Epigenomics: Redefining the Architecture of Phenotypic Variation and the Neo-Darwinian Framework
The biological sciences have long been dominated by the Modern Synthesis, or Neo-Darwinism, a framework established in the mid-20th century that married Mendelian genetics with Darwinian natural selection. At its core, the Neo-Darwinian paradigm posits that the engine of evolutionary change is the random mutation of DNA sequences, which are then filtered by the sieve of natural selection. In this view, the genotype acts as the definitive blueprint for the organism, and phenotypic variance is primarily the result of variations in the nucleotide sequence. However, the rapid emergence of epigenomics—the study of the complete set of chemical modifications to the DNA and histone proteins that regulate gene expression without altering the underlying sequence—is now compelling a profound reassessment of this dogma. Epigenomics reveals that the "code of life" is far more fluid and responsive to the environment than previously imagined, suggesting that the phenotype is a nuanced, dyna...