The uncovering of acquired characteristics
In the past two decades, epigenetics has taken the forefront in defining diseases and providing new therapeutic targets. Through DNA methylation, histone modifications and nucleosome remodeling, epigenetics has altered the way we view and study diseases. The idea underlying epigenetics, however, is not novel but dates back to the 1800s. More in-depth analysis, however, was not conducted until the early 1900s when Conrad Waddington proposed the idea of "acquired characters", whereby an organism is able to acquire characters that allow the organism to develop normally in response to different environmental conditions. In this paper Waddington demonstrates his idea of genetic assimilation of characteristics by analyzing the cross-vein in Drosophila melanogaster under a stressed temperature condition. The ideas set forth in this paper and his earlier papers provided the basis of acquired characteristics due to different environmental exposures.
Other Reading: Waddington, 1942
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