ME/CFS Science Blog
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As I understand it, these are the controls already used in DecodeME.Say if you take the controls from the UK Biobank of European ancestry, could they be usefully added to the control group?
As I understand it, these are the controls already used in DecodeME.Say if you take the controls from the UK Biobank of European ancestry, could they be usefully added to the control group?
But they need not even have a direct influence, there could be an intermediary right? Some other signalling molecule for instance, interferon.
Are results from ALL metabolomic studies done on ME/CFS irrelevant? If yes, why this is so ?
Answering the question you tagged me on, just my view.As a patient I would like to know : Are results from ALL metabolomic studies done on ME/CFS irrelevant? If yes, why this is so ?
I don't think they are irrelevant but my understanding is that the vast majority of findings are within normal ranges and that the few exceptions have not been replicated. I suspect that people have been looking at metabolomics because in the past there has been a tendency to think of ME/CFS in terms of altered energy metabolism. People try to find things in their data that confirm their hunches. In the past ME/CFS research has been a backwater and the level of critique within the science community has been fairly low.
I think I asked if you knew of any metabolic abnormalities we should focus on @mariovitali ? I forget things, but cannot remember anything striking. Can you?
I think we are all very aware that the spiny neurons may be a blind alley but at least we have some pointers in that direction.
Answering the question you tagged me on, just my view.
I am sure that there are some existing reports of ME/CFS abnormalities of various sorts that are true, no doubt we have discussed some of them. The problem is that, right now, I don't think we know which ones they are. They are hidden among all the noise and the lack of replication. I wouldn't say metabolic studies are irrelevant. We need more, done really carefully.
I certainly am not ruling out issues with lipids. But, I can't recall any convincing evidence yet. Some that is a bit suggestive, I guess, among other studies that have too many problems to tell us anything reliable. I'd be happy to be pointed to something that people feel is convincing.
@Jonathan Edwards You did ask and I gave an example regarding replicated findings of disruption in Cholines and other phospholipids.
I mean, if after all these studies we do not have at least some directions.. this is frightening and deserves immediate communication to patients and patient groups.
Many of the SNP-gene assignments are likely not correct, making the analysis based on not perfectly accurate data. But many likely are. If it was mostly SNPs assigned to genes incorrectly, I would think we would not see any significant tissues, as opposed to seeing significant tissues that are totally wrong. I'm sure the specific pattern of tissues could change somewhat though with more accurate data.3) Is the following true or false : Conventional MAGMA analysis can be limited because SNPs are typically assigned to genes by physical position or LD-based mapping. For complex regulatory loci, especially in brain, the causal gene may be hundreds of kilobases away and connected through chromatin looping. If true, what are the implications ?
Yes, the core idea of MAGMA is fairly easily interpretable: Imagine there are only 3 genes in the DNA. SNPs near gene A are very significant and gene A is highly expressed in the liver. SNPs near gene B are moderately significant and gene B is moderately expressed in the liver. SNPs near gene C are not at all significant and gene C is not expressed in the liver. MAGMA would thus highlight the liver as significant. If gene A, B, and C do not show this pattern of expression in, say, the kidney - maybe all genes equally expressed there - then the kidney would not be significant.4) Is it true that MAGMA/FUMA enrichment identify tissues and cell types whose expressed genes carry more association signal, but it does not prove the disease originates in those cells,
No, MAGMA doesn't identify causal variants. The mapping of significant variants to genes could be considered a crude method of identifying causal genes (the 13 "MAGMA genes" in DecodeME), but again, many of these mappings are likely wrong so any given specific gene should be taken with a grain of salt.nor does it identify causal variants or causal genes ?
Sorry, I must have missed that. Ther are so many threads.
I am not sure what this has to do with Paolo's suggestion. We are not running a theory competition. We are looking at everything that might provide clues.
I don't understand what is frightening. We have always known that we understand almost nothing about ME/CFS. Lots of negative findings help to narrow things down. Hutan suggests that some of the positive findings may turn out 'true' findings but the problem is that we don't know which ones that will be. We now have some important genetic leads and genetic data are inherently much more powerful than other studies because they imply causal relation, even if that may be complex and hard to pin down.
What were the choline and phospholipid findings?
Mario, that first one is the Huang, Armstrong study of blood lipids in people with a label of ME/CFS in the UK Biobank. As I and others explained ad nauseam on the forum thread for it, that study unfortunately does not give us evidence of altered lipids in ME/CFS because the ME/CFS individuals are not compared with suitable controls. It seems highly likely that most, but perhaps not all, of the identified differences are the result of comparing the ME/CFS group, who have the co-morbidities typical of 50 and 60 year old people, with people who were selected to be particularly healthy in most respects.
Patients and patient groups certainly do need to know that a lot of ME/CFS research, including biologically focussed research, doesn't take us forward. That's not frightening news though. Us understanding that is progress, because we can do things to make the research better, rather than simply applauding as things go round in circles.I mean, if after all these studies we do not have at least some directions.. this is frightening and deserves immediate communication to patients and patient groups.
I feel like nothing is moving in the right direction.
Yes, Professor, you did correct me on my one somewhat general and peremptory statement. Sorry.That isn't how some of the rest of us are feeling!!
but unless you know things we don't in the inner workings of research, what's on the horizon in two or three years is a bit depressing (before daratumumab and SequencEM).
you often remind us that the solution could arrive at any moment, tomorrow or in 10 years
If we had dozens of Maccalinis working behind the scenes, that would be fantastic
how can we move forward without dozens and dozens of brain autopsies, in-depth studies on the most severely affected patients that would require home visits for saliva and blood samples, etc.
I get the impression that this forum is the only one that understands the disease.
Obviously what you say here is hypothetical but do you mean it in the sense of a massive finding being discovered 'last week' but not written up/published by the lab yet, so we are all unaware?I have actually often said it might have been last week and not known to us, too. I think that is a significant possibility.
Obviously what you say here is hypothetical but do you mean it in the sense of a massive finding being discovered 'last week' but not written up/published by the lab yet, so we are all unaware?