Time magazine published a special report "Why Your DNA Isn’t Your Destiny" in 2010. Though it is a little bit out of date, but it is easy to read. 時代雜誌於 2010 年 發表了一個特別報導 "為何你的基因不是命運的主宰", 雖然有點過時,但它很容易閱讀。
The remote, snow-swept expanses of northern Sweden are an unlikely place to begin a story about
cutting-edge genetic science. The kingdom's northernmost county, Norrbotten, is nearly free of human life;
an average of just six people live in each square mile. And yet this tiny population can reveal a lot about how
genes work in our everyday lives.
Norrbotten is so isolated that in the 19th century, if the harvest was bad, people starved. The starving years
were all the crueler for their unpredictability. For instance, 1800, 1812, 1821, 1836 and 1856 were years of
total crop failure and extreme suffering. But in 1801, 1822, 1828, 1844 and 1863, the land spilled forth such
abundance that the same people who had gone hungry in previous winters were able to gorge themselves for
months.
In the 1980s, Dr. Lars Olov Bygren, a preventive-health specialist who is now at the prestigious Karolinska
Institute in Stockholm, began to wonder what long-term effects the feast and famine years might have had
on children growing up in Norrbotten in the 19th century — and not just on them but on their kids and
grandkids as well. So he drew a random sample of 99 individuals born in the Overkalix parish of Norrbotten
in 1905 and used historical records to trace their parents and grandparents back to birth. By analyzing
meticulous agricultural records, Bygren and two colleagues determined how much food had been available
to the parents and grandparents when they were young.
Around the time he started collecting the data, Bygren had become fascinated with research showing that
conditions in the womb could affect your health not only when you were a fetus but well into adulthood. In
1986, for example, the Lancet published the first of two groundbreaking papers showing that if a pregnant
woman ate poorly, her child would be at significantly higher than average risk for cardiovascular disease as
an adult. Bygren wondered whether that effect could start even before pregnancy: Could parents'
experiences early in their lives somehow change the traits they passed to their offspring?
It was a heretical idea. After all, we have had a long-standing deal with biology: whatever choices we make
during our lives might ruin our short-term memory or make us fat or hasten death, but they won't change
our genes — our actual DNA. Which meant that when we had kids of our own, the genetic slate would be
wiped clean.
What's more, any such effects of nurture (environment) on a species' nature (genes) were not supposed to
happen so quickly. Charles Darwin, whose On the Origin of Species celebrated its 150th anniversary in
November, taught us that evolutionary changes take place over many generations and through millions of
years of natural selection. But Bygren and other scientists have now amassed historical evidence suggesting
that powerful environmental conditions (near death from starvation, for instance) can somehow leave an
imprint on the genetic material in eggs and sperm. These genetic imprints can short-circuit evolution and
pass along new traits in a single generation.
For instance, Bygren's research showed that in Overkalix, boys who enjoyed those rare overabundant
winters — kids who went from normal eating to gluttony in a single season — produced sons and grandsons
who lived shorter lives. Far shorter: in the first paper Bygren wrote about Norrbotten, which was published
in 2001 in the Dutch journal Acta Biotheoretica, he showed that the grandsons of Overkalix boys who had
overeaten died an average of six years earlier than the grandsons of those who had endured a poor harvest.
Once Bygren and his team controlled for certain socioeconomic variations, the difference in longevity
jumped to an astonishing 32 years. Later papers using different Norrbotten cohorts also found significant
drops in life span and discovered that they applied along the female line as well, meaning that the daughters
and granddaughters of girls who had gone from normal to gluttonous diets also lived shorter lives. To put it
simply, the data suggested that a single winter of overeating as a youngster could initiate a biological chain
of events that would lead one's grandchildren to die decades earlier than their peers did. How could this be
possible?
Meet the Epigenome
The answer lies beyond both nature and nurture. Bygren's data — along with those of many other scientists
working separately over the past 20 years — have given birth to a new science called epigenetics. At its most
basic, epigenetics is the study of changes in gene activity that do not involve alterations to the genetic code
but still get passed down to at least one successive generation. These patterns of gene expression are
governed by the cellular material — the epigenome — that sits on top of the genome, just outside it (hence
the prefix epi-, which means above). It is these epigenetic "marks" that tell your genes to switch on or off, to
speak loudly or whisper. It is through epigenetic marks that environmental factors like diet, stress and
prenatal nutrition can make an imprint on genes that is passed from one generation to the next.
