The "Indestructible" :Epigenetics, Plasticity, and the Rise of Modern Sensitivities
The nostalgic refrain that children of previous generations were "indestructible" despite exposure to lead paint, processed meats, and stagnant water often serves as a shorthand for resilience. While the sentiment captures a stark difference in childhood experience, the biological reality is more complex. The dramatic rise in food allergies and intolerances specifically regarding peanuts and gluten is not a sign that human bodies have become inherently weaker, but rather that our environment has shifted with a velocity that our biology struggles to track. This discrepancy is rooted in the interplay between epigenetics and phenotypic plasticity. Phenotypic plasticity is the ability of an organism to change its phenotype (its observable physical or biochemical characteristics) in response to changes in the environment. Think of it as a biological "if-then" statement: if the environment provides a certain stimulus, then the organism adjusts its development accordingly....