the Genathlete study. (2007)

Endothelial nitric oxide synthase gene polymorphism and elite endurance athlete status: the Genathlete study.via PubMed: triathletes OR triat... by Wolfarth B, Rankinen T, Mühlbauer S, Ducke M, Rauramaa R, Boulay MR, Pérusse L, Bouchard C on 12/11/07

Endothelial nitric oxide synthase gene polymorphism and elite endurance athlete status: the Genathlete study.

Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2007 Dec 7;

Authors: Wolfarth B, Rankinen T, Mühlbauer S, Ducke M, Rauramaa R, Boulay MR, Pérusse L, Bouchard C

In the Genathlete study, we examined the contribution of three polymorphisms in the endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS3) gene to discriminate elite endurance athletes (EEA) from sedentary controls (SC). The EEA group included a total of 316 Caucasian males with a VO(2max) >75 mL/kg. The SC group comprised 299 unrelated sedentary Caucasian males who had VO(2max) values below 50 mL/kg. The polymerase chain reaction technique was used to amplify a microsatellite (CA)(n) repeat in intron 13, a 27 bp repeat in intron 4 and a third fragment in exon 7 containing the Glu298Asp SNP. No difference was found between the EEA and SC groups for the 27 bp repeat and the Glu298Asp polymorphism. Chi-square analysis of the overall allelic distribution of the (CA)(n) repeat revealed no significant difference between the two groups (P=0.135). However, comparing carriers and non-carriers for the most common (CA)(n) repeat alleles, we found significant differences between SC and EEA, with more EEA subjects carrying the 164 bp allele (P=0.007). In summary, we found suggestive evidence that the 164 bp allele of the (CA)(n) repeat in intron 13 is associated with EEA status and may account for some of the differences between EEA and SC.

PMID: 18067521 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Engineering a win (2007 Oct)

Engineering a winIssue 17 of Cosmos, October 2007 <http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/issues/2007/17/> by Dominic Cadden <http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/node/1669> Sporting prowess at the flick of a gene? In the race to be the best, some athletes are even prepared to toy with their DNA.

Doping in sport is big business. Fierce competition drives athletes to extreme measures to improve their performance, while sports institutions employ ever more comprehensive tests to screen for the most commonly abused steroids and drugs.

The next paradigm in doping for those who can afford (and stomach) it may lay in illicitly manipulating their own DNA for a range of benefits, from increased stamina and reduced fat to larger muscles. 'Gene doping' exploits the ability to splice or 'cut and paste' useful genes resulting in athletic benefits ˆ and unknown side effects ˆ that last a lifetime.

A substance linked to gene doping was first detected at the 2006 Winter Olympics and there's now concern the practice could be used in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Gene doping is a spin-off from gene therapy, which is being investigated to treat hereditary disorders such as cystic fibrosis by replacing a patient's faulty genes with functional ones. Doctors have had some success with transferring genes into harmless viruses, which are injected into the body. With luck, these viruses replicate within target cells and copy themselves into the body's strands of DNA.

"The skills involved aren't that difficult," says Daniel Eichner, scientific manager for the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority in Canberra. "There are scientists who are willing to do anything for money, and a lot of athletes are willing to put their body on the line, no matter what the danger."

Even in medical gene therapy, however, two major dangers exist. The first is the risk that a manipulated gene can't be controlled or turned off. The second is that gene therapy could trigger cancer. One seemingly successful French trial for treating severe combined immunodeficiency disorder was halted in 2002 when some of the 11 patients developed leukaemia. However, despite the risks, the temptations will be hard to resist.

Since the full publication of the human genome in 2004, a handful of the 25,000-odd genes detected so far have been found to have some role in athletic performance. One example is the IGF-1 or insulin growth factor gene, says geneticist Damien Abarno of the University of South Australia in Adelaide. Scientists have already had some success getting this gene to 'take' in animals and, unlike steroids, "it increases the number of muscle cells, not just the size of them," he says.

And there are many more genes that could be useful to athletes. Boosting the expression of the gene for MGF, or mechano-growth factor, could limit fatigue and improve muscle repair. The AMPK gene affects how muscles accumulate glycogen, and therefore impacts endurance. The ACE-1, or angiotensin-converting enzyme gene, can be deleted for increased strength or inserted for greater endurance, and has an effect on blood pressure and how muscles use oxygen.

Only a few of these genes have been extensively tested for side effects. However, animal trials with one gene called HCP have highlighted some of the potential risks. One common method of improving performance is increasing red blood cell numbers, which boosts the transport of oxygen from the lungs to the muscles, improving stamina and performance. The conventional method of boosting red blood cell count is with the hormone erythropoietin (EPO), although this is now easily screened for in athletes. Similar effects can be gained by inhibiting the function of the gene HCP, which itself regulates blood cell distribution. However, trials in monkeys were unsuccessful, and often fatal, says Albarno. "The problem was that the [red blood cell count] increased rapidly up to levels where it turned the blood to jelly."

This side-effect was avoided with a different gene therapy treatment, for anaemia. Tested in 2002, but never produced commercially, Repoxygen works by increasing levels of the body's own EPO. This, in turn, boosts red blood cell production, but only in response to very low levels of oxygen that might be experienced with anaemia or during intensive exercise.

It was Repoxygen that German athletics coach Thomas Springstein was accused of attempting to obtain prior to the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Springstein and another trainer in Germany are under investigation by the World Anti-Doping Authority (WADA), which outlawed gene doping in 2003. The WADA is now working with geneticists to find effective screening techniques.

"Close to US$8 million has been spent in the WADA research program for gene doping, representing a significant portion of the entire budget," says geneticist Theodore Friedmann at the University of California in San Diego, USA, and chair of WADA's gene doping panel.

