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newGenome View

CFTR
on chromosome 7
Databases

PubMed
the literature
LocusLink
collection of gene-related information
OMIM
catalog of human genes and disorders

Information

Fact sheet
from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, NIH
The cystic fibrosis foundation
information and links

CYSTIC FIBROSIS (CF) is the most common fatal genetic disease in the US today. It causes the body to produce a thick, sticky mucus that clogs the lungs, leading to infection, and blocks the pancreas, stopping digestive enzymes from reaching the intestines where they are required to digest food.
  CF is caused by a defective gene, which codes for a sodium and chloride (salt) transporter found on the surface of the epithelial cells that line the lungs and other organs. Several hundred mutations have been found in this gene, all of which result in defective transport of sodium and chloride by epithelial cells. The severity of the disease symptoms of CF is directly related to the characteristic effects of the particular mutation(s) that have been inherited by the sufferer.
  CF research has accelerated sharply since the discovery of CFTR in 1989. In 1990, scientists successfully cloned the normal gene and added it to CF cells in the laboratory, which corrected the defective sodium chloride transport mechanism. This technique - gene therapy - was then tried on a limited number of CF patients. However this treatment may not be as successful as originally hoped. Further research will be required before gene therapy, and other experimental treatments, prove useful in combating CF.