Epigenetics. Your genes are not set in stone. You don't have to live with the fact that just because your parents or grandparents were unhealthy doesn't mean you have no other choice but to be unhealthy also. You can change particular genes in your body just by eating the right foods and getting rid of the toxic bad habits, of any kind, and reprogramming your cells to make your body much healthier and stronger. By also applying an exercise routine that will decrease stress is also key to fixing your genes. Epigenetics is a new science that is telling us that we can take control of our bodies destiny and make it so healthy that our longevity will stamp out diseases and we can live a happier, healthier, more rewarding long life. If you have never heard about epigenetics, you really should get your knowledge on about these wonderfully new ground breaking science. The facts are clear and we truly do have control over how our lives are lived.
Wrong. You cant change your genes. You can, just sometimes change the expression of your genes! Often Epigenetic factors like DNA-Methylations are even not reversible
can certain athletic properties or abilities be manipulated by epigenetics i.e. continuous practice of certain ability, these things kinda demotivate me
This is the most extraordinary discovery since DNA itself (c.1953). It explains so much that we did not realize about human functioning and dysfunction. This lady is a wonderful teacher.
This is AMAZING!! GREAT INFORMATION! what blew my mind was 50 trillion cells in a human body, each cell having a strand of 6 feet of DNA in each cell, and each of DNA are fit into this 400000 times small than a cell in a nucleus cell! WOW!! that is what blew my mind! I'm happy to learn this!
such a great way to present fairly complex concepts, loved the way she did the pauses between sentences, words, and also how the powerpoint was short and spot on on the stuff that is greatly helped by images. Not to say about the subject, GREAT talk
Hope is right! The wonderful thing is that we can "repent" (change our ways) to break the curses passed on. While the sins of the father may be passed to the next generation, the next generation can change their ways and break that curse. How wonderful!
Excellent speaker who made the concepts quite accessible. I’m very interested to learn more about this emerging field while also inspired to go back and learn the fundamentals of DNA, genetics and organic chemistry to better understand the topic.
Absolutely beautifully presented and explained. I actually think I understood most of what Courtney said. Beautifully composed sentences, very pleasant voice. No extraneous words. I loved it! 💐🌿🌹🌿💐
I liked this. My favorite for accessibility on the same subject is Dr Bruce Lipton's book, The Biology of Belief. I believe this whole field will explode our possibilities and the way we think about our environment, physical, emotional, mental. Epigenetics goes a long way towards explaining how Energy Psychology and EFT work so well, documented in the 60+ peer-reviewed published studies. Challenging our convictions is what science is supposed to be all about, and I'm delighted with Courtney Griffins' presentation that paves the way for a better understanding of who we are and how we're impacted, and what we can do with that information.
I love this topic! We are not doomed by our genetic heritage. They provide the perfect conditions for us to grow and live our greatest potential. Additional to the creation of medicines that can support gene heritage are a number of psychotherapeutic methods that can heal genetic expressions inherited from our ancestors.
Fascinating talk! The part on how our parents/grandparents habits shaped our genes reminded me of Exodus 20:5: "Bringing punishment for the error of fathers upon sons, upon the third generation and upon the fourth generation."
Holger Lenz I was thinking the same thing. Have they checked how many generations of impact adjustments make or even what adjustments they suggest and which are all still unproven have what outcome.
yes it is - but it acknowleges that science is an ever developing subject, so what was understood/misunderstood in one way, has morphed into something else as work has been done. For me, it is welcome, highlighting the increasing , better, undertanding of the problem
Beautiful teaching, Courtney, broke down the concept of Epigenetics. We can change our Longterm health by treating our epigenome kindly through healthy lifestyle decisions.
Best 19 minutes i have spent on my life, hopefully modern medicine can produce such medications based on these theories plus the importance of life style and diet among people so raising awareness is also playing part to fight or prevention of cancer 🙏🙏🙏
I PERSONALLY AM VERY GREATEFULL TO YOU FOR THIS VIDEO IN WHICH YOU HAVE GIVEN SPECIFIC IMPORTANCE FOR EPIGENOME WHICH BUSTED THE OLD MYTH THAT GENES ARE STATIC MACHINES WHICH ARE NOT INFLUENCED BY EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT INCLUDING FOOD AND MENTAL STRESS LEVEL OF ANY SPECIES.👍
This is one of the most amazing lectures of Epigenetics. Ummm, now I can understand that is now everything is lost. Means if our parents had bad habits, as not eating healthy and another things against our bodies, we can change and be healthy...