One proposal has been to genetically map athletes and then periodically re-screen them to detect changes, says Robin Parisotto, a Canberra-based consultant to Sport Knowledge Australia, who helped establish a test for blood doping with EPO. "But when do you do that? Before they become elite athletes, as a child, or soon after birth?" Parisotto asks.

Friedmann says that scientists working under the WADA banner have studied a number of the side effects that occur with changes to genes and to metabolism. If researchers can put these together to create a 'signature', eventually it may be possible to detect this signature in saliva samples, he says. "In exactly the same way that DNA technology has added so much in forensic science and crime detection, it will add very powerful new tools to detect doping."

With the 2008 Beijing Olympics looming, the clock is ticking to find tests capable of detecting the practice.

"Realistically, it will be very difficult to have a test up and running before Beijing", says ASADA's Eichner. But this doesn't mean GM cheaters will manage to remain undetected ˆ WADA rules allow samples to be tested for up to eight years after an event. 

Dominic Cadden is a freelance science and physiology writer based in Sydney, Australia.

Anti-doping agency developing test for genetic cheating (2007, Nov 1)

Anti-doping agency developing test for genetic cheatingThu Nov 1, 9:54 PM ET

The World Anti-Doping Agency is working with scientists to develop tests to battle genetic cheating, which it believes could become possible in five years, its chief said in an interview published Friday.

Dick Pound, WADA's outgoing chairman, told the Financial Times business daily that genetic manipulation could eventually dwarf drugs-based cheating in sports.

"We are working with them (scientists) to have a non-invasive (test) ready by the time these techniques are being used," Pound said, telling the paper he was convinced scientists would make genetic manipulation an option for athletes in five to six years.

Pound said that scientists had told WADA that they had already received inquiries from athletes and coaches about how genetic manipulation would work, and how it could affect performance.

The FT said that such testing is at such an early stage that scientists are still conducting laboratory experiments on rats.

Pound also said that the recent case of American Olympic gold medallist Marion Jones admitting she took performance-enhancing drugs had helped push the US Olympic Committee to take a harder line against drugs-based cheating.

"US professional sports are in a combination of denial and responding with the absolute minimum they think they have to do to keep Congress off their backs. It is only legislation that gets their attention," he said.

"It is very hard to quantify the scale of the (drugs cheating) problem. Some countries understand the problem, but don't know how to go about solving it. Some are still trying to pretend there is no problem."

Warning on genetic cheating in sports (2007, Nov 1)

Warning on genetic cheating in sportsBy Roger Blitz in London Financial Times updated 7:43 p.m. CT, Thurs., Nov. 1, 2007 Genetic manipulation will eventually dwarf drug-cheating as the main issue to confront sports, the outgoing chairman of the World Anti-Doping Agency said on Thursday.

Dick Pound said he was convinced scientists would make genetic development available to athletes within five or six years, allowing them to enhance performance by bulking up their bodies by up to 30 per cent.

Mr Pound, who leaves the sports doping monitoring body at the end of the year after six years at the helm, said Wada had begun contact with leading global scientists and was running several research projects about genetic manipulation.

He said that scientists were telling Wada that they were already receiving inquiries from coaches and athletes about how genetic manipulation could improve performance - even though research is still at a stage where scientists are working in laboratory conditions with rats.

"We are working with them to have a non-invasive [test] ready by the time these techniques are being used," he told the FT.

Sports are grappling to protect their integrity following a series of high-profile drug scandals. Athletics has been rocked by the admission by US athlete Marion Jones, an Olympic champion in Sydney in 2000, that she took performance-enhancing drugs. Cycling's Tour de France endured another year of drug scandals, prompting team disqualifications and the desertion of several sponsors.

Mr Pound, who was attending an FT sports industry conference, said he believed the Marion Jones case had helped harden the mood of the US Olympic Committee after assuming for years that drug-cheating in athletics was a problem only for other countries.

But he said US professional sports continued to show a blinkered attitude. "US professional sports are in a combination of denial and responding with the absolute minimum they think they have to do to keep Congress off their backs. It is only legislation that gets their attention," said Mr Pound.

The fight against drug cheats would be improved by speeding up the process of drug testing by sporting bodies, he added. But he agreed that individual sports and their federations only tended to crack down on their stars after the painful experience of a high-profile scandal.

"It is very hard to quantify the scale of the problem. Some countries understand the problem, but don't know how to go about solving it. Some are still trying to pretend there is no problem. It will be a combination of passage of time and a willingness to assume responsibility," Mr Pound said.

He added that the Beijing Olympics next year would be equipped with state-of-the-art anti-doping testing, but Wada remained short of funds with an overall annual budget of $23m.

Copyright The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved.

Gene doping could replace performance-enhancing drugs, experts predict (2007, Oct 23)

Gene doping could replace performance-enhancing drugs, experts predict

By Morgan Ashenfelter

(AXcess News) Washington - Performance-enhancing drugs are nothing new in professional sports, as recent scandals with Major League Baseball, the Tour de France and Marion Jones attest. But members of medical and policy making communities are worried about a new technology called gene doping, which modifies genes regulating specific traits.

"The sports industry is a small window into an entire realm of non-medical testing that we need to consider how to regulate," said Mark Rothstein, director of the Institute for Bioethics, Health Policy and Law at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. He and three other members of a panel spoke on Monday.

The focus of the panel, put on by the Hastings Center and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, was the effects gene doping and genetic testing could have on athletes and how it should be regulated.

"The science is inevitable," said Dr. Theodore Friedmann, professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San Diego. "The time is not too early to think about policy and ethical issues."

In the sports world, gene doping would be the use of genes instead of drugs to enhance performance. Scientists have identified genes that control blood production, muscle growth and fast and slow twitch fibers, which determine muscles' ability to work at a high intensity or steady endurance. If an athlete has a lower amount of a certain gene in his or her body, a doctor could inject the athlete with more of that specific gene.

