JavaScript and Cookies are required to view this site. Please enable both in your browser settings.
Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities
Documenting Reality Death Pictures & Death Videos Human Deformities & Medical Problems Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities 

Current Rating:

Unlimited Views No Ads No Algorithms Lifetime Account

Documenting Reality

Community Forum · Est. 2006

Join Now
Thread Tools
  #1  
07-17-2012, 05:49 PM
DiamondSmiles's Avatar
DiamondSmiles
Offline:
★The Queen★
Poster Rank:67
Female
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 23,498
Contributions: 120
 
Mentioned: 95 Post(s)
Quoted: 3083 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 16/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss23498
Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

I found this interesting since some of us were talking about violet eyes yesterday. She lucked out in this area, too, with none of the bad effects some people have.

Blogging the Human Genome

How a mutation on chromosome 16 gave Elizabeth Taylor her amazing double eyelashes.

No one kept it a secret exactly during her lifetime, but few people knew that Elizabeth Taylor was a mutant. In fact her condition, distichiasis, which usually involves a frameshift mutation near the tip of chromosome 16, helped accent Taylor’s famously lovely eyes with an extra-sexy set of double eyelashes to bat at the cameras.

Taylor lucked out, though. In other victims, distichiasis scars the corneas, swells the limbs grotesquely, opens up cleft palates, and causes varicose veins.

In 7 percent of patients, it also leads to heart disease, and perhaps not coincidentally, Taylor had a history of heart trouble and died of heart failure in March, 2011.

The distichiasis gene isn’t the only DNA with an extraordinarily wide range of effects inside the body. The self-explanatory hand-foot-genital syndrome, (a chromosome 7 defect), can cause stubby thumbs, small feet, soft wrist and ankle bones, urinary tract infections, and a urethra opening not at the tip but on the underside of the penis.

There’s also Waardenburg-Shah syndrome, which causes the unlikely combination of deafness, piebaldism, (patches of albino skin), and so-called megacolon, including constipation so bad it’s often fatal.

Single genes that tweak many different body traits are called pleiotropic, and pleiotropic genes can wield their power in different ways. Some build proteins in tissues or cells that just happen to appear all over the body, like connective tissues. Others, like the distichiasis gene, foxc2, exert control not so much by building things but by controlling what other genes build and when they build them. Scientists call genes with this power transcription factors.

Remember that transcription involves turning DNA into RNA. Human beings have something like 23,000 DNA genes, but not all of them are firing at once. Genes turn on and off in individual cells at different times, and the varying on/off patterns make skin cells and liver cells and brain cells unique.

Transcription factors are what turn genes on in many cases, by clamping onto DNA and signaling cells to start manufacturing something. And foxc2’s protein just happens to turn on many other genes in many different tissues—it’s a genetic manager.

Genetic managers screw up, though, multiple body parts suffer.

Perhaps the most important transcription factors are hox genes, which steer bodily development from our earliest hours. Insects, fish, mammals, reptiles, and all other animals share these genes, and the ubiquity of hox in the animal kingdom explains why most animals have the same basic body plan: a cylindrical trunk with a mouth at one end, an anus at the other, and various appendages sprouting in between.

Humans have four stretches of around 10 hox genes each, including a stretch on chromosome 12. And quite unusually for genes, the hox have a pretty strict division of labor.

The first few hox within a given stretch generally design things near the top of the head. The next hox design things a bit lower down. The next hox work a little lower down, and so on, down to our nether regions. Why nature requires this tidy top-to-bottom mapping with the hox isn’t known, but all animals exhibit this trait.

Scientists refer to DNA that appears in the same basic form in many, many species as highly “conserved” because creatures remain very conservative about changing it. (Some hox and hox-like genes are so conserved that scientists can rip them out of chickens, mice, and flies and swap them between species, and the genes more or less function the same.)

As you might suspect, highly conserved DNA like hox is vitally important, and it’s easy to see why creatures don’t mess with hox and other body-patterning genes very often.

Delete some of this DNA and animals can develop multiple jaws. Mutate other DNA and wings disappear, or extra sets of eyes appear in awful places—bulging out on the legs or staring from the ends of antennae.

Still other mutations cause genitals or legs to sprout on the head, or cause jaws or antennae to grow in the crotch area. And these are the lucky mutants—most creatures that gamble with these genes don’t live to speak of it.

Still, creatures can get around the strictures of highly conserved DNA in other ways. As mentioned in the palindrome entry, cells sometimes randomly double stretches of DNA. Doubling the hox stretch would give animals backup copies, and the backup copies could then mutate without such dire consequences.

