"GENETIC PARK"
An article from the
GUARDIAN UNLIMITED

Rory Carroll in Rome
Monday October 30, 2000
The Guardian 

Meet the people of
Genetic Park 


Centuries of isolation have turned
the inhabitants of remote Italian
villages into a living laboratory

 

Ten remote villages in southern Italy are
this week becoming a "genetic park"
where scientists can harvest the racially
pure inhabitants' DNA to identify the
causes of disease. Isolated for centuries
by mountains and forest, the villagers'
genetic history stretches back to the
Greeks and could hold the key to cures
for Alzheimer's disease, asthma, cancer
and hypertension. 

Villagers crowded into the town hall of
Gioi Cilento at the weekend to toast a
project they hope will bring visitors and
jobs, reversing generations of poverty and
emigration. It is one of science's most
ambitious attempts to trace the roots of
inherited illnesses by spotting genetic
differences between a homogeneous
people. Similar projects are under way in
Sardinia, Iceland, and the Pacific islands. 

The villagers agreed to become a living
laboratory after it was explained they
possessed a unique gene pool that could
help create better drugs. 

Two hours south of Naples, the area,
known as Cilento, had no roads or
electricity until recent decades. Woods
thick with olives, chestnuts, gorges and
caves made it one of the remotest parts of
the region of Campania. 

Scientists chose Cilento because its
inhabitants, who survive by farming and
making cheese, have been undisturbed by
large-scale immigration for millennia.
Some of the villages, which each have
between 600 and 2,000 inhabitants, still
speak ancient Greek and Albanian.
Another 70 Cilento villages are expected
to join the project next year. 

The park is protected by Unesco because
of archaeological and environmental
treasures. 

From today a Naples-based team from the
International Institute of Genetics and
Biophysics will start combing church
records, which date back 500 years, to
build families' genealogical profiles.
Interviews with local doctors, blood
samples and DNA analysis will follow. A
genetic data bank should be ready within
two years. 

By comparing genetically similar people it
is much easier to spot rogue genes linked
to disease, says Graziella Persico, who is
heading the team. 

"These people are so isolated they are
perfect for research. We're not looking for
any disease in particular, that will emerge
in time. Then specialists from America
and England can come to study." Months
of reassuring villagers led up to today's
ceremony, which will include mayors,
biologists, anthropologists and
sociologists. "We had to explain that we
weren't going to use them. We will be
here for many, many years." 

The decoding of the human genome in
June injected urgency into the search for
inherited susceptability to disease. 

The project is funded by Italy's national
research council but private backers are
being sought, a move that could be
controversial if profit-making companies
are given exclusive access to data. 

Iceland agonised over ethical and privacy
concerns before handing over the entire
population's medical records to the
American company DeCode Genetics. 

Playing a role in 21st-century medicine is
gratifying but Cilento's inhabitants hope
the researchers' arrival will reverse an
atrophy that has left villages
half-abandoned, according to Andrea
Salati, mayor of Gioi Cilento. "Many of our
children have gone, it's mostly old people,
which means our communities are dying.
This has given us hope for the future. It is
a chance to create tourism." 
Domenico Nicoletti, director of the park,
has for years been striving to tap its
tourist potential. "It is the only realistic
way to revive these villages," he says.
When approached by the scientists he
persuaded them to include an economic
angle to the project. Businesses and
employer organisations in Naples were
brought on board. Experts in catering and
accommodation will tour the villages
offering workshops on how to set up bed
& breakfasts, an alien concept in rural
Campania. 

Dr Persico acknowledges that studying
Cilento's isolation could in fact end it. "If
emigrants start returning and tourists hear
about what's going on the park is likely to
change, we know that. But so be it. That's
what the villages want." 

For communities on the coast, which
survive on fishing and tourism, Cilento has
remained an unexplored wilderness fit
only for goats and mountain people.
Hundreds of caves form elaborate
labyrinths populated only by bats.
Travellers who come to view the
stalactites without guides routinely
become disoriented. In 1889 two brothers
went missing. By the time they were
found, one was dead and the other
insane. 

A genetic park of two villages in Sardinia
set up earlier this year is yielding results,
says Mario Pirastu, director of the
national research council's institute for
molecular genetics. "We've set up a
model that will be extremely useful to
geneticists. We will be publishing results
in the next few months." 

Investigations of the DNA of close-knit
communities is likely to grow as results
become more spectacular. Genes linked
to breast cancer have been found among
Ashkenazi Jews, hypertension among
Turks and diabetes among Finns.

How isolated peoples' DNA can help
science unlock secrets of disease


Sicily From the mountain town of Troina,
opposite Mount Etna, biologists at the
Oasi research centre are on the verge of
announcing the isolation of genetic
mutations linked to phenylketonuria, a
disease that retards babies' development. 

Cambridge archaeologists, investigating
tombs and artefacts, have helped the
biologists by mapping who settled where
and when. The mutation is believed to
have been brought by a bronze age settler
from Anatolia, Turkey 

Sardinia A gene data bank of 4,000
people from the villages of Perdasdefogu
and Talana is being compiled to unlock
secrets of cancer, heart disease, asthma
and depression. 

The second most homogeneous people in
Europe after the Lapps, Sardinians were
not diluted with immigrants. People rarely
married outside their villages. The
population of Talana is descended from
eight fathers and eight mothers 

Iceland The rogue gene responsible for
Alzheimer's disease has been identified in
a gene pool directly linked to the Vikings.
The island's ethnic balance - 85% Nordic
and 15% Celt - has been largely
undisturbed for 1,000 years 

Pingelap Island Almost all of the
western Pacific island's 3,000 inhabitants
are descended from the 20 survivors of a
1775 storm. DNA from the 5% of islanders
who have a rare type of colour blindness
has helped scientists locate a gene for
colour vision 

Norfolk Island The 1,500 south Pacific
descendants of Fletcher Christian and
other mutineers on HMS Bounty are being
studied to find genetic predispositions to
high blood pressure. 

The combination of a British diet,
Polynesian genes which are susceptible
to heart disease, and isolation are
expected to yield insights into
hypertension

 

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