Lamarck's Revenge: How Epigenetics Is Revolutionizing Our Understanding of Evolution's Past and Present

Lamarck's Revenge: How Epigenetics Is Revolutionizing Our Understanding of Evolution's Past and Present

by PeterWard (Author)

Synopsis

Epigenetics upends natural selection and genetic mutation as the sole engines of evolution. Darwinian evolution is based on the genetic code of an individual being changed by mutation, causing the genome passed to the offspring to differ from that of the parent. But some morphological changes have taken place so radically and so pervasively that they cannot be explained by modern evolutionary theory. A far simpler explanation for this phenomenon is epigenetics, which can create radical physical and physiological changes in subsequent generations by the simple addition of a single small molecule and without genetic mutation. One commonly studied alteration is the addition of very short chains of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen to particular nucleotides in DNA, typically silencing gene activity--somewhat as if someone canceled your delivery of bricks while you were in the process of building a house. Heritable epigenetics takes place when methyl molecules change the functioning of both DNA and tiny bits of RNA. Sometimes the presence of methylation or tiny freeloaders causes a protein not to be made. Or it might cause a new protein to be made that would not otherwise occur. Other times, it might cause a regulator gene-essentially the General Contractor coordinating all of the cells of the busy construction project-to walk off the job entirely, and huge changes take place far beyond what any single mutation could facilitate. Such changes affecting an individual can then be passed to the next generation: the methyl molecules are not physically passed on to the next generation, but the propensity for them to attach in the same places in the next generation are! Lamarck's Revenge explains how physical and behavioral changes can be passed on even though there has been no mutation that has been inherited from the progenitor. Among species, epigenetics can create morphological and physiological changes faster than could be explained by Darwinian natural selection and mutation. Not only has epigenetics played a key role in the history of our species--and indeed, of the world as a whole--it is crucial to understanding and predicting future human evolution.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 288
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 17 Oct 2018

ISBN 10: 1632866153
ISBN 13: 9781632866158
Book Overview: Epigenetics upends natural selection and genetic mutation as the sole engines of evolution.

Media Reviews
A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE deserves kudos for infectious elan, impressive scholarship and a plausible accounting of life's herky-jerky, hurry-up-and-wait tribulations. * Wall Street Journal (A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE) *
If you want to open your mind to the depths of modern thinking, then A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE is for you. Read it! * San Francisco Book Review (A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE) *
A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE makes for an exciting and comprehensive read, enthralling to science nerds and lay readers who are curious about the rich natural history of planet Earth. * Nature World News (A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE) *
The authors, both scientists, propose several different ways of looking at the history of life on earth, including the role that catastrophes played in shaping the development of living things. * Seattle Times (A NEW HISTORY OF LIFE) *
Author Bio
Peter Ward, Ph.D. has been active in Paleontology, Biology, and more recently, Astrobiology, and is an acknowledged expert on mass extinctions and the role of extraterrestrial impacts on Earth. He has published many books, the most recent is A New History of Life, with coauthor Joe Kirschvink. His Rare Earth, coauthored with Don Brownlee, was named by Discover Magazine as one of the ten most important science books of 2001 and his Gorgon was awarded a Washington State Governor's Book Award in 2005, and was nominated for a Keck Science Writing award. He is a regular on the Art Bell Coast to Coast radio program, as well as on Science Friday with Ira Flatow. Ward lives in Washington State.