ABSTRACT
Phenotype variability, phenotypic plasticity, and the inheritance of phenotypic traits constitute the fundamental ground of processes such as individuation, individual and species adaptation and ultimately speciation. Even though traditional evolutionary thinking relies on genetic mutations as the main source of intra- and interspecies phenotypic variability, recent studies suggest that the epigenetic modulation of gene transcription and translation, epigenetic memory, and epigenetic inheritance are by far the most frequent reliable sources of transgenerational variability among viable individuals within and across organismal species. Therefore, individuation and speciation should be considered as nonmutational epigenetic phenomena.
ABSTRACT
It has been long thought that the brain reorganizes itself in response to environmental needs. Sensory experiences coded in action potentials are the mean by which information on the surroundings is introduced into neuronal networks. The information approaching the brain in the form of electrochemical codes must then be translated in biochemical, epigenetic and genetic ones. Only until recently we have begun understanding the underpinning of such informational transformations and how this process is expressed as neuronal plastic responses. Central for our comprehension of this matter is the finding that signals transduction cascades can modify gene expression by remodeling the chromatin through epigenetic mechanisms. Hence, chromatin remodeling seems to be the process by which experiences are imprinted.