I really like the content and the way it is delivered. You unpacked such complex subject in an easily understood way. Thank you. I watched this video so many times and each time, l have gone back and fro, taking out more and getting to know myself more. Super video, massive content, and a beautiful scientist. Thank you, ma'am.
17:16 "There are things that we can do now to positively influence our epigenome. It's not too late to start eating healthier foods, foods that we already know are good for us, like leafy vegetables and whole grains. Avoiding cigarettes, cocaine and stress."
This is great information that people need to know regarding the healthy birth of children. We can influence the outcome of a birth by changing our habits before conceiving.Great evidence for a plant based lifestyle.
I am not a geneticist but Dr Courtney makes a great case that demonstrate the effects of lifestyle and personal choices and the outcome of how well we live. It makes sense that our choices will affect our genetic destiny either + or -. There have been lots of examples of genetically identical twins who have made different life style choices and the affects on how they age. This also has been recorded with gene chip analysis which is state of the art technology in measuring objectively how our genes our affected by lifestyle choices. So I don't think what she is saying is mere speculation.
Great presentation, I was on board until around 15:01 - Teacher's we should be following should be teaching us how to properly prepare the foods we eat and that the life style choices we make (the types of thoughts we think) will determine our physical experience. I have no problem with her description of how gene's express themselves, It just seems intuitive to me, that our science - as good as it is, is still learning to crawl - and this is Huge.
Thank you. I agree. Also her point at 1:39 about criminal tendencies being more genetically based is a long standing debate that hasn’t been settled yet. NYT published an article a year before her talk saying as much. Many scientists and statisticians say that the sample size of even the largest study about the heritability of criminal tendencies is still too small to fully see the role of genes in this issue. Also the term crime is so vague.. does she mean tax evasion too or just street crime? From what I’ve read it’s more about anti social behavior being linked to certain hormones. That part of her talk seemed off to me
This talk does a great job of discussing the complexities of the relationship between our genes and the environment, particularly through epigenetics. While this discussion is important in and of itself, it also raises important ethical concerns about genetic enhancement and technological affordability, which has the potential to exacerbate already existing inequalities, disparities, and discrimination. One of the major concerns around genetic enhancement technologies is accessibility. If only the wealthy have access to these technologies, it will create a divide between those who have access to enhanced genetic traits and those who do not, leading to social and economic inequality. There is also a risk that these technologies could be used to perpetuate harmful biases, such as racism, sexism, and ableism.
Thank you and Courtney Griffin for the wonderful video! One question (and I must apologize in advance - I am in no way any expert in the area, just have read this and that): it is mentioned in the video at 7:20, that there are "not so many" epigenetic marks on the genome in the beginning, and that they begin to appear later in development, as the cells start to divide and receive signals from outside. However, what I have read elsewhere, says the oppozite: the zygote - as the ultimate "stem cell" - has most of its genome silenced and genes non-transcribed. And it is early in the blastocyst stage that some of these epigenetic marks (particularly methylgroups) are removed from DNA and acetylgroups added to histones, thus beginning to "lead" the cell towards a certain genetic/developmental trail. I have read, that in mice silent genomen becomes not-fully-silent around mid-1-cell stage, although more transcription begins at 2-cell stage. Not sure if it is different in humans. Will appreciate the explanation.
Great information. To change our bad habits we need to control our mind by performing regular exercises, pranayam, yoga and Meditation which can transform our body cells and thoughts
This is very exciting. Instead of destroying Cancer , good cells can be reinstalled or reprogrammed. This makes so much more sense to repair rather than destroy!
The thing is no identical twins have identical environments, and there is no way to know how the smallest of differences could or could not impact on personality. This is the inherent flaw in all twin studies, the assumption that twins raised together can be treated as though they have been raised in an identical environment. Her pie chart would have made more sense if it were presented as a venn diagram with epigenetics the area where nature and nurture overlap rather than being separate from nature and nurture.
shirley A-z well contrary to your belief it's been proven. Environmentally enduced epigenetics are part of the reason why identical twins can grow up to have very different luves. As twins get older there, epigenomes diverge affecting the way age and there susceptibility to disease. You missed the whole theory on how over time the environmental experience play a role here. This can be applied to not just twin. You as person can affect your future generations by lifestyle decisions you make now. For example smoking or any stress you react to now. Can come up in future generations decades from now. Depending on what you did, are you quick to panic? Then most likely your grand children will be also. In order to grasp what she explain you need to understand epigenetic changes. Watch the video titles What is epigenetic by Carlos Guerrero
Excellent! I believe its all true as i have asthma and i started a raw plant based diet and it is already helping my asthma. My plan is to stick with it and journal my findings. It has also cut down my meds 40 percent so far. I understand asthma is a chronic disease but i also believe there is a lot you can do to manage it and help yourself. Most of all i dont miss the sweets, processed foods or junk food❤
I played an Atistic child to better health. What ever it was... exposure to nature, contextual emotions... increased happiness & interest in life ... from play. Or epigenetics... it worked. where people said it could not be. nurture here did play a role, bringing the child to nature... and then... play saved the child.
