Friday 5 December 2014

Smoking Might Cost Men Their 'Y' Chromosome, Study Finds

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Consequences aren't clear, but experts suspect the change might be linked to increased cancer risk

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WebMD News from HealthDay

By Amy Norton

HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Dec. 4, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Men who smoke may see more of their Y chromosomes disappear as they age, a new study suggests.

Scientists have long known that as men grow older, the Y chromosome can start to disappear from some of their body cells. And that was initially thought to be a normal part of aging.

But recent research has suggested that "loss of Y" might not be so benign. In a study reported earlier this year, researchers linked Y chromosome loss to a shorter life span and an increased risk of dying from cancer, specifically.

The new study, published online Dec. 4 in Science, adds to those results: It found that older men who smoke typically lose more Y chromosomes from their blood cells than non-smokers do.

The finding hints at one possible explanation for why male smokers tend to face higher cancer risks than female smokers, according to Lars Forsberg, a researcher at Uppsala University in Sweden who led the study.

There are smokers who don't show a loss in the chromosome, and non-smokers who do, Forsberg noted -- just as many smokers don't develop cancer, and many non-smokers do.

"But overall," he said, "smoking is associated with loss of Y, and loss of Y is associated with cancer."

Men have an X and a Y chromosome, while women have two X chromosomes. And experts used to think that the Y -- short and stumpy compared with the X -- did little more than determine male sex and ensure normal sperm production.

"The bottom two-thirds of the Y chromosome was seen as just repetitive DNA that doesn't code for anything," explained Dr. Martin Bialer, a medical geneticist at North Shore-LIJ Health System in Great Neck, N.Y.

"But now we're starting to think it may have more roles than just determining sex -- though that's a pretty important one," said Bialer, who was not involved in the study.

Recent research has shown that the Y chromosome actually contains a large number of genes. Their jobs are not fully understood yet, but a couple of those genes may help suppress tumors, according to Forsberg's team.



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