Epigenetics:
Earlier, I said that even if two people ended up with exactly the same genes,
that wouldn’t guarantee that those genes would work exactly the same way inside
of them. How can that be? Well, it turns out that there is more interaction
between your environment and your genetics than previously thought. The
environment can change the way genes act, and once these changes occur, they
can sometimes be passed on to
offspring in the next generation. If that happens, it affects more than just
the individual, it affects evolution.
Epigenetics is not
what Jean-Baptiste Lamarck considered “the inheritance of acquired
characteristics,” although it may seem like it at first. For Lamarck’s idea to
work, mutations would be needed in the DNA. Epigenetics—the “epi” means from
outside—doesn’t cause a mutation in a gene. It doesn’t alter the way the DNA manuscript
is written; it alters the way it is read.
To say it another way, epigenetic events don’t add new information to our
genome. They change the way that genome is expressed in a person.
A number of
epigenetic phenomena have been identified now. For example, in the “Hunger
Winter,” the “Dutch Famine” at the end of World War II, thousands of people in
the Netherlands starved as a result of Nazi occupation. Children born to
pregnant mothers who suffered through this famine and lived have, as adults,
shown higher rates of obesity and coronary heart disease than comparative
control groups who did not experience starvation. How could this happen?
Well, to
simplify, you have a lot of genes and not all of these are active at every
given moment. Genes have, for want of a better term, “switches” that tell them
when to turn on and when to turn off. Some genes are active during the fetal
period but get turned off later. Other genes are inactive until they are turned
on during the various stages of growing up and aging. In the normal course of a
life, some genes may never be turned on. However, stressful events, such as the
starvation people experienced during the Hunger Winter, can sometimes activate
switches that wouldn’t normally be activated. This turns genes on or off, thus
changing the way a person’s genome builds the structure of their bodies.
14 comments:
So as a result of the starvation, the switch was thrown to pack in absorb every calorie possible, resulting in obesity when that wasn't needed anymore.
Alex, that is the thinking. Still a lot to understand about this concept but that's it in a nutshell.
The question that occurs is it primarily trauma in the environment that changes the genetic switching or does extended periods of pleasure, calm, peace have the same effect? Privation I am fairly certain limits the dopamine in the brain but what about the opposite during extended periods of positivity? Or does brain chemistry have nothing to do with the subject?
Mark, brain chemistry is probably one of the triggers, although it's not completely clear. So far, all the epigenetic effects that I'm aware of have been triggered by stress. Interesting question about whether there could be positive triggers.
Charles, have you read Pulitzer Prize winning author Siddhartha Mukherjee's latest book "The Gene: An Intimate History"? I think you will like it. I read excerpts and found it absorbing. Mukherjee is on a "quest to understand human heredity and its surprising influence on our lives, personalities, identities, fates, and choices."
The way medicine is advancing these questions may be answered before long.
I knew you were engaging with academic writing instead of fantasy--interesting stuff you're working on this summer. I look forward to being educated from you posts!
Prashant, no I haven't. Sounds like right down my alley, though. I'll have a look at it.
Oscar, one hopes.
Sage, thankee, man
Ah, science is intriguing in how it affects man in a multitude of ways. Thanks, Charles.
This is a fascinating subject for me! I'd like to read more about it.
Barbara, glad you enjoyed.
Riot Kitty, it's a pretty new field of investigation but already lots of exiting things.
OH! Now I understand. You are and excellent teacher, C
Huh. Interesting.
Cloudia, thankee.
Rachel, yep, I think so.
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