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Study shows that Rett syndrome in females is not just less severe, but different

ScienceDaily
Summary
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76% Informative

Study shows that Rett syndrome in females is not just less severe, but different.

A long-term study on mice explains why the condition progresses differently in males and females.

The study also found that females had more dysregulated genes and at different stages compared to males.

The study showed a link between the MECP2 mutation and the Alzheimer's pathway as well as various addiction pathways.

"In genomics, we have moved from looking at one gene at a time to thinking about groups of genes that act together in pathways," Janine LaSalle said.

VR Score

89

Informative language

96

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43

Article tone

formal

Language

English

Language complexity

48

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possibly offensive

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not hateful

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Time-value

long-living

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