Saturday, August 22, 2015

Environmental Epigenetics Affects Disease, Evolution




My efforts take all this a mile further by identifying the dominance of the cellular logic machine based in second tier matter in making useful choices.  What we are seeing is the apparatus.


Haunting all this new work is the ghost of Lysenko who got much right in an age when men were simply blind.  Besides, i would not be so cheerful about Dark Matter, had i not produced a tube full of it to glow happily in the dark.  Up to that and a couple other demonstrations i had theoretical assurance only.


Yet that was enough to lead to the right type of tests.


Environmental epigenetics affects disease, evolution 

Posted by TANNBiology, 

Breakingnews, Evolution, Genetics 2:30 PM 


 http://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.ca/2015/08/environmental-epigenetics-affects.html?

Washington State University researchers say environmental factors are having an underappreciated effect on the course of disease and evolution by prompting genetic mutations through epigenetics, a process by which genes are turned on and off independent of an organism's DNA sequence.  

The environment affects genes, which are present in chromosomes (shown), without changing the genetic code. 

This process is called epigenetics [Credit: Jane Ades/National Human Genome Research Institute] 


Their assertion is a dramatic shift in how we might think of disease and evolution's underlying biology and "changes how we think about where things come from," said Michael Skinner, founding director of the Center for Reproductive Biology in WSU's School of Biological Sciences. Skinner and colleagues Carlos Guerrero-Bosagna and M. M. Haque present their findings in the latest issue of the journal Epigenetics. 
 

"The ability of environmental factors to promote epigenetic inheritance that subsequently promotes genetic mutations is a significant advance in our understanding of how the environment impacts disease and evolution," they write. 


Skinner is a pioneer in the field of epigenetics, which looks at the effect of changes in how genetic information is passed between generations even if DNA remains unchanged. Earlier work by Skinner has found epigenetic effects from a host of environmental toxicants, connecting plastics, pesticides, fungicide, dioxin and hydrocarbons to diseases and abnormalities as many as three generations later. His recent study exposed gestating female rats to the fungicide vinclozolin. 


Sperm in the first generation of male offspring showed epimutations, or alterations in the methyl groups that stick to DNA and affect its activation. 

Third generation, or great-grand offspring, had increased genetic mutations, which the researchers saw in increased DNA structure changes known as copy-number variations. Multiple generations of control animals had no such variations. This, said Skinner, suggests that environment has a more important role in mutations, disease and evolution than previously appreciated, and appears to be one of the main drivers of intergenerational changes, not simply a passive component. 


In short, Skinner and his colleagues say, the environment and epigenetics can drive genetics. "There's not a type of genetic mutation known that's not potentially influenced by environmental epigenetic effects," Skinner said.

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