Ghost in Your Genes

2007, Documental, Genética, 720p
PBS.org
<table width="576"><tr><td align="justify">"Scientists have long puzzled over the different fates of identical twins: both have the same genes, yet only one may develop a serious disease like cancer or autism. What's going on? Does something else besides genes determine who we are? NOVA explores this startling possibility in this program. The "something else" turns out to be a network of chemical switches that sit on our DNA, turning genes off and on. Called collectively the epigenome, the switches appear to play a major role in everything from how our cells keep their identity to whether we contract dread diseases. Epigenetic switches may even help mold our personalities—or so it appears to Canadian researchers studying a group of epigenetically modified rats.
In this program, NOVA reveals the clues that have led scientists to this new picture of genetic control and expression. One such clue is the surprisingly modest number of genes that turned up when technology made it possible to map the human genome. The Human Genome Project was originally expected to find at least 100,000 genes defining the human species. Instead the effort yielded only about 20,000—about the same number as in fish or mice—too few, some believe, to account for human complexity. Researchers now suspect that it's how genes are regulated that distinguishes species. What turns them on and off? Among other things, epigenetic switches.
Another clue is that a single abnormality in a chromosome may result in two completely different diseases, depending on whether the defect is inherited from the mother or the father. The different fates may be due to different settings of epigenetic switches. And still another clue comes from a strain of mice that eats without limit if given the chance, which leads to obesity, diabetes, and cancer. Amazingly, their young can be rendered slim, healthy, and longer-lived through a change in diet that leaves their genes intact but alters their epigenetic switches.
The program closes at the controversial cutting edge of this burgeoning new field. At the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas, researchers are investigating epigenetic means to treat a deadly form of leukemia. In Washington State, a researcher finds that a toxin given to rats still affects their offspring four generations later, without producing any changes in their genes. And in Sweden, a study of historical records seems to show that the lifespan of grandchildren is affected by their grandparents' access to food. Might these effects be epigenetic? Might our experiences, by changing our epigenomes, literally change the fate of our offspring ... and their offspring ... and theirs in turn? And might our own states of health owe something to the diets and exposures of our forebears?
more info: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/genes/
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Runtime: 53:26
Source: OTA High Definition 1080i
Video Encoding: xvid.1280x720.3552kbps
Audio Encoding: ac3.384kbps-5.1chan
File Size: 1.45GB
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