To biomedical researchers all over the world, twins offer a precious opportunity to untangle the influence of genes and the environment - of nature and nurture. Because identical twins come from a single fertilized egg that splits into two, they share virtually the same genetic code. Any differences between them -one twin having younger looking skin, for example - must be due to environmental factors such as less time spent in the sun.
Alternatively, by comparing the experiences of identical twins with those of fraternal twins, who come from separate eggs and share on average half their DNA, researchers can quantify the extent to which our genes affect our lives. If identical twins are more similar to each other with respect to an ailment than fraternal twins are, then vulnerability to the disease must be rooted at least in part in heredity.
These two lines of research - studying the differences between identical twins to pinpoint the influence of environment, and comparing identical twins with fraternal ones to measure the role of inheritance - have been crucial to understanding the interplay of nature and nurture in determining our personalities, behavior, and vulnerability to disease.
The idea of using twins to measure the influence of heredity dates back to 1875, when the English scientist Francis Galton first suggested the approach (and coined the phrase 'nature and nurture'). But twin studies took a surprising twist in the 1980s, with the arrival of studies into identical twins who had been separated at birth and reunited as adults. Over two decades 137 sets of twins eventually visited Thomas Bouchard's lab in what became known as the Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart. Numerous tests were carried out on the twins, and they were each asked more than 15, 000 questions.
Bouchard and his colleagues used this mountain of data to identify how far twins were affected by their genetic makeup. The key to their approach was a statistical concept called heritability. in broad terms, the heritability of a trait measures the extent to which differences among members of a population can be explained by differences in their genetics. And wherever Bouchard and other scientists looked, it seemed, they found the invisible hand of genetic influence helping to shape our lives.
Lately, however, twin studies have helped lead scientists to a radical new conclusion: that nature and nurture are not the only elemental forces at work. According to a recent field called epigenetics, there is a third factor also in play, one that in some cases serves as a bridge between the environment and our genes, and in others operates on its own to shape who we are.
Epigenetic processes are chemical reactions tied to neither nature nor nurture but representing what researchers have called a 'third component'. These reactions influence how our genetic code is expressed: how each gene is strengthened or weakened, even turned on or off, to build our bones, brains and all the other parts of our bodies.
If you think of our DNA as an immense piano keyboard and our genes as the keys - each key symbolizing a segment of DNA responsible for a particular note, or trait, and all the keys combining to make us who we are - then epigenetic processes determine when and how each key can be struck, changing the tune being played.
One way the study of epigenetics is revolutionizing our understanding of biology is by revealing a mechanism by which the environment directly impacts on genes. Studies of animals, for example, have shown that when a rat experiences stress during pregnancy, it can cause epigenetic changes in a fetus that lead to behavioral problems as the rodent grows up. Other epigenetic processes appear to occur randomly, while others are normal, such as those that guide embryonic cells as they become heart, brain, or liver cells, for example.
Geneticist Danielle Reed has worked with many twins over the years and thought deeply about what twin studies have taught us. 'It's very clear when you look at twins that much of what they share is hardwired, ' she says. 'Many things about them are absolutely the same and unalterable. But it's also clear, when you get to know them, that other things about them are different. Epigenetics is the origin of a lot of those differences, in my view. '
Reed credits Thomas Bouchard's work for today's surge in twin studies. 'He was the trailblazer, ' she says. 'We forget that 50 years ago things like heart disease were thought to be caused entirely by lifestyle. Schizophrenia was thought to be due to poor mothering. Twin studies have allowed us to be more reflective about what people are actually born with and what's caused by experience. '
Having said that, Reed adds, the latest work in epigenetics promises to take our understanding even further. 'What I like to say is that nature writes some things in pencil and some things in pen, ' she says. 'Things written in pen you can't change. That's DNA. But things written in pencil you can. That's epigenetics. Now that we're actually able to look at the DNA and see where the pencil writings are, it's sort of a whole new world. '
To biomedical researchers all over the world,
twins
offer a precious opportunity to untangle the
influence
of genes and the
environment
-
of
nature
and nurture.
Because
identical
twins
come
from a single fertilized egg that splits into two, they share
virtually
the same
genetic
code. Any
differences
between them -one
twin
having younger looking skin,
for example
-
must
be due to environmental factors such as less time spent in the sun.