Genes are also affected by environment and development over time, meaning scientists may not be able to modify the genes that could enhance an athlete's performance.

But that's a risk most professional athletes are willing to take, said John Feinstein, National Public Radio sports commentator and the author of several sports books.

"The pressures on athletes, the fact that there's always someone right behind you and the amount of money encourages them to take the risk," Feinstein said. "To athletes, succeeding at their sport is worth the risk to their health, to be labeled as a cheater and of being caught."

Thomas Murray, president of the Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute, said in the short run, education is the most important.

"In the next several years, it is much more likely athletes will hurt themselves because no one knows exactly how to regulate certain genes," Murray said. "In the long run, sports bodies will have to do the most in terms of policy, but there will be some room for Congress."

Genes, which are made up of DNA, can be likened to instructions that contain a person's physical and functional traits. When a problem exists within DNA, a mutation occurs in the gene, which affects whichever trait it controls.

Through gene therapy, doctors can target specific, problematic genes by injecting a virus into the person's body. The virus has been stripped of its disease-causing materials and instead carries a human gene that is mutilated or missing in that person. When the virus multiplies, the new, healthy gene will have different traits than the one it replaced.

In athletes, the injections could add traits that didn't exist before or reinforce existing traits.

Because the technology is so new, risks are high. Many patients who undergo gene therapy to cure life-threatening diseases die from contracting other diseases, such as leukemia. Friedmann encourages the use of gene therapy only for patients with life-threatening mutations, not for healthy athletes.

"Gene therapy is an immature technique, still," Friedmann said. "It's experimental medicine."

Murray said that one protection would be to discourage gene testing, at least on children.

Gene testing analyzes a person's DNA to look for a number of specific traits, such as cognitive ability, addiction, sexuality and coordination. What Rothstein is concerned about is parents using genetic testing to place children on a certain life path, including sports. He cited Genetic Technologies, an Australian company, which offers such tests.

"It is an incorrect notion, genetic determinism, to think that genes are immutable," Rothstein said.

Genetic Technologies' test analyzes a person for disease susceptibility, identity and sports performance, specifically ACTN3, which controls fast twitch fibers.

"This won't affect the 2008 Olympic Games," Murray said. "But companies will soon be peddling gene doping, and there will be willing and eager athletes as customers."

Source: Scripps Howard Foundation Wire

Gene Doping: A Review

Gene Doping: A Review of Performance-Enhancing Genetics

Gary R. Gaffney, MD, Robin Parisotto, BA

0031-3955/07/ 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

doi:10.1016/j.pcl.2007.04.004 pediatric.theclinics.com

Pediatr Clin N Am 54 (2007) 807–822

“Mighty Mice” Made Mightier (2007, Aug 30)

“Mighty Mice” Made MightierImage Gallery

Se-Jin Lee Comparison of body and muscle size between normal mice (left) and double mutant mice lacking myostatin and overproducing follistatin (right)

Newswise — The Johns Hopkins scientist who first showed that the absence of the protein myostatin leads to oversized muscles in mice and men has now found a second protein, follistatin, whose overproduction in mice lacking myostatin doubles the muscle-building effect.

Results of the new study by Se-Jin Lee, M.D., Ph.D., appearing this Wednesday in PloS One, show that while mice that lack the gene that makes myostatin have roughly twice the amount of body muscle as normal, mice without myostatin that also overproduce follistatin have about four times as much muscle as normal mice.

Lee, a professor of molecular biology and genetics, says this added muscle increase could significantly boost research efforts to “beef up” livestock or promote muscle growth in patients with muscular dystrophy and other wasting diseases.

Specifically, Lee first discovered that follistatin was capable of blocking myostatin activity in muscle cells grown under lab conditions. When he gave it to normal mice, the rodents bulked up, just as would happen if the myostatin gene in these animals was turned off.

He then genetically engineered a mouse that both lacked myostatin and made extra follistatin. If follistatin was increasing muscle growth solely by blocking myostatin, then Lee surmised that follistatin would have no added effect in the absence of myostatin.

“To my surprise and delight, there was an additive effect,” said Lee, who notes that these muscular mice averaged a 117 percent increase in muscle fiber size and a 73 percent increase in total muscle fibers compared to normal mice.

“These findings show that the capacity for increasing muscle growth by targeting these pathways is much more extensive than we have appreciated,” adds Lee. “Now we’ll search for other players that cooperate with myostatin so we can tap the full potential for enhancing muscle growth for clinical applications.”

Lee adds that this issue is of particular significance, as most agents targeting this pathway, including one drug being currently tested in a muscular dystrophy clinical trial, have been designed to block only myostatin and not other related proteins.

The research was funded by grants from the NIH and the Muscular Dystrophy Association and by a gift from Merck Research Laboratories.

On the Web: http://www.jhu.edu/sejinlee/ http://www.plosone.org/home.action

French scientists seek test to detect gene doping in athletes (2007, Aug 21)

South Florida Sun-Sentinel.comUF, French scientists seek test to detect gene doping in athletes Staff report

August 21, 2007

Gene doping has the potential to spawn athletes capable of out-running, out-jumping and out-cycling the strongest of champions. But research under way at the University of Florida could help level the playing field by detecting the first cases of gene doping in professional athletes before the practice enters the mainstream.

In the wake of recent Tour de France drug violations ˜ and with the 2008 Olympics looming ˜ the need to stay ahead of the game has never been more evident. That's why the Montreal-based World Anti-Doping Agency, or WADA, charged with monitoring the conduct of athletes, is working with investigators around the globe to develop a test that would bust competitors for injecting themselves with genetic material capable of enhancing muscle mass or heightening endurance.

