Epigenetic Inheritance: The Non-Genetic Frontier Challenging the Modern Synthesis
The study of biology has long been anchored by the Modern Synthesis, the mid-20th-century unification of Darwinian natural selection and Mendelian genetics. This framework posits that evolution is driven almost exclusively by changes in DNA sequences (mutations) that occur randomly and are filtered by environmental pressures over vast timescales. However, the article “Generational stability of epigenetic transgenerational inheritance facilitates adaptation and evolution” presents a profound challenge to this orthodoxy. By demonstrating that epigenetic marks—chemical modifications to DNA and histones that do not change the underlying code—can be stably inherited across many generations, it introduces a mechanism for "soft inheritance" that allows for rapid, directed adaptation. The Core Premise: Beyond the Genetic Code At the heart of the Modern Synthesis is the Weismann Barrier, the principle that information flows only from the germline to the body cells, and never back. T...