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Inheritance that's not just in the genes

By Bob Holmes

29 June 2011

IN THE biological theatre, genes are the directors, commanding the rest of the cell’s biomolecules to their proper places and cueing their lines. That has been the dominant metaphor in biology for decades.

In Epigenetics, Richard Francis argues for a more improvisational play in which genes are one actor among the rest.

The gene’s fall from leadership is the result of geneticists’ growing attention to epigenetics – a form of genetic change that is essentially the gene’s way of responding to its surroundings but which does not involve alterations in the gene’s DNA. So mothers who suffer severe stress during pregnancy have children more sensitive to…

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