Biochemistry of Nutritional Sciences.

Jenzer, Helena; Sadeghi-Reeves, Leila (2017). Biochemistry of Nutritional Sciences. Journal of Molecular Biomarkers & Diagnosis, 8(3), pp. 1-6. 10.4172/2155-9929.1000338

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Biochemistry provides knowledge about commonality principles, explains particularities of individuals, and discloses targets for therapeutic approaches. Although common biochemical pathways have been conserved during evolution, and although molecules and pathways have been generated based on existing ones, a one-fitsall medicine is about to be more and more replaced by personalized medicine. The declared objective of personalized medicine is to either predict a person’s risks for developing a disease or to treat a patient according to his or her metabolic predisposition and capacity, genetic mutations, or polymorphisms. The genotype of a person can hint at imminent risks and prevent the outbreak of diseases if lifestyle or behavior is changed according to the risk profile. The phenotype does not only describe proteins, enzymes and metabolites from the expression of the person’s genes, but provides data to recognize patterns belonging to an existing or eventually silent disease which can be treated effectively.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

School of Health Professions

Name:

Jenzer, Helena and
Sadeghi-Reeves, Leila

Language:

English

Submitter:

Service Account

Date Deposited:

12 Feb 2020 07:06

Last Modified:

12 Feb 2020 07:06

Publisher DOI:

10.4172/2155-9929.1000338

ARBOR DOI:

10.24451/arbor.6153

URI:

https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/6153

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