I have always thought that my ideas were unrealistic when I wrote to different Professors telling them that Cancer and other debilitating diseases can be reversed. All we needed was to find the control switch. Now I feel I am in good company. In the Geneticist's term: "reminding the cells/tissues of what they should be doing". Nice. AD has hope. For moi, I now need to concentrate on how to transplant a brain (autotransplant).
your ideas are nonsense,not to mention totally oversimplistic , at the moment.We are decades away from such a solution.Why would you write to experts with such ignorant rubbish.
John Kuckian Doing research project on this and I am happy to see your face in the comments! What a coincidence indeed. About to go watch your epigenetics video again for reference :)
That was a great talk. I hope your twins (now 21) are well and all your whole family. Food for thought. Symptoms are the manifestation of faulty cellular processes and are often indicators of more sinister pathology. For example, constipation -- > colon cancer, migraine -- > stroke, irregular cycles -- > ovarian cancer. Faulty cellular processes, which this lovely presenter has said, are a function of the epigenome's 'on' or 'off' activity. What is important here is this: If a person, and not a drug, can control ( 'on' or 'off' on command) his or her symptoms, they have a window into the microcellular system without the expense associated with precision medicine. Do such systems exist? Yes. And more are on the way. If so, it disproves that much of the epigenetic instructions occur during embryonic development. How do we prove such a system exists? By demonstrating voluntary control individuals have to turn symptoms on and off . Whilst this was never an assumption in the video, using medications for microcellular control is one form of epigenetic medicine.
I am struck by the contradiction between "Your chromatin didn't have many epigenetic marks on it" at 7:10 and "They can also impact the health of your future children" at 17:50. Fascinating topic but I detect a little bit of "good" vs "bad" bias. The biggest question is which are and which are not inherited. It's gonna take a lot of careful research to prove "inheritability of acquired characteristics", discredited in an earlier age as Lamarcrkism. Phenotypes don't make value judgements. They are simply either more or less adaptive given certain environmental conditions. And genetic flexibility is a hallmark of genetic diversity.
Dr. Courtney Griffin is now an Assistant Member in the Cardiovascular Biology Research Program at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF) after receiving her B.A. from Harvard University and her Ph. D. from the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. Dr. Griffin studies certain enzymes that help turn genes on and off. These enzymes are specifically involved in relaxing DNA that is normally tightly coiled up in our cells.
what is the status of this medicine that helps restore cells rather than kills cancer cells? still being studied? approved? does anyone know? it makes so much more sense to restore cells rather than just killing off cancer cells
Would like to see experiments on the effects of Ayahuasca to determine if there are any co-relations between its deprogramming affects from environmental conditioning and epigenetics. It is great to see scientist embracing this research in an attempt to create a pill however nature may already have provided us with the solution through the direct use of plant medicine such as Ayahuasca.
Check out "Fellowship of the River",by Dr. Joe Tafur !! He also posted a video on You Tube about his work. Epigenetic effects are absolutely related to emotional and physical damage. The plant medicine reveals this is where emotional pain is stored, or translated in the body - within epigenetic changes to DNA.
COURTNEY GRIFFIN HAS RIGHTLY BRIEFED US ABOUT THE EFFECTS OF GOOD HEALTH AND HOW TO MAINTAIN THE RIGHT ENVIRONMENT BOTH INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL WITH REGARDS TO NOURISHMENT. SLEEP AND EXERCISE WITH GOOD FOOD AND SUPPLEMENTS IS ESSENTIAL NO NEED OF CHEMICAL DRUGS UNLESS IT IS CRITICAL.
the next level of epigenetic research is to acknowledge the gut microbiome and how the foods we eat and environments we live in, etc., are affecting every generation after us.
