Beyond the Sequence: Epigenetic Evolution and the Modern Synthesis
For much of the 20th century, the "Modern Synthesis" of evolutionary biology reigned supreme. It was a tidy, elegant framework that wedded Darwinian natural selection with Mendelian genetics. The central dogma was clear: evolution is the change in allele frequencies within a population over time. Phenotypic changes are driven by random DNA mutations, which are then filtered by the environment. However, the article "Evolution of epigenetic regulation in vertebrate genomes" presents a sophisticated challenge to this gene-centric view. By exploring how chemical modifications to DNA and histones—changes that do not alter the underlying genetic code—are preserved and evolved across vertebrate lineages, we find that the map from genotype to phenotype is far more fluid than the Modern Synthesis originally suggested. The Architecture of Vertebrate Epigenetics Vertebrate genomes are characterized by a unique "epigenetic landscape." While invertebrates often show m...