In fact, changes to highly conserved DNA might explain some of the large-scale, macroevolutionary changes scientists see in the fossil record—the relatively sudden emergence of creatures with antennae or extra legs or other ingenious variations on the basic body plan.

Again, few creatures win such gambles, but those that do thrive. And as we’ll see tomorrow, fussing with one bit of conserved DNA may well have spared us humans a lot of heartache, (and brainache), in our past.

*In this photo, the double row of bottom lashes are growing inward and I can imagine would be very annoying as anyone who has gotten a hair under their contact lens knows!*
eye.jpg
230.9 KB ·26248 views
9 Users Say Thank You For This Post:
Arsedestroyer, durt, DVEEUS, Pelle, Shelbeano ^-^, Spitfire Dynamo, Vapeitup, Vorgrus, Weatherly
▼ PROMO FROM DOCUMENTING REALITY
Want a better bang for your buck?
Join Now
Hidden for upgraded members.
  #2  
07-17-2012, 08:12 PM
coverdale0's Avatar
coverdale0
Offline:
.....
Poster Rank:226
female
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 6,307
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 44 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 18/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss6307
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

Interesting!!
  #3  
07-17-2012, 08:43 PM
calisphere
Offline:
My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL
Poster Rank:2114
Female
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 228
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 40 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 15/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssssss228
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

Have to love DNA! Thanks for the good find.
This User Says Thank You For This Post:
DiamondSmiles
  #4  
07-19-2012, 11:49 AM
durt's Avatar
durt
Offline:
★ Legacy Member ★
Poster Rank:72
male
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 21,135
Contributions: 1
 
Mentioned: 50 Post(s)
Quoted: 4947 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
2/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss21135
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

along with the eyelashes, if she had as many pricks sticking out of her as she's had stuck in, she'd be a porcupine!
This User Says Thank You For This Post:
DiamondSmiles
  #5  
07-19-2012, 06:20 PM
Dark Minato
Offline:
My Rank: PRIVATE
Poster Rank:7266
Male
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 27
 
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Quoted: 0 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssssss27
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

I have a friend who has this :O
  #6  
07-20-2012, 09:46 AM
Pelle's Avatar
Pelle
Offline:
My Rank: MAJOR
Poster Rank:148
Male
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 11,125
 
Mentioned: 6 Post(s)
Quoted: 205 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 17/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss11125
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

  #7  
07-20-2012, 02:35 PM
Faline's Avatar
Faline
Offline:
My Rank: MAJOR
Poster Rank:11
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 93,130
Contributions: 226
 
Mentioned: 91 Post(s)
Quoted: 2009 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 18/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss93130
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

  #8  
07-21-2012, 11:42 PM
LadyCPlum's Avatar
LadyCPlum
Offline:
★ Legacy Member ★
Poster Rank:192
All woman
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 7,782
 
Mentioned: 22 Post(s)
Quoted: 1420 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 15/20
Today Posts
0/11 sssss7782
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

I get the feeling that would be pretty annoying, constantly having them poking at your eyeball......
This User Says Thank You For This Post:
DiamondSmiles
  #9  
07-22-2012, 12:28 AM
DiamondSmiles's Avatar
DiamondSmiles
Offline:
★The Queen★
Poster Rank:67
Female
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 23,498
Contributions: 120
 
Mentioned: 95 Post(s)
Quoted: 3083 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 16/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss23498
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

I get the feeling that would be pretty annoying, constantly having them poking at your eyeball......

So would I. Have you ever worn contact lenses?

I would think it would be like when you get an eyelash or tiny piece of dirt or whatever under your lens, it annoys the Hell out of you.
  #10  
07-22-2012, 12:28 AM
DiamondSmiles's Avatar
DiamondSmiles
Offline:
★The Queen★
Poster Rank:67
Female
Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 23,498
Contributions: 120
 
Mentioned: 95 Post(s)
Quoted: 3083 Post(s)
Activity Longevity
0/20 16/20
Today Posts
0/11 ssss23498
Re: Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities

I have a friend who has this :O

Does it annoy him or her?
Documenting Reality Death Pictures & Death Videos Human Deformities & Medical Problems Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities
Documenting Reality Death Pictures & Death Videos Human Deformities & Medical Problems Chromosome Mutation Gave Elizabeth Taylor Double Eyelashes, Instead of Deformities


Powered by vBulletin Copyright 2000-2010 Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO