BYLINE: E. LaClear
  • Since the mid-1900s, researchers have known about Finland’s uniquely high frequency and strong geographic distribution of cleft palate birth defects. The cause was presumed to be genetic.
  • from MSU and collaborators points to a change in DNA near a specific gene. 
  • This change in DNA is found only in Finland and Estonia. The next largest population of people with Finnish ancestry — and, therefore, genetics — is found in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. However, Finland’s high frequency of cleft palate is not observed in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, leading researchers to believe there may be alternative explanations, such as demographic or environmental factors. 

News — EAST LANSING, Mich. – Cleft lip and cleft palate are some of the most common birth defects in people, affecting roughly in the world. Cleft lip — when the upper lip is split — is more common than cleft palate — when the roof of the mouth (palate) is split — except in Finland, where cases of cleft palate are so common they flip the ratio of cleft lip to cleft palate. 

Researchers have identified a likely culprit: a change in DNA variant near a specific gene. Previous studies showed that DNA changes in this gene cause and contribute to risk for both cleft lip and cleft palate. Surprisingly, in this new study, , researchers found the effect of this DNA variant only increases risk for cleft palate.  

, geneticist, associate professor and co-director of the D.O.-Ph.D. Physician-Scientist Training Program at the MSU , along with scientists from FinnGen, AbbVie Inc., the University of Helsinki, the University of Washington School of Dentistry, the Estonian Genome Center and other key collaborators, tie this change in DNA, which is found only in Finland and Estonia, to Finland’s high frequency of cleft palate. The team also connects this DNA change to Finland’s statistically significant geographic distribution of cleft palate cases, which become more frequent from the southwest to the northeast. This regional distribution of cleft palate has not been observed anywhere else in the world.

In next steps, Schutte will work with the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services to genotype blood samples from Michigan’s BioTrust. These samples will come from babies born with cleft palates from Ontonagon, Houghton, Schoolcraft, Marquette and Chippewa counties, where a significant number of Michiganders with Finnish ancestry live. 

“If we find the DNA change in those Michigan samples, but the frequency of cleft palate is not high like it is in Finland, that would suggest an environmental or other component that makes cleft palate less common in Michigan than in Finland, despite the genetic connection between the people,” Schutte said. “That has clinical, risk and public health ramifications.”

By E. LaClear

 

Read more on

 

###

 

Michigan State University has been advancing the common good with uncommon will for more than 165 years. One of the world’s leading public research universities, MSU pushes the boundaries of discovery to make a better, safer, healthier world for all while providing life-changing opportunities to a diverse and inclusive academic community through more than 400 programs of study in 17 degree-granting colleges.