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OMRF Stories

Prayers Answered:
Two Oklahomans suffering from a rare, life-threatening disease.

The Giver:
Jim Chapman’s generosity helped make OMRF what it is today.

Cancer From Every Angle:
OMRF researchers seeking clues to a variety of cancers.

Next of Kin:
It doesn't matter if you're a banana, fruit fly or writer; DNA is inside all your cells. Join OMRF's Greg
Elwell as he peels back his own genetic skin

The Strange Case of Tom Little
The Strange Case of Tom Little

The Comeback Kid:
An OMRF Discovery helped bring Rayna Dubose back from death, then Rayna had to learn to live again

Mighty Mice
Mighty Mice

Predicting Disease:
Live, Long and Prosper

This Is My Brain on 3-Tesla MRI

Autism: A Personal Story
Bringing up Jeremy

OMRF People
Bon Appetit

A New Birthday

Hitting the Right Note: Bob Floyd

Running Man: Gary Gorbsky

Family Matters: Kathy Moser

The Gospel According to Luke (Szweda)

Autism, Our Story

The Survivor

It's In The Genes

 

 

It turns out I have a lot more in common with a banana than I first thought. No, I don’t have yellow skin. I don’t bruise easily. And nobody waits until I am over-ripe to bake me into delicious bread. But under my skin, inside it even, I share one very important thing with bananas: deoxyribonucleic acid.

DNA serves as the basic building block of all life, and about half of mine (and yours) is identical to that of a banana. Granted, ours is a bit longer (23 pairs of chromosomes to just 11 pairs in the fruit that made Chiquita famous) and more complex, but there’s a genetic kinship there that will make me think twice before ordering my next smoothie. If that half-banana stat has got you thinking about checking the “fruit” box next time you’re asked your ethnicity, here’s another fun fact for you: All human DNA is 99 percent identical. It’s that one percent that accounts for all of our differences. The spots where there are changes are called single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, and they can change the color of your hair, the moisture in your earwax and your probability of developing diseases during your lifetime. It’s those portions of the DNA that scientists at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation—and throughout the world—are focusing on as they seek to unlock the secrets of human disease.

DNA is inside the cells of every living thing. It doesn’t matter if you’re a banana, a fruit fly, a tree or an almost-middle-aged writer. Here’s what I found when I peeled back the skin of my own DNA.

Live the genotyping experience
Go to interactive.omrf.org to watch Greg try to decode his own genetic blueprint. And while you’re there, check out Gregipedia, his new blog.

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