Israeli Researchers Discover Three Rules that Dictate Transgenerational Epigenetic Inheritance

 Remember Your servants, Avraham, Yitzchak and Yisrael, how You swore to them by Your Self and said to them: I will make your offspring as numerous as the stars of heaven, and I will give to your offspring this whole land of which I spoke, to possess forever.

Exodus

32:

13

(the israel bible)

August 26, 2020

4 min read

We know that when we sweat it out in the gym to bolster our muscles and lose weight, our workout will not make our children stronger, as most experiences we acquire in our lifetime will not be passed on to our descendants.

Yet researchers at Tel Aviv University (TAU) have discovered three rules that dictate epigenetic inheritance – meaning transgenerational inheritance through means other than changes in DNA sequences. Just published in the leading scientific journal Cell, the study was led by Prof. Oded Rechavi and his research student Dr. Leah Houri-Zeevi of the neurobiology department at the TAU’s Faculty of Life Sciences and the Sagol School of Neuroscience. The article is entitled “Three rules explain transgenerational small RNA inheritance in C. elegans.”

Studies conducted in recent years on epigenetic inheritance in worms challenge our traditional concepts regarding the limits of inheritance and evolution, indicating that some acquired traits are in fact passed on to subsequent generations. Rechavi noted that epigenetic inheritance of responses to the environment occurs independently of changes to the DNA sequence, through other inherited molecules. “In many organisms, responses to environmental changes, such as stress, involve small RNA molecules that silence or block the expression of certain genes.”

The C. elegans (Caenorhabditis elegans), a tiny, free-living transparent nematode that lives in temperate soil environments, is an important and widely used model animal, teaching us even how higher animals and humans function. It has shown in these worms that small RNA molecules can be transmitted to subsequent generations, thereby passing on certain traits.

In previous research projects, Rechavi discovered that worms transfer to their offspring small RNA molecules containing information on the parent’s environment, such as viral infections, nutrition and even brain activity, thus contributing to the survival of subsequent generations.

In the current study, he and his team tried to understand whether transgenerational epigenetic inheritance via small RNA molecules is governed by specific rules, or alternately, occurs passively and randomly.

“C. elegans is the preferred model organism for research on transgenerational epigenetic inheritance, for several  reasons: Its generation time is three and a half days, allowing us to study many generations in a short period of time; every worm produces hundreds of descendants, providing strong statistical validity; environmental exposure can be fully controlled; and each worm fertilizes itself, so that differences in DNA are almost completely neutralized,” Rechavi explained.

Houri-Zeevi added that “many laboratories have noted that at the level of a population, epigenetic inheritance through small RNA endures in worms for about three to five generations. In a previous study, we discovered a mechanism that controls the duration of the inheritance, proving, in effect, that this type of inheritance is a regulated process. But still the question remains: Why are some worms strongly affected by their ancestor’s environmental responses, while others do not inherit the epigenetic effect at all – despite the fact that all offspring are almost identical genetically,” she said. “This partial inheritance has been known for some time, but how epigenetic material is distributed among the offspring remained a mystery. We wanted to find out whether there was any pattern in the inheritance, that might explain and allow us to predict who would inherit the epigenetic features – and for how long.”

The researchers used a genetically engineered worm carrying a gene that produces a fluorescent protein – making the worm itself glow under fluorescent light. The researchers then initiated a heritable small RNA silencing response against the fluorescent gene and observed which descendants had inherited the silencing response and stopped glowing, and which descendants ‘forgot’ the parental response and started expressing the fluorescent gene once again after several generations.

Houri-Zeevi repeated this process over and over again so as to understand the rules governing the epigenetic effect. Altogether, she examined dozens of worms lineages, including more than 20,000 individual worms. But the most challenging part, according to Rechavi, was deciphering the different inheritance patterns and understanding the rules behind them.

Ultimately, through in-depth investigation of the inheritance mechanism, the researchers discovered three laws that can explain and even enable the prediction of who inherits the epigenetic information:

First law: Inheritance is uniform in worms descending from the same mother – namely worms of the same lineage. The researchers were surprised to learn that differences in inheritance observed in previous studies were in fact “concealed” due to the method of examining whole worm populations rather than distinct lineages.

Second law: Inheritance is very different in worms derived from different mothers, even though the mothers themselves are supposedly identical, because the worm fertilizes itself. The researchers characterized the mechanism that creates the differences between mothers who are genetically identical and found that differences between descendants stem from varying “internal states” randomly adopted by the mothers. Essentially, the mother’s internal state, the level of activity of the inheritance mechanism in each mother, determines the duration of inheritance, and thus the fate of subsequent generations.

Third law: The longer the duration of the epigenetic inheritance – namely, the greater the number of generations in a specific lineage who inherits the trait – the greater the probability that it will continue on to the next generation as well, “in something like transgenerational momentum, resembling the “Hot Hand” rule in basketball.

According Rechavi, we do not yet know whether the exact same transgenerational epigenetic inheritance mechanism exists in humans as well. “We hope that the mechanism we have discovered exists in other organisms as well, but we’ll just have to be patient. We must remember that genetic research also began with Friar Gregor Mendel’s observations in peas, and today we use Mendel’s laws to predict whether our children will have smooth or curly hair.”

“The idea of acquired traits passed on to descendants is as old as it is outrageous. Even before Darwin and Lamarck, the ancient Greeks argued about it, and it seems to be incompatible with genetic inheritance through DNA,” he concluded. “The worms changed the rules by showing us that inheritance outside the genetic sequence does exist, via small RNA molecules, enabling parents to prepare their offspring for the difficulties they have encountered in their lifetime. From one study to the next we shed light on the molecular mechanisms and mysterious dynamics of epigenetic inheritance, with the present study providing laws and introducing some order into the chaos.”

 

 

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