Epigenetics brings both good news and bad. Bad news first: there's evidence that lifestyle choices like
smoking and eating too much can change the epigenetic marks atop your DNA in ways that cause the genes
for obesity to express themselves too strongly and the genes for longevity to express themselves too weakly.
We all know that you can truncate your own life if you smoke or overeat, but it's becoming clear that those
same bad behaviors can also predispose your kids — before they are even conceived — to disease and early death.
The good news: scientists are learning to manipulate epigenetic marks in the lab, which means they are
developing drugs that treat illness simply by silencing bad genes and jump-starting good ones. In 2004 the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an epigenetic drug for the first time. Azacitidine is used to
treat patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (usually abbreviated, a bit oddly, to MDS), a group of rare
and deadly blood malignancies. The drug uses epigenetic marks to dial down genes in blood precursor cells
that have become overexpressed. According to Celgene Corp. — the Summit, N.J., company that makes
azacitidine — people given a diagnosis of serious MDS live a median of two years on azacitidine; those
taking conventional blood medications live just 15 months.
Since 2004, the FDA has approved three other epigenetic drugs that are thought to work at least in part by
stimulating tumor-suppressor genes that disease has silenced. The great hope for ongoing epigenetic
research is that with the flick of a biochemical switch, we could tell genes that play a role in many diseases —
including cancer, schizophrenia, autism, Alzheimer's, diabetes and many others — to lie dormant. We could,
at long last, have a trump card to play against Darwin.
The funny thing is, scientists have known about epigenetic marks since at least the 1970s. But until the late
'90s, epigenetic phenomena were regarded as a sideshow to the main event, DNA. To be sure, epigenetic
marks were always understood to be important: after all, a cell in your brain and a cell in your kidney
contain the exact same DNA, and scientists have long known that nascent cells can differentiate only when
crucial epigenetic processes turn on or turn off the right genes in utero.
More recently, however, researchers have begun to realize that epigenetics could also help explain certain
scientific mysteries that traditional genetics never could: for instance, why one member of a pair of identical
twins can develop bipolar disorder or asthma even though the other is fine. Or why autism strikes boys four
times as often as girls. Or why extreme changes in diet over a short period in Norrbotten could lead to
extreme changes in longevity. In these cases, the genes may be the same, but their patterns of expression
have clearly been tweaked.
Biologists offer this analogy as an explanation: if the genome is the hardware, then the epigenome is the
software. "I can load Windows, if I want, on my Mac," says Joseph Ecker, a Salk Institute biologist and
leading epigenetic scientist. "You're going to have the same chip in there, the same genome, but different
software. And the outcome is a different cell type."
How to Make a Better Mouse
As momentous as epigenetics sounds, the chemistry of at least one of its mechanisms is fairly simple.
Darwin taught us that it takes many generations for a genome to evolve, but researchers have found that it
takes only the addition of a methyl group to change an epigenome. A methyl group is a basic unit in organic
chemistry: one carbon atom attached to three hydrogen atoms. When a methyl group attaches to a specific spot on a gene — a process called DNA methylation — it can change the gene's expression, turning it off or
on, dampening it or making it louder.
The importance of DNA methylation in altering the physical characteristics of an organism was proposed in
the 1970s, yet it wasn't until 2003 that anyone experimented with DNA methylation quite as dramatically as
Duke University oncologist Randy Jirtle and one of his postdoctoral students, Robert Waterland, did. That
year, they conducted an elegant experiment on mice with a uniquely regulated agouti gene — a gene that
gives mice yellow coats and a propensity for obesity and diabetes when expressed continuously. Jirtle's team
fed one group of pregnant agouti mice a diet rich in B vitamins (folic acid and vitamin B12). Another group
of genetically identical pregnant agouti mice got no such prenatal nutrition.
The B vitamins acted as methyl donors: they caused methyl groups to attach more frequently to the agouti
gene in utero, thereby altering its expression. And so without altering the genomic structure of mouse DNA
— simply by furnishing B vitamins — Jirtle and Waterland got agouti mothers to produce healthy brown
pups that were of normal weight and not prone to diabetes.
Other recent studies have also shown the power of environment over gene expression. For instance, fruit
flies exposed to a drug called geldanamycin show unusual outgrowths on their eyes that can last through at
least 13 generations of offspring even though no change in DNA has occurred (and generations 2 through 13
were not directly exposed to the drug). Similarly, according to a paper published last year in the Quarterly
Review of Biology by Eva Jablonka (an epigenetic pioneer) and Gal Raz of Tel Aviv University, roundworms
fed with a kind of bacteria can feature a small, dumpy appearance and a switched-off green fluorescent
protein; the changes last at least 40 generations. (Jablonka and Raz's paper catalogs some 100 forms of
epigenetic inheritance.)