"If an athlete injects himself in the muscle with DNA, would we be able to detect that?" asked one of France's leading gene therapy researchers, Philippe Moullier, M.D., Ph.D., an adjunct professor of microbiology and molecular genetics at UF and director of the Gene Therapy Laboratory at the Universite de Nantes in France.

Right now the answer is no, he said. But the UF scientists are among several groups collaborating with national and global anti-doping organizations to develop a test that could detect evidence of "doped" DNA.

"WADA has had a research program in place for some years now, to try to develop tests for gene-based doping," said Theodore Friedmann, M.D., head of the agency's panel on genetic doping and director of the gene therapy program at the University of California, San Diego.

It sounds futuristic, but experts say it's only a matter of time. Unscrupulous athletes began showing an interest in gene doping in 2004, when the first reports of muscle-boosting therapies in mice were published by University of Pennsylvania researchers.

Since then, several potential targets of gene doping have emerged, including the gene for erythropoietin, or EPO. A bioengineered version of the hormone, currently on the market, increases red blood cell production in patients with anemia and boosts oxygen delivery to the body. In athletes, this translates to enhanced stamina and a competitive edge.

But because synthetic hormones such as EPO are prohibited by WADA and readily detected through drug tests, performance-driven athletes have begun searching for stealthier and more powerful alternatives.

"The next variation of boosting red blood cell production is to actually inject the EPO gene itself, which would cause increases in red blood cells," said Richard Snyder, Ph.D., an assistant professor of microbiology and molecular genetics at UF and director of UF's Center of Excellence for Regenerative Health Biotechnology. "So the idea is to develop a test that could detect the gene that's administered."

The task isn't easy ˜ the researchers are faced with a myriad of uncertainties, such as which tissues in the body to sample and how to distinguish a "doped" gene from a naturally occurring form of the gene. Ultimately, the test will compare how many copies of the EPO gene are found in an athlete's body to levels found in the average person who has not been doping.

"Our research aims to develop the ability to detect gene doping, primarily in athletes. But it has a wider purpose, and that's to understand how gene therapies are disseminated throughout the body," added Snyder, whose research stemmed from a cooperative agreement between the UF Genetics Institute and two biomedical research organizations in France: INSERM, the French version of the National Institutes of Health, and the French national blood bank, Etablissement Francais du Sang Pays de Loire. The agreement allows Snyder and Moullier to pool their expertise and resources.

A major objective of the UF-French collaboration is to decipher the structure of AAV, a virus commonly used to deliver genes into the body for therapeutic purposes. Gene "doping" would enter the body through a similar route, but scientists say the two procedures are as different as night and day from a therapeutic standpoint.

Copyright © 2007, South Florida Sun-Sentinel <http://www.sun-sentinel.com/>

The Future (2007, August)

The futureNatasha Woods

GENE DOPING is defined by the World Anti-Doping Agency as "the non-therapeutic use of cells, genes, genetic elements, or of the modulation of gene expression, having the capacity to improve athletic performance".

An example of gene doping would involve the non-therapeutic use of gene therapies used to treat muscle-wasting disorders and which will soon be entering human clinical trials.

The chemicals are indistinguishable from their natural counterparts and are only generated locally in the affected tissue. Nothing unusual enters the bloodstream, so officials will have nothing to detect in a blood or urine test.

The first product to be associated with genetic doping emerged in the build-up to the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games, where Repoxygen was discussed as a possible substance in use at the Games.

A German court hearing evidence in the trial of a running coach accused of giving performance-enhancing drugs to young athletes was told that a search of his email inbox turned up references to a product called Repoxygen.

The substance, developed by UK firm Oxford Biomedica, delivers the gene for erythropoietin (EPO) to muscle cells. In one email, according to German news service Deutsche Welle, the coach Thomas Springstein wrote that "new Repoxygen is hard to get" and "please give me new instructions soon so that I can order the product before Christmas".

Outlaw DNA (2007, June 2)

Outlaw DNABy GRETCHEN REYNOLDS It was a single line from a longer e-mail message. But when read into the record by prosecutors at the drug trial last year of the German track coach Thomas Springstein, it caused a sensation. “The new Repoxygen is hard to get,” Springstein had written. “Please give me new instructions soon so that I can order the product before Christmas.”

Until that day in the courtroom, Repoxygen was an obscure gene-therapy drug developed at a pharmaceutical lab in Oxford, England, to fight anemia. The lab shelved the product when it seemed unlikely to be profitable. Once it was mentioned in court in January 2006, however, Repoxygen vaulted to celebrity-drug status in Europe. Newspapers and Web sites ran dozens of stories about the imminent danger of the therapy. “The moment that e-mail was presented in open court,” a columnist wrote in the weekend paper Scotland on Sunday, was when the “era of genetic doping . . . arrived.”

Repoxygen works by worming a specialized gene into its host’s DNA. In the right circumstances, the gene directs cells to start making extra erythropoietin (EPO), a hormone that drives the production of red blood cells. More red blood cells means more oxygen transported to muscles, which is why athletes have been known to inject themselves with synthetic EPO. By insinuating itself into an athlete’s genetic code, Repoxygen would theoretically produce a natural stream of the stuff.

That presumably was its allure for Thomas Springstein, who in all likelihood had heard the rumors that a single dose of Repoxygen was not only undetectable but also had the capacity to alter an athlete’s DNA. Once a coach for several top German track-and-field athletes, Springstein was tried last year for giving performance-enhancing drugs to unwitting young runners, including one of Germany’s best female hurdlers, Anne-Kathrin Elbe, who was 16 at the time.

“I was taken aback and speechless,” Elbe told me in an e-mail message. “He said that they were vitamins.”