Why do we continue to find such incredible evidence of the impact of environment, healthy food without pesticides etc on our Epigenetic and yet we still want to create new drugs instead of creating a healthy society. All these scientists leave out or gloss over the most important question. How does the DNA know how to modify itself epigentically. How does it know to switch on some genes and off others based on whether a mother cares or not.
how was it linked the smoking in sweden and Uk to health risk factors in future generations? how were the other variables ruled out? like wreckless life for example due to other aspects
The interaction of our genes with our immediate environment (whatever the stage of development) shouldn't be that much of a shock, people. It's good that they can measure this process at a microscopic level, though. And an interesting subject , nonetheless!
Very fruitful presentation, and let's remember that healthy people produce healthy offsprings, as we continue to make food our medicine and medicine our food, because prevention is better than cure.
Awesome presentation.. Can you list some drugs with are approached to bring back the original nature of genes example that you gave for cancer silencing genes
The agouti mouse has a promoter that expresses at a rate depending on how methylated the DNA at that promoter is. They hooked that promoter up to a pigment gene so the coat color tells researchers how methylated the DNA of the mouse is. They used this to test if exposing pregnant mothers to various stimuli effect the offspring. They've found several chemicals that have clear cross gen effects. Kinda like lamarkian evolution? If you can find sources on it, it's well worth checking out.
this is very surpring to hear her say that criminal tendencies is related to genetics. I thought that was a feudal belief that was not scientific. I guess I'll have some interesting reading to see how they tried to isolate a genetic variable as a causal factor there.
I've seen several reviews using the agouti mouse and other models of cross generational epigenetics published in the last few years. Hopefully you're at a place where you can access journal articles. C. elegans has demonstrated 15 generation inheritance of changes caused by exposing eggs to certain compounds. If I recall, vasopresin. Many exposures have been shown after the 3rd generation (before that the germ cells in the developing foetus could have been exposed) so it is a thing.
Sadly it doesn't mention much about cross-generational epigenetics. It's a good source on the mechanisms and how they're used for mitotic stuff like development (genes that are never on in a cell are switched off with modifications to histones, as are transposons) and cell division (the centromere is specified by a variant histone). Paramutation and imprinting are the best known meiotic examples. Some programmed responses to environmental stimuli have been shown in the agoiuti mouse too.
Epigenetics. Your genes are not set in stone. You don't have to live with the fact that just because your parents or grandparents were unhealthy doesn't mean you have no other choice but to be unhealthy also. You can change particular genes in your body just by eating the right foods and getting rid of the toxic bad habits, of any kind, and reprogramming your cells to make your body much healthier and stronger. By also applying an exercise routine that will decrease stress is also key to fixing your genes. Epigenetics is a new science that is telling us that we can take control of our bodies destiny and make it so healthy that our longevity will stamp out diseases and we can live a happier, healthier, more rewarding long life. If you have never heard about epigenetics, you really should get your knowledge on about these wonderfully new ground breaking science. The facts are clear and we truly do have control over how our lives are lived.
exactly!
Sherrie Vitello b
Scooby Scooby Dooby Doo please
Wrong. You cant change your genes. You can, just sometimes change the expression of your genes! Often Epigenetic factors like DNA-Methylations are even not reversible
can certain athletic properties or abilities be manipulated by epigenetics i.e. continuous practice of certain ability, these things kinda demotivate me
actually since 2012 CRISPR - CAT9 we can
This is the most extraordinary discovery since DNA itself (c.1953). It explains so much that we did not realize about human functioning and dysfunction. This lady is a wonderful teacher.
This is AMAZING!! GREAT INFORMATION!
what blew my mind was 50 trillion cells in a human body, each cell having a strand of 6 feet of DNA in each cell, and each of DNA are fit into this 400000 times small than a cell in a nucleus cell! WOW!! that is what blew my mind! I'm happy to learn this!
such a great way to present fairly complex concepts, loved the way she did the pauses between sentences, words, and also how the powerpoint was short and spot on on the stuff that is greatly helped by images.
Not to say about the subject, GREAT talk
Totally agree with you
Thank you, I now understand epigenetics better than reading my book for my class . Very well explained.
She's speaks so gracefully...
A reason for hope. Generational curses don't always have to be passed on to the third and fourth generation.
Hope is right! The wonderful thing is that we can "repent" (change our ways) to break the curses passed on. While the sins of the father may be passed to the next generation, the next generation can change their ways and break that curse. How wonderful!
Excellent speaker who made the concepts quite accessible. I’m very interested to learn more about this emerging field while also inspired to go back and learn the fundamentals of DNA, genetics and organic chemistry to better understand the topic.