Can epigenetic changes be permanent? Possibly, but it's important to remember that epigenetics isn't
evolution. It doesn't change DNA. Epigenetic changes represent a biological response to an environmental
stressor. That response can be inherited through many generations via epigenetic marks, but if you remove
the environmental pressure, the epigenetic marks will eventually fade, and the DNA code will — over time —
begin to revert to its original programming. That's the current thinking, anyway: that only natural selection
causes permanent genetic change.
And yet even if epigenetic inheritance doesn't last forever, it can be hugely powerful. In February 2009, the
Journal of Neuroscience published a paper showing that even memory — a wildly complex biological and
psychological process — can be improved from one generation to the next via epigenetics. The paper
described an experiment with mice led by Larry Feig, a Tufts University biochemist. Feig's team exposed
mice with genetic memory problems to an environment rich with toys, exercise and extra attention. These mice showed significant improvement in long-term potentiation (LTP), a form of neural transmission that is
key to memory formation. Surprisingly, their offspring also showed LTP improvement, even when the
offspring got no extra attention.
All this explains why the scientific community is so nervously excited about epigenetics. In his forthcoming
book The Genius in All of Us: Why Everything You've Been Told About Genetics, Talent and IQ Is Wrong,
science writer David Shenk says epigenetics is helping usher in a "new paradigm" that "reveals how
bankrupt the phrase 'nature versus nurture' really is." He calls epigenetics "perhaps the most important
discovery in the science of heredity since the gene."
Geneticists are quietly acknowledging that we may have too easily dismissed an early naturalist who
anticipated modern epigenetics — and whom Darwinists have long disparaged. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
(1744-1829) argued that evolution could occur within a generation or two. He posited that animals acquired
certain traits during their lifetimes because of their environment and choices. The most famous Lamarckian
example: giraffes acquired their long necks because their recent ancestors had stretched to reach high,
nutrient-rich leaves.
In contrast, Darwin argued that evolution works not through the fire of effort but through cold, impartial
selection. By Darwinist thinking, giraffes got their long necks over millennia because genes for long necks
had, very slowly, gained advantage. Darwin, who was 84 years younger than Lamarck, was the better
scientist, and he won the day. Lamarckian evolution came to be seen as a scientific blunder. Yet epigenetics
is now forcing scientists to re-evaluate Lamarck's ideas.
Solving the Overkalix Mystery
By early 2000, it seemed clear to Bygren that the feast and famine years in 19th century Norrbotten had
caused some form of epigenetic change in the population. But he wasn't sure how this worked. Then he ran
across an obscure 1996 paper by Dr. Marcus Pembrey, a prominent geneticist at University College London.
Published in the Italian journal Acta Geneticae Medicae et Gemellologiae, Pembrey's paper, now
considered seminal in epigenetic theory, was contentious at the time; major journals had rejected it.
Although he is a committed Darwinist, Pembrey used the paper — a review of available epigenetic science —
to speculate beyond Darwin: What if the environmental pressures and social changes of the industrial age
had become so powerful that evolution had begun to demand that our genes respond faster? What if our
DNA now had to react not over many generations and millions of years but, as Pembrey wrote, within "a
few, or moderate number, of generations"?
This shortened timetable would mean that genes themselves wouldn't have had enough years to change.
But, Pembrey reasoned, maybe the epigenetic marks atop DNA would have had time to change. Pembrey
wasn't sure how you would test such a grand theory, and he put the idea aside after the Acta paper appeared. But in May 2000, out of the blue, he received an e-mail from Bygren — whom he did not know —
about the Overkalix life-expectancy data. The two struck up a friendship and began discussing how to
construct a new experiment that would clarify the Overkalix mystery.
Pembrey and Bygren knew they needed to replicate the Overkalix findings, but of course you can't conduct
an experiment in which some kids starve and others overeat. (You also wouldn't want to wait 60 years for
the results.) By coincidence, Pembrey had access to another incredible trove of genetic information. He had
long been on the board of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), a unique
research project based at the University of Bristol, in England. Founded by Pembrey's friend Jean Golding,
an epidemiologist at the university, ALSPAC has followed thousands of young people and their parents
since before the kids were born, in 1991 and 1992. For the study, Golding and her staff recruited 14,024
pregnant mothers — 70% of all the women in the Bristol area who were pregnant during the 20-month
recruitment period.
