Monday, 2 December 2013

Mice can ‘warn’ sons, grandsons of dangers via sperm


Mice can ‘warn’ sons, grandsons of dangers via sperm
Lab mice trained to fear a particular smell can transfer the impulse to their unborn sons and grandsons through a mechanism in their sperm, a study reveals.

The research claims to provide evidence for the concept of animals “inheriting” a memory of their ancestors’ traumas, and responding as if they had lived the events themselves.

It is the latest find in the study of epigenetics, in which environmental factors are said to cause genes to start behaving differently without any change to their underlying DNA encoding.

"Knowing how ancestral experiences influence descendant generations will allow us to understand more about the development of neuropsychiatric disorders that have a transgenerational basis," says study co-author Brian Dias of the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.

Happening in humans?
Commenting on the findings, British geneticist Marcus Pembrey says they could be useful in the study of phobias, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorders.

"It is high time public health researchers took human transgenerational responses seriously," he said in a statement issued by the Science Media Centre.

"I suspect we will not understand the rise in neuropsychiatric disorders or obesity, diabetes and metabolic disruptions generally without taking a multigenerational approach."

Wolf Reik, epigenetics head at the Babraham Institute in England, says such results were “encouraging” as they suggested that transgenerational inheritance does exist, but cannot yet be extrapolated to humans.

Source and further reading:
http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2013/12/02/3902972.htm

5 comments:

  1. That's such a Hindenburg Disaster David Hallowell

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  2. Akinola Emmanuel inherited memories and the epigenome. Is science proving karma?

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  3. John Cassone I'm not convinced yet. I'm looking at the data and the last one is the only one that addresses epigenetics. They look at many sites that they believe will have undergone epigenetic changes and they say there's a statistical difference, but out of the 26 sites, only 3 of them are changed. Although the data says they're significant (they use 12 different samples), I'm a little cautious.

    At any rate, I have to read the paper, but I think it's intriguing. Right now it seems like the gene for sensing that smell was "opened" in the offspring. I don't know if you can call that memory. If you could just take parental sperm and "open" that same gene, would you get the same results? If you did, would you call it memory?

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  4. Duncan Michael-MacGregor some of us enjoy worms =D

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  5. Damn it Akinola Emmanuel. I just want to finally discover the God factor, lol...

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