Absolutely beautifully presented and explained. I actually think I understood most of what Courtney said. Beautifully composed sentences, very pleasant voice. No extraneous words. I loved it! 💐🌿🌹🌿💐
I liked this. My favorite for accessibility on the same subject is Dr Bruce Lipton's book, The Biology of Belief. I believe this whole field will explode our possibilities and the way we think about our environment, physical, emotional, mental. Epigenetics goes a long way towards explaining how Energy Psychology and EFT work so well, documented in the 60+ peer-reviewed published studies. Challenging our convictions is what science is supposed to be all about, and I'm delighted with Courtney Griffins' presentation that paves the way for a better understanding of who we are and how we're impacted, and what we can do with that information.
I love this topic! We are not doomed by our genetic heritage. They provide the perfect conditions for us to grow and live our greatest potential. Additional to the creation of medicines that can support gene heritage are a number of psychotherapeutic methods that can heal genetic expressions inherited from our ancestors.
How many still rely on the necessary foods of mortals
This is a very helpful and clarifying TED talk about epigenetics. I really admire the way you teaches us.Thank you!
Fascinating talk! The part on how our parents/grandparents habits shaped our genes reminded me of Exodus 20:5: "Bringing punishment for the error of fathers upon sons, upon the third generation and upon the fourth generation."
Holger Lenz I was thinking the same thing. Have they checked how many generations of impact adjustments make or even what adjustments they suggest and which are all still unproven have what outcome.
"It turns out..." Ted speakers favourite phrase.
yes it is - but it acknowleges that science is an ever developing subject, so what was understood/misunderstood in one way, has morphed into something else as work has been done.
For me, it is welcome, highlighting the increasing , better, undertanding of the problem
I think it was a lack of kale.
What a beautiful person. Great TED talk!!!!
Beautiful teaching, Courtney, broke down the concept of Epigenetics. We can change our Longterm health by treating our epigenome kindly through healthy lifestyle decisions.
Simply brilliant, informative, clear and concise.
Best 19 minutes i have spent on my life,
hopefully modern medicine can produce such medications based on these theories plus the importance of life style and diet among people so raising awareness is also playing part to fight or prevention of cancer 🙏🙏🙏
this is probably the most informative ted talk for me that i've ever come across. greatly told
I PERSONALLY AM VERY GREATEFULL TO YOU FOR THIS VIDEO IN WHICH YOU HAVE GIVEN SPECIFIC IMPORTANCE FOR EPIGENOME WHICH BUSTED THE OLD MYTH THAT GENES ARE STATIC MACHINES WHICH ARE NOT INFLUENCED BY EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
INCLUDING FOOD AND MENTAL STRESS LEVEL OF ANY SPECIES.👍
This is one of the most amazing lectures of Epigenetics. Ummm, now I can understand that is now everything is lost. Means if our parents had bad habits, as not eating healthy and another things against our bodies, we can change and be healthy...
I really like the content and the way it is delivered. You unpacked such complex subject in an easily understood way. Thank you. I watched this video so many times and each time, l have gone back and fro, taking out more and getting to know myself more. Super video, massive content, and a beautiful scientist. Thank you, ma'am.
This was so powerful! It reminds me of how much power we have to change.
One of my favorite talks to date.
17:16 "There are things that we can do now to positively influence our epigenome. It's not too late to start eating healthier foods, foods that we already know are good for us, like leafy vegetables and whole grains. Avoiding cigarettes, cocaine and stress."
take everything, but not cocaine! xD
This is great information that people need to know regarding the healthy birth of children. We can influence the outcome of a birth by changing our habits before conceiving.Great evidence for a plant based lifestyle.
I am not a geneticist but Dr Courtney makes a great case that demonstrate the effects of lifestyle and personal choices and the outcome of how well we live. It makes sense that our choices will affect our genetic destiny either + or -. There have been lots of examples of genetically identical twins who have made different life style choices and the affects on how they age. This also has been recorded with gene chip analysis which is state of the art technology in measuring objectively how our genes our affected by lifestyle choices. So I don't think what she is saying is mere speculation.
Hands down, best tedx video ever !
I have listened to this presentation, and each time l learn more. Thank you so much. I am better informed.
Very interesting indeed. I was actually looking for a new hobby so now I might take up DIY genetic manipulation on myself!
Dfh
Dfh
I've been slightly obsessed with it, over the last month or so
@@atlas3732 what have u learned ?
I first studied genetics in 1955 so things have moved on a great deal since then!!!