The ALSPAC parents and kids have undergone extensive medical and psychological testing every year since.
Recently, I met an ALSPAC baby, Tom Gibbs, who is now a sturdy 17-year-old. I accompanied him as
clinicians measured his height (178 cm, or 5 ft. 8 in., not including spiked blond hair), the bone density of
his left femur (1.3 g/sq cm, which is above average) and a host of other physical traits.
All this data collection was designed from the outset to show how the individual's genotype combines with
environmental pressures to influence health and development. ALSPAC data have offered several important
insights: baby lotions containing peanut oil may be partly responsible for the rise in peanut allergies; high
maternal anxiety during pregnancy is associated with the child's later development of asthma; little kids
who are kept too clean are at higher risk for eczema.
But Pembrey, Bygren and Golding — now all working together — used the data to produce a more
groundbreaking paper, the most compelling epigenetic study yet written. Published in 2006 in the
European Journal of Human Genetics, it noted that of the 14,024 fathers in the study, 166 said they had
started smoking before age 11 — just as their bodies were preparing to enter puberty. Boys are genetically
isolated before puberty because they cannot form sperm. (Girls, by contrast, have their eggs from birth.)
That makes the period around puberty fertile ground for epigenetic changes: If the environment is going to
imprint epigenetic marks on genes in the Y chromosome, what better time to do it than when sperm is first
starting to form?
When Pembrey, Bygren and Golding looked at the sons of those 166 early smokers, it turned out that the
boys had significantly higher body mass indexes than other boys by age 9. That means the sons of men who
smoke in prepuberty will be at higher risk for obesity and other health problems well into adulthood. It's very likely these boys will also have shorter life spans, just as the children of the Overkalix overeaters did.
"The coherence between the ALSPAC and Overkalix results in terms of the exposure-sensitive periods and
sex specificity supports the hypothesis that there is a general mechanism for transmitting information about
the ancestral environment down the male line," Pembrey, Bygren, Golding and their colleagues concluded
in the European Journal of Human Genetics paper. In other words, you can change your epigenetics even
when you make a dumb decision at 10 years old. If you start smoking then, you may have made not only a
medical mistake but a catastrophic genetic mistake.
Exploring Epigenetic Potential
How can we harness the power of epigenetics for good? In 2008 the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
announced it would pour $190 million into a multilab, nationwide initiative to understand "how and when
epigenetic processes control genes." Dr. Elias Zerhouni, who directed the NIH when it awarded the grant,
said at the time — in a phrase slightly too dry for its import — that epigenetics had become "a central issue
in biology."
This past October, the NIH grant started to pay off. Scientists working jointly at a fledgling, largely
Internet-based effort called the San Diego Epigenome Center announced with colleagues from the Salk
Institute — the massive La Jolla, Calif., think tank founded by the man who discovered the polio vaccine —
that they had produced "the first detailed map of the human epigenome."
The claim was a bit grandiose. In fact, the scientists had mapped only a certain portion of the epigenomes of
two cell types (an embryonic stem cell and another basic cell called a fibroblast). There are at least 210 cell
types in the human body — and possibly far more, according to Ecker, the Salk biologist, who worked on the
epigenome maps. Each of the 210 cell types is likely to have a different epigenome. That's why Ecker calls
the $190 million grant from NIH "peanuts" compared with the probable end cost of figuring out what all the
epigenetic marks are and how they work in concert.
Remember the Human Genome Project? Completed in March 2000, the project found that the human
genome contains something like 25,000 genes; it took $3 billion to map them all. The human epigenome
contains an as yet unknowable number of patterns of epigenetic marks, a number so big that Ecker won't
even speculate on it. The number is certainly in the millions. A full epigenome map will require major
advances in computing power. When completed, the Human Epigenome Project (already under way in
Europe) will make the Human Genome Project look like homework that 15th century kids did with an
abacus.
But the potential is staggering. For decades, we have stumbled around massive Darwinian roadblocks. DNA,
we thought, was an ironclad code that we and our children and their children had to live by. Now we can
imagine a world in which we can tinker with DNA, bend it to our will. It will take geneticists and ethicists
many years to work out all the implications, but be assured: the age of epigenetics has arrived.
Jan. 06, 2010 by John Cloud
正確認識人類的遷徙歷史,有助於促進人類社會的和諧。
Understanding of human migration history for better harmonious society.
Topics list is at bottom of page. Click to see COVID-19 Genome&Vaccines new site.
