Can
the legacy of trauma be passed down the generations??
SADLY, YES
Our
children and grandchildren are shaped by the genes they inherit from us, but
new research is revealing that experiences of hardship or violence can leave
their mark too.
By Martha Henriques
In 1864, nearing the end of the US Civil War,
conditions in the Confederate prisoner of war camps were at their worst. There
was such overcrowding in some camps that the prisoners, Union Army soldiers
from the north, each had the square footage of a grave. Prisoner death rates
soared.
While their sons and grandsons had not suffered the
hardships of the PoW camps – and if anything were well provided for through
their childhoods – they suffered higher rates of mortality than the wider
population. It appeared the PoWs had passed on some element of their trauma to
their offspring.
But unlike most inherited conditions, this was not
caused by mutations to the genetic code itself. Instead, the researchers were
investigating a much more obscure type of inheritance: how events in someone’s
lifetime can change the way their DNA is expressed, and how that change can be
passed on to the next generation.
This is the process of epigenetics, where the
readability, or expression, of genes is modified without changing the DNA code
itself. Tiny chemical tags are added to or removed from our DNA in response to
changes in the environment in which we are living. These tags turn genes on or
off, offering a way of adapting to changing conditions without inflicting a
more permanent shift in our genomes.
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