Heritability of traits and diseases may not be limited to DNA
London, January 20 (ANI): A new study conducted by scientists at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) suggests that DNA may not be the only carrier of heritable information, and that a secondary molecular mechanism called epigenetics may also account for some inherited traits and diseases.
The researchers say that their findings challenge the fundamental principles of genetics and inheritance, and potentially provide a new insight into the primary causes of human diseases.
A trait or disease is called heritable if genetically identical twins are more similar to each other than genetically different twins.
In molecular terms, heritability has traditionally been attributed to variations in the DNA sequence.
Dr. Art Petronis, head of the Krembil Family Epigenetics Laboratory at the CAMH, conducted a comprehensive epigenetic analysis of 100 sets of genetically identical and genetically different twins in the first study of its kind.
"We investigated molecules that attach to DNA and regulate various gene activities. These DNA modifications are called epigenetic factors," said the lead researcher.
His study demonstrated that epigenetic factors - acting independently from DNA - were more similar in identical twins than their non-identical counterparts, suggesting that there was a secondary molecular mechanism of heredity.
The epigenetic heritability might help explain currently unclear issues in human disease, such as the presence of a disease in only one identical twin, the different susceptibility of males (e.g. to autism) and females (e.g. to lupus), significant fluctuations in the course of a disease (e.g. bipolar disorder, inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis), among numerous others.
"Traditionally, it has been assumed that only the DNA sequence can account for the capability of normal traits and diseases to be inherited," says Dr. Petronis.
"Over the last several decades, there has been an enormous effort to identify specific DNA sequence changes predisposing people to psychiatric, neurodegenerative, malignant, metabolic, and autoimmune diseases, but with only moderate success. Our findings represent a new way to look for the molecular cause of disease, and eventually may lead to improved diagnostics and treatment," the researcher added.
The study has been published in the online edition of the journal Nature Genetics. (ANI)
-
Gold Rate Today 11 March 2026: Fresh IBJA Gold Rates; Tanishq, Malabar, Joyalukkas, Kalyan Jewellery Prices -
Gold Rate Today 12 March 2026: IBJA Issues New Gold Rates; Tanishq, Malabar, Joyalukkas, Kalyan Prices -
UPSC Result: Astha Jain’s Rank 9 Achievement Sparks EWS Quota Debate -
Gold Silver Rate Today, 11 March 2026: City-Wise Prices, MCX Gold Gains As Silver Climbs Across India -
LPG Cylinder Booking Made Easy: How to Refill Your HP, Indane Gas Cylinder By Missed Call, SMS or WhatsApp -
RCB Unbox Event 2026: Bengaluru’s Chinnaswamy Stadium to Host Season Launch on March 20 or 22 -
LPG Cylinder Rules In India: How Many Gas Cylinders Can You Keep At Home Legally? -
Bangalore Gold Silver Rate Today, March 11, 2026: Gold Prices Jump, Silver Steady as Global Tensions Push Safe -
Men Are The Biggest Victims: Jayam Ravi Amid Vijay-Sangeetha Divorce Row Linked To Trisha -
Trump Says Iran War Could End ‘Any Time I Want’, Claims Tehran’s Military ‘Practically Destroyed’ -
Kerala Gold Rate Today: 24K Gold Drops Slightly, Silver Also Declines -
Real Kerala Story: Maha Kumbh Fame Monalisa Marries Her Muslim Boyfriend in Kerala Against Her Family’s Will












Click it and Unblock the Notifications