Epigenetic Echoes: How DNA Methylation Challenges the Foundations of Modern Biology
For decades, the Modern Synthesis has served as the bedrock of evolutionary biology. It elegantly wedded Darwinian natural selection with Mendelian genetics, proposing a world where evolution is driven primarily by random mutations in the DNA sequence the "blueprint" of life. However, recent research into DNA methylation, specifically its evolutionary conservation and population-specific patterns, is adding a layer of complexity that the original synthesis did not account for. The study of DNA methylation, the addition of a methyl group to DNA that acts as a "dimmer switch" for gene expression suggests that the instructions for life are not just written in the sequence of nucleotides, but also in how those sequences are packaged and regulated. The Architecture of Epigenetic Conservation When scientists investigate the evolutionary conservation of DNA methylation, they are looking for patterns that have remained unchanged across millions of years of species divergenc...