Great presentation, I was on board until around 15:01 - Teacher's we should be following should be teaching us how to properly prepare the foods we eat and that the life style choices we make (the types of thoughts we think) will determine our physical experience. I have no problem with her description of how gene's express themselves, It just seems intuitive to me, that our science - as good as it is, is still learning to crawl - and this is Huge.
Thank you. I agree. Also her point at 1:39 about criminal tendencies being more genetically based is a long standing debate that hasn’t been settled yet. NYT published an article a year before her talk saying as much. Many scientists and statisticians say that the sample size of even the largest study about the heritability of criminal tendencies is still too small to fully see the role of genes in this issue. Also the term crime is so vague.. does she mean tax evasion too or just street crime? From what I’ve read it’s more about anti social behavior being linked to certain hormones. That part of her talk seemed off to me
@@sameeahmuhammad8439 totally agree, im glad someone else noticed
An excellent summary with life changing advice! Thank you.
This talk does a great job of discussing the complexities of the relationship between our genes and the environment, particularly through epigenetics. While this discussion is important in and of itself, it also raises important ethical concerns about genetic enhancement and technological affordability, which has the potential to exacerbate already existing inequalities, disparities, and discrimination. One of the major concerns around genetic enhancement technologies is accessibility. If only the wealthy have access to these technologies, it will create a divide between those who have access to enhanced genetic traits and those who do not, leading to social and economic inequality. There is also a risk that these technologies could be used to perpetuate harmful biases, such as racism, sexism, and ableism.
Thank you and Courtney Griffin for the wonderful video!
One question (and I must apologize in advance - I am in no way any expert in the area, just have read this and that):
it is mentioned in the video at 7:20, that there are "not so many" epigenetic marks on the genome in the beginning, and that they begin to appear later in development, as the cells start to divide and receive signals from outside.
However, what I have read elsewhere, says the oppozite: the zygote - as the ultimate "stem cell" - has most of its genome silenced and genes non-transcribed. And it is early in the blastocyst stage that some of these epigenetic marks (particularly methylgroups) are removed from DNA and acetylgroups added to histones, thus beginning to "lead" the cell towards a certain genetic/developmental trail.
I have read, that in mice silent genomen becomes not-fully-silent around mid-1-cell stage, although more transcription begins at 2-cell stage. Not sure if it is different in humans.
Will appreciate the explanation.
Incredible TED talk! You've really done a great job explaining this clearly
A remarkable good presentation about the backround of epigenetics! Great thanks for sharing.
love the fact she said ,"unaffected". Instead of "normal"
Great information. To change our bad habits we need to control our mind by performing regular exercises, pranayam, yoga and Meditation which can transform our body cells and thoughts
???
I have to say that talk was pretty EPIC!
Great talk! Thank u for posting and for Dr. Griffin, for making it such an easy entry into understanding a little about this pretty amazing topic.
This is very exciting. Instead of destroying Cancer , good cells can be reinstalled or reprogrammed.
This makes so much more sense to repair rather than destroy!
Explained such complex but sweet subject in a simple and interesting way. Thank you.
I was surprised to hear she promoted grain without mentioning the potential epigenenetic effects of synthetic folic acid on our methylation.
thank you for putting this in such a way that us "regular" people could easily follow. very much appreciated!
The thing is no identical twins have identical environments, and there is no way to know how the smallest of differences could or could not impact on personality. This is the inherent flaw in all twin studies, the assumption that twins raised together can be treated as though they have been raised in an identical environment. Her pie chart would have made more sense if it were presented as a venn diagram with epigenetics the area where nature and nurture overlap rather than being separate from nature and nurture.
shirley A-z well contrary to your belief it's been proven. Environmentally enduced epigenetics are part of the reason why identical twins can grow up to have very different luves. As twins get older there, epigenomes diverge affecting the way age and there susceptibility to disease. You missed the whole theory on how over time the environmental experience play a role here. This can be applied to not just twin. You as person can affect your future generations by lifestyle decisions you make now. For example smoking or any stress you react to now. Can come up in future generations decades from now. Depending on what you did, are you quick to panic? Then most likely your grand children will be also. In order to grasp what she explain you need to understand epigenetic changes.
Watch the video titles
What is epigenetic by Carlos Guerrero
Also, I know identical twins where one is right-handed and the other is left-handed
That's why the tests are done with twins who have been separated since birth.
Awesome presentation. touched on some very important aspects. Learnt a lot. Thank you!
