Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Family Tree UK

FAMILY HISTORY UNDER THE MICROSCOPE

What is epigenetics?

Epigenetics – or the study of changes in gene expression not caused by alterations in DNA sequences – is becoming of increasing interest to today’s family historians. Moving away from traditional genealogy, epigenetics may add a new dimension by exploring the potential transgenerational transfer of trauma and the impact of historical events on our genes. This revelation opens up research possibilities, as families seek to comprehend their heritage better and understand the complexities that shape their identities. It also offers an area for family historians to work more closely with psychologists. However, the subject is not without controversy and there are arguments over whether it is scientifically accurate for the term epigenetics to be used at all in the area of human psychology. Although the word ‘epigenesis’ has been in English usage since the 17th century, it was only in the early 1940s that Conrad Waddington (1905 75), an embryologist and later professor of animal genetics at the University of Edinburgh, introduced the term epigenetics.

He defined epigenetics as ‘the branch of biology which studies the causal interactions between genes and their products, which bring the phenotype into being’. currently defines epigenetics as ‘The study of factors that influence gene expression but do not alter genotype, such as chromatin methylation and acetylation involved in tissue-specific patterns of gene expression, or the parental imprinting of genes.’ Nevertheless, there remains no absolute consensus on how the term is used. It can thus be difficult to have a conversation around epigenetics as not

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Family Tree UK

Family Tree UK2 min read
What Were You Doing 40 Years Ago? Was It Family-history Related?
However, young or old we are, 40 years is a long, long time! And we are absolutely delighted to be celebrating the 40th anniversary of Family Tree this issue. This time four decades ago, Michael Armstrong (the passionate genealogist who started Famil
Family Tree UK1 min read
A.I. Grants For Library, Museum & Archive Innovation
The Archives and Records Association UK & Ireland (ARA) has awarded two grants of £10,000 to projects investigating AI (and other emerging technologies) and their application within the record-keeping sector. The grants have been awarded to: • Dr Lis
Family Tree UK3 min read
Researching The SOCIAL & FAMILY HISTORY Of Unrelated Cohorts
I made this record card (see below right) 50 years ago when, as a student at the Royal Free Hospital (formerly the London School of Medicine for Women), I started this project. The project was then in abeyance until three years ago when it was revive

Related