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阿爾泰語系的起源和傳播 Origin and Spread of Altaic Languages 2021
古北歐亞人 Ancient North Eurasians (Ghost population)
早期人類沿海遷徙 Early Human Coastal Migrations (updated 2022)
現代東亞人的起源與形成 Origin and formation of modern East Asians
單倍羣 Haplogroup CT 2022-2-14
基因檢測: 祖源分析,製造"太陽的後裔"? DNA: Ancestry,Descendants of the sun
各方言區漢族的父系祖先 Paternal Ancestors of Chinese of Different Dialects
6千年前有3人是四成多華裔的祖先 Three neolithic men are 40% Chinese ancestors
基因和基因表現 Genetics & Epigenetics
常染色體遺傳: 耳垢、初乳、狐臭、狐狸精 Autosomal: earwax, colostrum & body odor etc.
匈奴、孔子、曹操的基因 Genes of Hunnu, Confucius & Emperor Cao
走入川西民族走廊, 尋找東女國 Ethnic Corridor of West Sichuan, Ancient female nation; 青藏高原東緣的族群 Ethnic groups in eastern Tibetan Plateau
人類的單倍羣、遷徙、歷史 Human's haplogroups, migration & history
走出伊甸園, 羊的傳人 Out of Eden, Shepherd Linkage; 東亞民族單倍羣分佈 Haplogroup distribution in East Asia
東亞、東南亞的人類遷徙 Human migration in East & Southeast Asia; 走入藏區, 探秘東亞最古老的部族 East Asia's oldest tribe in Tibetan area
奇妙的人類旅程 - 中文視頻 Chinese video; Incredible Human Journey - English video 英文視頻 2011
Y染色體在全世界的譜系 World's Y-DNA haplogroup distribution 2008; 單倍羣 Haplogroup CT 2019-6-22
Time: Why Your DNA Isn't Your Destiny 為何你的基因不是命運的主宰 2010
Ancient History -Archeology & Legends 歷史文化、傳說故事、考古、傳世文獻: Beginning of China、商、周、秦
我的旅遊創作網站連結 My Blog Links
Please acknowledge the source when reproducing the content elsewhere. 引用或轉載本文, 請註明來源。
Below: Unhighlighted shown under highlighted links
COVID-19 Genome & Vaccines posts had been moved to new site.
阿爾泰語系的起源和傳播 Origin and Spread of Altaic Languages 2021
古北歐亞人 Ancient North Eurasians (Ghost population)
早期人類沿海遷徙 Early Human Coastal Migrations (updated 2022)
現代東亞人的起源與形成 Origin and formation of modern East Asians
單倍羣 Haplogroup CT 2022-2-14
基因檢測: 祖源分析,製造"太陽的後裔"? DNA: Ancestry,Descendants of the sun
各方言區漢族的父系祖先 Paternal Ancestors of Chinese of Different Dialects
6千年前有3人是四成多華裔的祖先 Three neolithic men are 40% Chinese ancestors
基因和基因表現 Genetics & Epigenetics
常染色體遺傳: 耳垢、初乳、狐臭、狐狸精 Autosomal: earwax, colostrum & body odor etc.
匈奴、孔子、曹操的基因 Genes of Hunnu, Confucius & Emperor Cao
走入川西民族走廊, 尋找東女國 Ethnic Corridor of West Sichuan, Ancient female nation; 青藏高原東緣的族群 Ethnic groups in eastern Tibetan Plateau
人類的單倍羣、遷徙、歷史 Human's haplogroups, migration & history
走出伊甸園, 羊的傳人 Out of Eden, Shepherd Linkage; 東亞民族單倍羣分佈 Haplogroup distribution in East Asia
東亞、東南亞的人類遷徙 Human migration in East & Southeast Asia; 走入藏區, 探秘東亞最古老的部族 East Asia's oldest tribe in Tibetan area
奇妙的人類旅程 - 中文視頻 Chinese video; Incredible Human Journey - English video 英文視頻 2011
Y染色體在全世界的譜系 World's Y-DNA haplogroup distribution 2008; 單倍羣 Haplogroup CT 2019-6-22
Time: Why Your DNA Isn't Your Destiny 為何你的基因不是命運的主宰 2010
Ancient History -Archeology & Legends 歷史文化、傳說故事、考古、傳世文獻: Beginning of China、商、周、秦
我的旅遊創作網站連結 My Blog Links
Please acknowledge the source when reproducing the content elsewhere. 引用或轉載本文, 請註明來源。
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