It’s unlikely that Springstein ever got hold of Repoxygen; none was found during a 2004 raid of his home. It’s even harder to say that the “era of genetic doping” is unequivocally upon us. What is clear, and what the Springstein case reminds us, is just how impatient some coaches and athletes are to find new and ingenious ways to cheat. First it was steroids, then EPO, then human growth hormone — and now the illicit grail seems to be gene therapy. Researchers have been hounded with requests for gene therapy from sports teams as well as individual athletes; many scientists also believe that would-be dopers troll the Internet, searching for just the right gene-therapy study to try to duplicate on their own. The formula for Repoxygen itself is publicly accessible, and a few Web sites even claim to have it for sale.

“We filed a patent,” says Alan Kingsman, the chief executive of Oxford BioMedica, the lab that developed Repoxygen. “We published our data. It’s all available to anyone who has the training to understand it.”

So far, there have been no confirmed cases of gene doping in the United States or anywhere else, though that could change during the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, which is when some speculate that gene doping will make its debut. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), which preemptively banned gene doping in 2003, has been funding research at laboratories around the world to develop a reliable blood or urine test to use at the Games. “They’ll freeze samples,” says Theodore Friedmann, a geneticist at the University of California <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_california/index.html?inline=nyt-org> , San Diego, who also is head of a gene-doping advisory panel for WADA. “If gene doping is happening in Beijing, I believe we will be able to tell — if not during the competition, then later.”

Friedmann can’t say just how close WADA is to producing its gene-doping test, and won’t speculate about how foolproof it would be. At present, gene doping is detectable only through biopsies of affected muscle tissue. Cheaters can only hope this remains the case indefinitely.

“We all know people who’ll take anything — anything — to make the Olympic team,” says Darren De Reuck, a running coach in Boulder, Colo., whose athletes include his wife, Colleen, the 2004 United States Women’s Olympic Trials marathon champion. “It doesn’t matter how weird and wacky it sounds. Playing around with genes is about as out-there as anything I’ve ever heard of. So I’m sure some people will think it would be a great thing to try.”

In the United States, the first news media reports of gene doping appeared in the late 1990s, when word got out that “Schwarzenegger mice” were being produced in the lab of H. Lee Sweeney, a molecular physiologist at the University of Pennsylvania <http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_pennsylvania/index.html?inline=nyt-org> . Sweeney, who had been searching for treatments for muscle-wasting diseases, focused his research on a gene that produces a protein called IGF-1, which helps regulate growth. His experiments worked. The mice that had been injected with an extra copy of the IGF-1 gene packed on muscle and became as much as 30 percent stronger than before.

After his work was publicized, Sweeney was inundated with calls from athletes volunteering themselves as human test subjects. One high-school football coach offered up his entire team. “I was quite surprised, I must admit,” Sweeney says. “People would try to entice me, saying things like, ‘It’ll help advance your research.’ Some offered to pay me.”

To this day, Sweeney receives overtures from would-be guinea pigs. “Every time there’s a story about our research or any research similar to ours, we get more calls,” he says. Patiently he’ll explain to the caller that, even when his therapy is ready for human testing — Sweeney says it will be years — there will be risks of infection, rejection, organ failure, possibly death. The callers will listen, he says, and then reply, “O.K., when can we start?”

Other gene-therapy advances are closer to fruition. At Harvard Medical School, Chris Evans, a professor of orthopedic surgery, has located a gene that may treat and prevent osteoarthritis; he and his colleagues have tested it successfully in lame horses and plan to switch to human subjects later this year.

“I’ve had lots of people volunteer,” he says. “Some of them are my friends, middle-aged weekend athletes whose knees are shot.” But he’s anticipating that he’ll eventually get requests from coaches and trainers as well. When I ask how his therapy could affect healthy young athletes, he replies: “It is possible they could create stronger joints. They could train harder without risking joint injury. But that’s not the point of our research. We’re trying to treat disease.”

The search for effective gene therapies was a primary motivation behind the Human Genome Project, which, between 1990 and 2003, identified the 20,000-plus genes that make up human DNA. Each of these genes expresses a protein that, in turn, regulates cellular functions. If, for instance, you have a defective gene for producing the muscle protein dystrophin, your muscles won’t repair themselves correctly. That’s the cause of muscular dystrophy. By fixing glitches in a person’s genome, gene therapy would, in theory, cure any number of devastating genetic diseases.

The science is quite simple: typically, the requisite gene is introduced into a virus that is then injected into a patient. The virus can enter the nuclei of host cells, changing their DNA. When the cells replicate, they pass on the new DNA as well.

But the results have been largely disappointing. Hundreds of gene-therapy trials have been performed on humans and animals over the past two decades. A handful of therapies have shown moderate success, but most have done absolutely nothing, good or bad. Some have had unintended, even disastrous consequences. In one 1998 study, baboons were injected with a genetic compound similar to Repoxygen designed to alter EPO production. The new gene did, indeed, produce extra EPO — at an unchecked pace. The baboons’ circulatory systems became so clogged with red blood cells that the animals had to be drained of excess blood. In another study, healthy primates had an unexpected immune reaction to the virus used to carry the EPO gene. Their bodies lost the ability to produce red blood cells. Stricken with anemia, several of the animals had to be euthanized.

Repoxygen is not so capricious. Unlike most experimental EPO gene therapies, Repoxygen has a built-in gauge that recognizes when red-blood-cell counts have fallen below a healthy level. Only then will the gene crank up EPO production. Once normal red-blood-cell counts have been reached, the gene turns itself off. Since athletes presumably have optimum red-blood-cell levels, Repoxygen would likely do nothing for them, except possibly set off an immune reaction to the virus.

Nonetheless, dopers want it, as is apparent by underground Web sites that advertise gene therapies for sale. In the interest of research, Olivier Rabin, the science director of WADA, ordered some samples. “What came was just versions of synthetic EPO,” he says, not gene-therapy drugs. But fraudulent advertising doesn’t seem to be a deterrent to sales.