Alternatively
, by comparing the experiences of
identical
twins
with those of fraternal
twins
,
who
come
from separate eggs and share on average half their DNA, researchers can quantify the extent to which our genes affect our
lives
. If
identical
twins
are more similar to each
other
with respect to an ailment than fraternal
twins
are, then vulnerability to the disease
must
be rooted
at least in part in heredity.
These two lines of research
-
studying the
differences
between
identical
twins
to pinpoint the
influence
of
environment
, and comparing
identical
twins
with fraternal ones to measure the role of inheritance
-
have been crucial to understanding the interplay of
nature
and nurture in determining our personalities, behavior, and vulnerability to disease.
The
idea
of using
twins
to measure the
influence
of heredity dates back to 1875, when the English scientist Francis
Galton
first
suggested the approach (and coined the phrase 'nature and nurture').
But
twin
studies
took a surprising twist in the 1980s, with the arrival of
studies
into
identical
twins
who
had
been separated
at birth and reunited as adults. Over two decades 137 sets of
twins
eventually
visited Thomas Bouchard's lab in what became known as the Minnesota
Study
of
Twins
Reared Apart. Numerous
tests
were carried
out on the
twins
, and they were each asked more than 15, 000 questions.
Bouchard and his colleagues
used
this mountain of data to identify how far
twins
were
affected
by their
genetic
makeup. The
key
to their approach was a statistical concept called heritability.
in
broad terms, the heritability of a trait measures the extent to which
differences
among members of a population can be
explained
by
differences
in their genetics. And wherever Bouchard and
other
scientists looked, it seemed, they found the invisible hand of
genetic
influence
helping to shape our
lives
.
Lately,
however
,
twin
studies
have
helped
lead scientists to a radical new conclusion: that
nature
and nurture are not the
only
elemental forces at work. According to a recent field called epigenetics, there is a third factor
also
in play, one that in
some
cases serves as a bridge between the
environment
and our genes, and in others operates on its
own
to shape
who
we are.
Epigenetic processes are chemical reactions tied to neither
nature
nor nurture
but
representing what researchers have called a 'third component'. These reactions
influence
how our
genetic
code
is expressed
: how each gene
is strengthened
or weakened, even turned on or off, to build our bones, brains and all the
other
parts of our bodies.
If you
think
of our DNA as an immense piano keyboard and our genes as the keys
-
each
key
symbolizing a segment of DNA responsible for a particular note, or trait, and all the keys combining to
make
us
who
we are
-
then epigenetic processes determine when and how each
key
can
be struck
, changing the tune
being played
.
One way the
study
of epigenetics is revolutionizing our understanding of biology is by revealing a mechanism by which the
environment
directly
impacts on genes.
Studies
of animals,
for example
, have shown that when a rat experiences
stress
during pregnancy, it can cause epigenetic
changes
in a fetus that lead to behavioral problems as the rodent grows up.
Other
epigenetic processes appear to occur
randomly
, while others are normal, such as those that guide embryonic cells as they become heart, brain, or liver cells,
for example
.
Geneticist Danielle Reed has worked with
many
twins
over the years and
thought
deeply
about what
twin
studies
have taught us. 'It's
very
clear
when you look at
twins
that much of what they share
is hardwired
,
'
she
says
. '
Many
things about them are
absolutely
the same and unalterable.
But
it's
also
clear
, when you
get
to know them, that
other
things about them are
different
. Epigenetics is the origin of
a lot of
those
differences
, in my view. '
Reed credits Thomas Bouchard's work for
today
's surge in
twin
studies
. 'He was the trailblazer,
'
she
says
. 'We forget that 50 years ago things like heart disease were
thought
to
be caused
entirely
by lifestyle. Schizophrenia was
thought
to be due to poor mothering.
Twin
studies
have
allowed
us to be more reflective about what
people
are actually born with and what's caused by experience. '
Having said that, Reed
adds
, the latest work in epigenetics promises to take our understanding even
further
. 'What I like to
say
is that
nature
writes
some
things in pencil and
some
things in pen,
'
she
says
. 'Things written in pen you can't
change
. That's DNA.
But
things written in pencil you can. That's epigenetics.
Now
that we're actually able to look at the DNA and
see
where the pencil writings are, it's
sort of a
whole new world. '