20 research outputs found
Occupational pension funds: Governance issues at the international and European levels
This article reviews the orientation of the European regulation on pension fund governance in the international context of the OECDās recommendations. It outlines the features judged to be essential for a sound private pension schemeās governance. It then describes the orientation of the European regulations in this area and sets out some criticisms. The focus is on private sector ādefined-contributionā occupational pension plans managed by a pension fund, in light of the shared perception that the āgovernanceā issue is particularly sensitive for these types of schemes
Towards a mutant map of the mouse - New models of neurological, behavioural, deafness, bone, renal and blood disorders
With the completion of the first draft of the human genome sequence, the next major challenge is assigning function to genes. One approach is genome-wide random chemical mutagenesis, followed by screening for mutant phenotypes of interest and subsequent mapping and identification of the mutated genes in question. We (a consortium made up of GlaxoSmithKline, the MRC Mammalian Genetics Unit and Mouse Genome Centre, Harwell, Imperial College, London, and the Royal London Hospital) have used ENU mutagenesis in the mouse for the rapid generation of novel mutant phenotypes for use as animal models of human disease and for gene function assignment (Nolan et al., 2000). As of 2003, 35,000 mice have been produced to date in a genome-wide screen for dominant mutations and screened using a variety of screening protocols. Nearly 200 mutants have been confirmed as heritable and added to the mouse mutant catalogue and, overall, we can extrapolate that we have recovered over 700 mutants from the screening programme. For further information on the project and details of the data, see http://www.mgu.har.mrc.ac.uk/mutabase