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Posts Tagged ‘Ashkenazi Jews’

Jews and Genetic Disorders

Wednesday, July 23, 2025 @ 05:07 PM
posted by Roger Price

Credit: ‘EM Unit, UCL Medical School, Royal Free Campus’. Wellcome Images

Introduction

Victoria Gray, a Black American woman now in her mid-thirties, was just three months old when she suffered her first painful bout with sickle cell disease (SCD), a debilitating genetic blood disorder. SCD is caused by a mutation of the hemoglobin-beta (HBB) gene in chromosome 11 that alters the shape of normally flexible, round red blood cells into rigid, crescent shaped cells. When it does, the flow of red blood cells that usually deliver oxygen to bodily tissues is restricted resulting in limited oxygen delivery to tissues and associated severe pain. Until recently, treatment consisted primarily of strong pain relief medication and, also, frequent blood transfusions. SCD affects about 100,000 people in the United States, more than 90% of whom are African-American or non-Hispanic Black, and millions more worldwide.

In 2019, Ms. Gray became the first patient with any form of genetic disease to be treated by gene-editing technology known as CRISPR which modified blood cells taken from her bone marrow for subsequent infusion back into her body. Two years later, she was not only pain free, but doing well enough to no longer be part of the landmark study for which she volunteered, although she will continue to be followed for fifteen more years in order to check the long-term safety and efficacy of her treatment. 

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The Genome and Souls of Ashkenazi Jews

Friday, September 12, 2014 @ 02:09 PM
posted by Rabbi Allen S. Maller

   The Ashkenazi Jewish population is a genetic isolate gene pool almost equally close to European and Middle Eastern groups according to a highly detailed genetic study published in Nature Communications on September 9, 2014. The report is a high-depth analysis of the sequencing of 128 complete genomes of Ashkenazi Jews controls compared with European complete genome samples from 26 Flemish people from Belgium.

Reconstruction of recent Ashkenazi Jewish history from such genetic segments confirms a recent bottleneck of merely 300-400 individuals living in Central Europe, 25-32 generations ago, in the 13th-15th centuries (1200-1400). This bottleneck was the result of wide spread massacres of Jews in the Rhine Valley during the first three crusades; and additional massacres of Jews who were blamed by European Christians for causing the Bubonic Plague (1328-1351) which killed a third of the population in Europe (and almost half in urban areas). read more

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