The Web sites are, Rabin believes, quite popular: “No one ever said the people willing to use gene doping will be great minds or careful scientists.”

The unsettling dystopian aura surrounding gene doping also obscures the fact that this isn’t fantasy science: gene doping is not eugenics. It can’t create superathletes. None of the substances with which dopers will likely experiment would completely rewrite a person’s DNA; nor could dopers pass on their altered genes to future generations. And genetic changes wouldn’t necessarily be permanent.

If successful, gene therapy would affect performance by fractions of seconds. But, of course, gold medals and multimillion-dollar sponsorship deals rest on such knife-edged differences, so the dopers are sure to keep trying.

As for Thomas Springstein, he received a 16-month suspended sentence for supplying an illegal substance to a minor. He has been banned from the German Track and Field Federation but is otherwise free to coach. The word is, he’s been getting offers. .

Ethics to guide gene quest for sport stars (2007, May 19)

Ethics to guide gene quest for sport starsJacquelin Magnay May 19, 2007 GENETICS has long been touted as the next big thing in sport - the "big" being the potential abuse of gene manipulation to enhance sporting performance.

But Australian authorities are keen to use genetics in an ethical way to identify the next big thing: the next great sporting hero.

In the past two days the bio-ethicists at the Hastings Centre in New York have grappled with their final position statement, using input from the Australian Institute of Sport's director, Peter Fricker, to clarify research issues affecting genes and sport.

Fricker is planning to submit the Hastings Centre framework to the World Anti-Doping Agency and seek permission from the Federal Government to restart athlete genetic research which was put on hold in 2004.

"We had to make sure we got the guidelines in place because it is such an important issue," he said. "But the research will be to see if genetic screening is worth doing in the first place. Is it worth making it part of the battery of current testing like heart rate∑ or do we find 99 per cent of an athlete's ability is because of coaching, physiological aspects or training and the DNA is only a small part?"

Scientists could, for example, take a sample of tissue, analyse the DNA and work out which sport an athlete is best suited to. And if the athlete had the "boxer" gene, indicating a predisposition to injury, or more serious diseases like Alzheimer's and heart disease, they could be spared long stints on the sideline with prevention programs.

The think tank's initial ideas for ethical guidelines include a requirement that athletes be at least 12 years old before being involved in research, and that the need of sports organisations who cared for athletes to know genetic information should prevail over an athlete's not wanting to know.

Gene doping may give athletes edge (2007, April 28)

Gene doping may give athletes edgeTinkering with mutations would be much harder to detect than the substance doping some use today By Greg Lavine The Salt Lake Tribune Salt Lake Tribune Article Last Updated:04/28/2007 01:28:04 AM MDT

Performance-enhancing drugs can be tough enough to detect in athletes, but the future of cheating - gene doping - may be even harder to notice. And it could be happening now, said Utah genetics expert Marc Williams. Most illegal sports drugs are designed to enhance the body's production of natural substances, such as testosterone or steroids. But gene manipulation could alter an athlete's genetic makeup to bump up the amount of certain substances. There are no proven cases of gene doping, yet the International Olympic Committee and the World Anti-Doping Agency have already banned the practice. Gene doping was one of several topics discussed by Williams, director of the Intermountain Clinical Genetics Institute at LDS Hospital, and other doctors this week in Murray during a seminar on the growing link between genomics and athletics. Part of the problem, the experts agreed, is there is no sure way to prove someone has been gene doping. "It's gonna be tough to detect this stuff," said Eric Heiden, an Olympic gold medalist in speed skating who is an orthopedic surgeon at TOSH, The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, in Murray, "and it's gonna work." An area of potential concern is genetic ways to alter an athlete's blood. The traditional cheat involves the drug erythropoietin, or EPO, which is used to increase hemoglobin levels in the body. Williams said hemoglobin can be thought of as buckets carrying oxygen to vital tissues. Increasing hemoglobin levels means more buckets are available to distribute oxygen. Drugs that mess with hemoglobin levels can leave telltale signs that can be found in drug testing. If a gene has been altered to increase EPO levels, it may leave behind no sign of foul play. This raises the question of genetically-gifted athletes who happen to have beneficial mutations. A champion Nordic skier from Finland, Eero M`ntyranta, in the 1960s had a genetic mutation that helped his body to produce higher levels of EPO, and this likely gave him an edge over competitors, Williams said. Genetic researchers may be able to detect abnormally high levels of certain substances, but there might be no way to prove who has been gene doped and who is genetically gifted, Williams said. Gene doping has already taken place in lab animals, including mice and monkeys, but there is no evidence the practice has made the leap to humans, he said. To alter an athlete's genetics, a modified virus cell could be used to carry a new gene into a person's DNA, he said. Just as drugs can have negative side effects, gene doping may also have unforeseen long-term consequences on other bodily functions. These concerns may apply more to the possibility of creating genetically altered superathletes from birth. Williams said parents might one day have the option of picking genetic traits in their offspring, such as bulkier body for football or a taller frame for basketball. "Where is the child's choice?" asked Williams. The doctor also wondered what happens after a genetically-altered athletes pass their physical peak, and are no longer good at what they were designed to do. glavine@sltrib.com

Human Enhancement Technologies in Sport (March, 2007)

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEECOMMITTEE OFFICE, HOUSE OF COMMONS 7 Millbank, London SW1P 3JA Tel. Nos. 020 7219 2793-2794 (Fax. No. - 0896) email: scitechcom@parliament.uk

20 February 2007

PUBLICATION OF REPORT

HUMAN ENHANCEMENT TECHNOLOGIES IN SPORT

The Science and Technology Committee today calls for tough new measures to tackle doping in sport in the run up to the London Olympic games.