Wow, how amazing is Intelligent Design! This I don't think just happened haphazardly. Your study of epigenetics convinces me even more. Thanks.
Excellent! I believe its all true as i have asthma and i started a raw plant based diet and it is already helping my asthma. My plan is to stick with it and journal my findings. It has also cut down my meds 40 percent so far. I
understand asthma is a chronic disease but i also believe there is a lot you can do to manage it and help yourself. Most of all i dont miss the sweets, processed foods or junk food❤
It’s worth sharing. I can’t imagine what I had heard from this video
Just 6 minutes in and she explained more than my college professor ever did in a 50 min class... dang
A wonderful talk. So much good information in a short time. I found that prayer can impact Epigenetics as well.
You are on the next level mate! And it is so true.
What a wonderful ted talk. Thank you Courtney!
I played an Atistic child to better health. What ever it was... exposure to nature, contextual emotions... increased happiness & interest in life ... from play. Or epigenetics... it worked. where people said it could not be.
nurture here did play a role, bringing the child to nature... and then...
play saved the child.
I have always thought that my ideas were unrealistic when I wrote to different Professors telling them that Cancer and other debilitating diseases can be reversed. All we needed was to find the control switch. Now I feel I am in good company. In the Geneticist's term: "reminding the cells/tissues of what they should be doing".
Nice. AD has hope.
For moi, I now need to concentrate on how to transplant a brain (autotransplant).
your ideas are nonsense,not to mention totally oversimplistic , at the moment.We are decades away from such a solution.Why would you write to experts with such ignorant rubbish.
Thank you for posting this, individual! I have an interest in epigenetics, and having a link to further my knowledge in it is greatly appreciated! =)
Human life is a dangerous undertaking. We need so many protections against harmful elements common in this world.
Great speech, Mrs. Griffin. I loved it and I learnt so much. Thank you!
I've just linked this to my most recent video about Epigenetics :-) x
John Kuckian I came here because of your video 😂
John Kuckian Doing research project on this and I am happy to see your face in the comments! What a coincidence indeed. About to go watch your epigenetics video again for reference :)
♥ I love it! ♥
Lol "Kuckian"
Such a brilliant talk! Thanks.
Exquisitely explained! Thank you for this!
That was a great talk. I hope your twins (now 21) are well and all your whole family.
Food for thought.
Symptoms are the manifestation of faulty cellular processes and are often indicators of more sinister pathology. For example, constipation -- > colon cancer, migraine -- > stroke, irregular cycles -- > ovarian cancer.
Faulty cellular processes, which this lovely presenter has said, are a function of the epigenome's 'on' or 'off' activity.
What is important here is this: If a person, and not a drug, can control ( 'on' or 'off' on command) his or her symptoms, they have a window into the microcellular system without the expense associated with precision medicine.
Do such systems exist? Yes. And more are on the way.
If so, it disproves that much of the epigenetic instructions occur during embryonic development.
How do we prove such a system exists?
By demonstrating voluntary control individuals have to turn symptoms on and off .
Whilst this was never an assumption in the video, using medications for microcellular control is one form of epigenetic medicine.
crazy how much farther this field has come since 2012
Very informative, well articulated,.... and with a touch of humor, too. Kudos!
I have already watched this recently, however, now it has been cited in a course I am taking.
Anyone here from the biological psychology course?
i also came to watch this from the course
I am struck by the contradiction between "Your chromatin didn't have many epigenetic marks on it" at 7:10 and "They can also impact the health of your future children" at 17:50. Fascinating topic but I detect a little bit of "good" vs "bad" bias. The biggest question is which are and which are not inherited. It's gonna take a lot of careful research to prove "inheritability of acquired characteristics", discredited in an earlier age as Lamarcrkism.
Phenotypes don't make value judgements. They are simply either more or less adaptive given certain environmental conditions. And genetic flexibility is a hallmark of genetic diversity.
I like how she specifies that nature has an affect on depression in specifically men, knowing that no science can describe why women could be upset.
Dr. Courtney Griffin is now an Assistant Member in the Cardiovascular Biology Research Program at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (OMRF) after receiving her B.A. from Harvard University and her Ph. D. from the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. Dr. Griffin studies certain enzymes that help turn genes on and off. These enzymes are specifically involved in relaxing DNA that is normally tightly coiled up in our cells.
Most helpful educational video on epigenetic. Thanks. Regards.
Extremely well explained!
Courtney Griffins excellent video
Thank you so much for this! This truly is profound for me!
