Of Mice and Men: How Non-Genetic Epigenetics rewrites Evolution
The striking genetic overlap between humans and mice presents a profound biological paradox. Despite sharing approximately 98% of their protein-coding DNA, a human and a mouse develop vastly distinct anatomical structures, physiological systems, and cognitive capacities. For decades, the dominant framework of evolutionary biology accounted for this disparity primarily through changes in sequence-specific regulation, positioning the genome as the rigid, unidirectional blueprint of life. However, the emergence of epigenetics reveals that the physical manifestation of an organism, its phenotype, is not dictated solely by the static sequence of A, T, C, and G nucleotides. By demonstrating that environmental inputs can alter gene expression without changing the underlying DNA sequence, and that these alterations can be inherited across generations, epigenetics presents a fundamental challenge to the foundational assumptions of the Modern Synthesis. To understand this challenge, it is necess...