In its report, Human Enhancement Technologies in Sport, the Committee says more needs to be done if the UK is to play “clean” and set a good example for the 2012 Olympics.

Among the measures the Committee calls for are a four year ban in all incidences where doping has been proven and a mechanism whereby cheating athletes would have to repay all financial gains going back to their last clean test. Athletes should also have to disclose sources of doping before they are allowed to return to competitive sport. The Government should review the experience of those countries which have criminalised doping in sport.

The recommendations come after a far-reaching inquiry into the use of human enhancement technologies which led the Committee to conclude that the official figures on the incidence of illegal doping may not be an accurate reflection of the scale of the problem. It would like to see more research into this.

The Committee is particularly concerned at the ease by which banned, and potentially dangerous, substances can be obtained for use by athletes. But it would also like better information to prevent athletes inadvertently taking banned drugs. There should be “clear reasoning” given by WADA (the World Anti-Doping Agency) as to why substances and methods are on the prohibited list. More attention should be paid to the science behind which substances are included on the list.

Greater emphasis should also be paid to ensuring that all drugs allowed for therapeutic use are given on the grounds of real medical need.

In the run up to the 2012 Olympics the Committee would like to see science used to develop more sophisticated detection techniques, including testing blood samples as well as urine.

The Committee wants it to be mandatory for UK athletes to compete internationally in the 12 months prior to the games before they are eligible to take part, as this would make it easier to detect unusual increases on an athletes performance.

A separate body should be established to undertake drug testing of athletes in the UK independent of UK Sport and the national government bodies of individual sports. This should also be responsible for monitoring and evaluating potential new illegal substances and methods as they are developed.

The Committee also supports the idea of a pilot project looking at the feasibility of a doping passport.

Chairman of the Committee Phil Willis said: “Sport matters to people and any scandal associated with British sportsmen or women resonates way beyond the immediate sporting world. It can be a matter of national humiliation.

“The 2012 Olympics have given us the perfect opportunity to showcase the best of  British sporting talent. We must not risk turning an occasion for national pride into one of embarrassment and disgrace. That is why the Government and the international sporting bodies concerned must do much more to identify and prevent doping scandals now.”

For media inquiries please call Laura Kibby on 020 7219 0718. For any other information please call Ana Ferreira, on 020 7219 279. Previous press notices and publications are available on our website. www.parliament.uk/s&tcom Notes to editors:

·          Under the terms of Standing Order No. 152 the Science and Technology Committee is empowered to examine the “expenditure, policy and administration of the Office of Science and Technology and its associated public bodies”. The Committee was appointed on 19 July 2005.

·          This inquiry was announced on 1 March 2006 in Press Notice No 24 of session 2005-06. http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/science_and_technology_committee/scitech010306.cfm

·          Evidence sessions were held on Wednesday: 19 July 2006 when evidence was heard from: Mr Matthew Reader, Head of Elite Sports Team, Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Mr John Scott, Director of Drug Free Sport, and Ms Allison Holloway, Education Manager for Drug Free Sport, UK Sport; 25 October 2006 when evidence was heard from Professor Ian McGrath, University of Glasgow and Chairman of the Physiological Society, Mr John Brewer, Director of Sports Science and the Lucozade Sport Science Academy, GlaxoSmithKline, Dr Bruce Hamilton, Chief Medical Officer, UK Athletics and Dr Anna Casey, Research Fellow, QinetiQ; 29 November 2006 when evidence was heard from; Dr Richard Budgett, Chief Medical Officer, British Olympic Association, and Dr Arne Ljungqvist, Chairman, International Olympic Committee (IOC) Medical Commission and Chairman of the World Anti-Doping Authority (WADA) Medical Research Committee; and on Tuesday 12 December when evidence was heard from Rt Hon Richard Caborn MP, Minister for Sport, Department for Culture, Media and Sport. Membership of the Committee

Mr Phil Willis (Lib Dem, Harrogate and Knaresborough)(Chairman) Chris Mole (Lab, Ipswich) Adam Afriyie (Con, Windsor) Mr Brooks Newmark (Con, Braintree) Mr Robert Flello (Lab, Stoke-on-Trent South) Dr Bob Spink (Con, Castle Point) Mrs Linda Gilroy (La/Co-op, Plymouth Sutton) Graham Stringer (Lab, Manchester, Blackley Dr Evan Harris (Lib Dem, Oxford West & Abingdon) Dr Desmond Turner (Lab, Brighton Kemptown) Dr Brian Iddon (Lab, Bolton South East)

Zizek in Liverpool (17 March, 2008)

Slavoj Zizek in Liverpool From the organizers:

Dear All, We are lucky to be able to present the internationally renowned cultural theorist and philosopher Slavoj Zizek. Zizek will be speaking on 'The (Mis)Use of Violence' on Monday 17th March between 6-8 at 68 Hope Street, Liverpool. 'One of the most innovative and exciting contemporary thinkers of the left' (TLS) 'The most formidably brilliant exponent of psychoanalysis, indeed of cultural theory in general, to have emerged from Europe in some decades' (Terry Eagleton) Best wishes, This event has been sponsored by the departments of philosophy, SOCLAS, SACE, History and Politics. It is a joint event with the Faculty of Arts, Liverpool John Moores and FACT.

More info here: http://www.liv.ac.uk/arts/

They say: Admission is free, but limited to 180, on first-come basis.

Future Ethics (Manchester, 2008-9)

Future Ethics: Climate Change, Political Action and the Future of the Human An interdisciplinary workshop series, June 2008 - January 2009, held in Manchester. www.manchester.ac.uk/futureethics <https://owa.liv.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.manchester.ac.uk/futureethics>

3 one day workshops to explore the ideas, beliefs and motivations underpinning  political responses to climate change.