This is great mental exercise; like many TED Talks
vídeo maravilhoso!! a explicação impecável ❤
Great talk and now I have another passion to study epigenetics! Thank you 😊💓
Interesting,summarized it beautifully.
what is the status of this medicine that helps restore cells rather than kills cancer cells? still being studied? approved?
does anyone know? it makes so much more sense to restore cells rather than just killing off cancer cells
Would like to see experiments on the effects of Ayahuasca to determine if there are any co-relations between its deprogramming affects from environmental conditioning and epigenetics. It is great to see scientist embracing this research in an attempt to create a pill however nature may already have provided us with the solution through the direct use of plant medicine such as Ayahuasca.
most medicine is derived from plant chemistry so its entirely possible
Check out "Fellowship of the River",by Dr. Joe Tafur !! He also posted a video on You Tube about his work. Epigenetic effects are absolutely related to emotional and physical damage. The plant medicine reveals this is where emotional pain is stored, or translated in the body - within epigenetic changes to DNA.
Definitely read Dr Joe Tafur's Fellowship of the River.
COURTNEY GRIFFIN HAS RIGHTLY BRIEFED US ABOUT THE EFFECTS OF GOOD HEALTH AND HOW TO MAINTAIN THE RIGHT ENVIRONMENT BOTH INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL WITH REGARDS TO NOURISHMENT. SLEEP AND EXERCISE WITH GOOD FOOD AND SUPPLEMENTS IS ESSENTIAL NO NEED OF CHEMICAL DRUGS UNLESS IT IS CRITICAL.
Reminding about being good cells !!!!
Love it!!!!
Helpful and well-explained presentation! Thank you :D
the next level of epigenetic research is to acknowledge the gut microbiome and how the foods we eat and environments we live in, etc., are affecting every generation after us.
I also had identical twins one passed and this is accurate!!
you are unique. thanks for the presentation
Why do we continue to find such incredible evidence of the impact of environment, healthy food without pesticides etc on our Epigenetic and yet we still want to create new drugs instead of creating a healthy society.
All these scientists leave out or gloss over the most important question. How does the DNA know how to modify itself epigentically. How does it know to switch on some genes and off others based on whether a mother cares or not.
Fantastic job
how was it linked the smoking in sweden and Uk to health risk factors in future generations? how were the other variables ruled out? like wreckless life for example due to other aspects
The interaction of our genes with our immediate environment (whatever the stage of development) shouldn't be that much of a shock, people. It's good that they can measure this process at a microscopic level, though. And an interesting subject , nonetheless!
perfect presentation.thanks
Very fruitful presentation, and let's remember that healthy people produce healthy offsprings, as we continue to make food our medicine and medicine our food, because prevention is better than cure.
Awesome presentation..
Can you list some drugs with are approached to bring back the original nature of genes example that you gave for cancer silencing genes
You are so lucky, ma'am. to prove what you learn in real life situation
Such a great talk. Thanks!
The agouti mouse has a promoter that expresses at a rate depending on how methylated the DNA at that promoter is. They hooked that promoter up to a pigment gene so the coat color tells researchers how methylated the DNA of the mouse is. They used this to test if exposing pregnant mothers to various stimuli effect the offspring. They've found several chemicals that have clear cross gen effects. Kinda like lamarkian evolution? If you can find sources on it, it's well worth checking out.
Muito bom!! Grata por compartilhar seu conhecimento
this is very surpring to hear her say that criminal tendencies is related to genetics. I thought that was a feudal belief that was not scientific. I guess I'll have some interesting reading to see how they tried to isolate a genetic variable as a causal factor there.
Go look in any prison . What racial tendency do you see? No chi squared test needed here. Yeah, I know, they were all framed by corrupt cops.
I've seen several reviews using the agouti mouse and other models of cross generational epigenetics published in the last few years. Hopefully you're at a place where you can access journal articles. C. elegans has demonstrated 15 generation inheritance of changes caused by exposing eggs to certain compounds. If I recall, vasopresin. Many exposures have been shown after the 3rd generation (before that the germ cells in the developing foetus could have been exposed) so it is a thing.
Very informative and interesting talk. Thank you.
nice and new field , excellent presentation
Sadly it doesn't mention much about cross-generational epigenetics. It's a good source on the mechanisms and how they're used for mitotic stuff like development (genes that are never on in a cell are switched off with modifications to histones, as are transposons) and cell division (the centromere is specified by a variant histone). Paramutation and imprinting are the best known meiotic examples. Some programmed responses to environmental stimuli have been shown in the agoiuti mouse too.