Part 4 of 5 - The Ghost in your Genes - BBC Horizon

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
28,201
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Aug 31, 2009

Biology stands on the brink of a shift in the understanding of inheritance. The discovery of epigenetics hidden influences upon the genes could affect every aspect of our lives.
At the heart of this new field is a simple but contentious idea that genes have a 'memory'. That the lives of your grandparents the air they breathed, the food they ate, even the things they saw can directly affect you, decades later, despite your never experiencing these things yourself. And that what you do in your lifetime could in turn affect your grandchildren.
The conventional view is that DNA carries all our heritable information and that nothing an individual does in their lifetime will be biologically passed to their children. To many scientists, epigenetics amounts to a heresy, calling into question the accepted view of the DNA sequence a cornerstone on which modern biology sits.
Epigenetics adds a whole new layer to genes beyond the DNA. It proposes a control system of 'switches' that turn genes on or off and suggests that things people experience, like nutrition and stress, can control these switches and cause heritable effects in humans.
In a remote town in northern Sweden there is evidence for this radical idea. Lying in Överkalix's parish registries of births and deaths and its detailed harvest records is a secret that confounds traditional scientific thinking. Marcus Pembrey, a Professor of Clinical Genetics at the Institute of Child Health in London, in collaboration with Swedish researcher Lars Olov Bygren, has found evidence in these records of an environmental effect being passed down the generations. They have shown that a famine at critical times in the lives of the grandparents can affect the life expectancy of the grandchildren. This is the first evidence that an environmental effect can be inherited in humans.
In other independent groups around the world, the first hints that there is more to inheritance than just the genes are coming to light. The mechanism by which this extraordinary discovery can be explained is starting to be revealed.
Professor Wolf Reik, at the Babraham Institute in Cambridge, has spent years studying this hidden ghost world. He has found that merely manipulating mice embryos is enough to set off 'switches' that turn genes on or off.
For mothers like Stephanie Mullins, who had her first child by in vitro fertilisation, this has profound implications. It means it is possible that the IVF procedure caused her son Ciaran to be born with Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome a rare disorder linked to abnormal gene expression. It has been shown that babies conceived by IVF have a three- to four-fold increased chance of developing this condition.
And Reik's work has gone further, showing that these switches themselves can be inherited. This means that a 'memory' of an event could be passed through generations. A simple environmental effect could switch genes on or off and this change could be inherited.
His research has demonstrated that genes and the environment are not mutually exclusive but are inextricably intertwined, one affecting the other.
The idea that inheritance is not just about which genes you inherit but whether these are switched on or off is a whole new frontier in biology. It raises questions with huge implications, and means the search will be on to find what sort of environmental effects can affect these switches.
After the tragic events of September 11th 2001, Rachel Yehuda, a psychologist at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, studied the effects of stress on a group of women who were inside or near the World Trade Center and were pregnant at the time. Produced in conjunction with Jonathan Seckl, an Edinburgh doctor, her results suggest that stress effects can pass down generations. Meanwhile research at Washington State University points to toxic effects like exposure to fungicides or pesticides causing biological changes in rats that persist for at least four generations.
This work is at the forefront of a paradigm shift in scientific thinking. It will change the way the causes of disease are viewed, as well as the importance of lifestyles and family relationships. What people do no longer just affects themselves, but can determine the health of their children and grandchildren in decades to come. "We are," as Marcus Pembrey says, "all guardians of our genome."

  • likes, 1 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Top Comments

  • This raises some very strang posibilities.

  • @trutherseeker1420

    You know what I hate? Narrow minded fucktards who try to distort science to fit they'r bigoted views

see all

All Comments (45)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • @RobDeManc Word on that!

  • thankyou for uploading :)

  • The woman was prgenant at the time it happened, hence the baby had already inherited his genes from the parents at conception...so this wouldnt even count as a trai being passed from one generation to another on a genetic level

  • I want these tests. I was in a VERY stressfull marriage when I was pregnant with my twins. During the pregnancy I didn't know if they would survive because of the amount of emotional abuse I was dealing with. I ran for our lives six months after the twins were born. 16 years later I can see that the twins don't deal with stress very well. Hmmm...where do I get these tests?

  • it is like the lotto or a pronostic where you chose a very few numbers i.e. 6 out of i.e.40 and you have milions of choises. So what if you have a very big number of genes ?

  • This is a theory right?

  • @serg4nyc you know nothing of science

  • @Arkalantes  yeah ok keep believing that.

  • @serg4nyc

    1 day of trauma can equal weeks to months of stress and trauma. look at war veterans, they were effected even when they came back. if an individual is traumatised their body will generate the cortisol, this switch being flicked on for the gland to create this also seems to turn on the glands of their children. broaden your mind for fucks sake

  • @ridgetownpimp sounds like you, a narrow minded fuckwit trying to distort fact to your own opinion

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more