thoraa@decode.is 

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1395021/deCODE_twins.jpg 

SOURCE: DeCODE Genetics Inc 
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