A chance for activists, academics, practitioners, and concerned individuals working on political responses to climate change to come together with questions, solutions, experience, and ideas.

Workshop 1: "What is to be done?  Apocalyptic Rhetoric and Political Action" June 13, 2008

Workshop 2: "What Price Security?  New Issues in the Ethics of Risk" September 19, 2008

Workshop 3: "A World Without Us?  Imagining the End of the Human" January 16, 2009

Free to attend, but places limited!  See the website for registration.

Short abstracts for 'starter papers' invited for each  workshop.  See the website for submission deadlines

All Workshops held at Bridge 5 Mill (MERCi) <https://owa.liv.ac.uk/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.merci.org.uk/merci.php> , Manchester's own centre for sustainable living

Please circulate widely!

Many thanks

Stefan Skrimshire

Dr. Stefan Skrimshire Post Doctoral Research Associate in Religion and Politics School of Arts, Histories and Cultures Samuel Alexander Building The University of Manchester Manchester M13 9PL

stefan.skrimshire@manchester.ac.uk tel: 0161 306 1663

Building Utopias (Liverpool, 12-14 June, 2008)

As part of the Magical Mysterious Regeneration Tour Conference, 12 to 14 June 2008, and in collaboration with the Centre for Architecture and the Visual Arts (CAVA) and the Department of Philosophy, University of Liverpool, Tate Liverpool welcome postgraduate student proposals for three panels on the themes of artists, architecture and the future of the city, respectively titled Building Utopias, Mapping Exclusion and Creative Dwellings. For more information please visit: http://www.tate.org.uk/liverpool/eventseducation/symposia/13812.htm

Building Utopias

This panel will focus on contemporary and historical responses by architects and planners to the city. Themes include utopian visions of modernism’s high ideal, the planning of ideal space in the city & its subsequent deterioration, dystopian future visions, a loss of the city to apocalypse, destitution, conflict, or nature, the city as an archive, and urban palimpsests. An ancillary theme will be the reinsertion of narratives of urban memory into the city landscape, and the interstitial stories of city space that emerge in forms of urban memory – the recurring echoes of the past trapped in the residuum of our decaying cityscapes.

Influences in these areas can be seen in the wide-ranging and diverse ideas of architects, artists and urban theorists such as Manfredo Tafuri, Archigram, Italo Calvino, Mark Crinson, and Andreas Huyssen. Topics for potential papers could include, but are not limited to:

•Totality, visions of utopia and their intersections with architecture

• Future Visions, Architectures of Technological Idealism

• Dystopia, the out-of-control city, Urban Apocalypse

• Urban memory theory, post-industrial city narratives, memory & forgetting in urban space

• Urban palimpsests and the city as an archive

• Archaeological traces and fragments in the built environment

The panel will be chaired by Richard Koeck, City in Film, University of Liverpool

Mapping Exclusion

This panel will look at sociological and historical methods of analysing the zoning of cities, and will consider some of the contested spatial practices shaping the social fabric of urban environments. The separation of cities into moneyed and poor, the exclusion of groups, shanty towns, favelas and the informal architectures of the unplanned city contrasted with the rise of 2

gated communities, the regimented, controlled social space of the city. We seek papers that give insight into the wide range of social, political, economic and cultural factors that motivate zonings, and also the implications of these divisions on the inhabitants of city spaces.

Proposals are invited for individual papers addressing all aspects of zoning and exclusion in the city. Interdisciplinary approaches are welcome. Topics for discussion could include, but are not limited to:

•Zoning of city space, role of local authorities and development agencies, gated communities, exclusion, gentrification

• Informal architecture, unplanned city space, resistance to urban planning, dereliction, wasteland, squats, ‘non-productive’ spaces

• Spaces of consumption, retail and leisure zoning, heritage, theme parks, cultural quarters, non-places and contractual spaces

• Social control, surveillance, CCTV, regulating movement, border control, abstract spaces

• Embodied, gendered, sexualised, racialised and diasporic city spaces

• Conurbation, centre/periphery, suburban dynamics, business, industrial, and retail parks, orbital routes, transport networks, hubs

The panel will be chaired by Les Roberts, City in Film, University of Liverpool.

Creative Dwellings

How artists engage with regenerating city space is not just an issue for contemporary practice: ever since city space has existed, artists have deliberated the energizing and equally troubling dynamic it brings to their work. From Renaissance Italian cityscapes, through Rembrandt van Rijn’s examination of the Dutch town hood, the Impressionist Salon des Refuses grappling with post-Haussmann Paris, through 60s art communes on the barricades, to present day negotiations between city authorities and artistic groupings, artists have engaged with the societal issues of urban dwelling in a range of ways. As the constructivist slogan would have it, 'the streets our brushes, the squares our palettes'.

We welcome proposals that examine the ways in which artists have inhabited and engaged with city space, both in their practices and lives. Different strands for proposals could include, but are not restricted to:

•Home and Homeliness

• Gentrification, loft living and the unofficial misuse of cities

• 60s social activist art space, institutional critique & urban use of Land Art principles

• Flânerie, the drift and artistic imagining of walking city space

• Artistic critiques of urban regeneration

• Memory, Art and urban decay and renewal

The panel will be chaired by Paul Sullivan, Director of Static

Proposals for papers for all 3 sessions, accompanied by a brief academic CV/biography, can be submitted to liverpool.research.forum@tate.org.uk and should be no longer than one side of A4 in length. Please put ‘Building Utopias/Mapping Exclusion/Creative Dwellings’ in the header, as appropriate. The deadline for submissions is Friday 11 April 2008

Ghost in the Shell (1995)

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7urZe6r5CGU 600 400] References

Ford, P. (2008) Hacking the Mind: Existential Enhancement in the Ghost in the Shell” In Shapshay, S. (Ed) Bioethics Through Film, Johns Hopkins University Press.