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NOVA explores new findings that call into question the long-held belief that all inherited traits are passed on by our genes.
In a provocative report from the frontiers of biology, NOVA
explores new findings that call into question the long-held belief
that all inherited traits are passed on by our genes. The
fast-growing field of epigenetics investigates hidden influences
that could affect not only our health today but that of our
descendants far into the future. It now seems that our environment
makes small chemical changes to our DNA without affecting the
gene's overall makeup. To put it another way, epigenetics adds to
our DNA another layer that acts as a control system of "switches."
Experiential factors such as nutrition or stress may trigger these
switches and turn genes on or off. These subtle changes can then be
"remembered" and passed on from generation to generation, altering
inherited traits. This means the lives of our grandparents -
the air they breathed, the food they ate, even the things they saw
- could have directly affected us, and that what we do could, in
turn, affect our grandchildren. NOVA explores this fascinating new
idea, interviewing top scientists in the field and following what
could be a paradigm shift in the way we think about inheritance and
genes.