Affiliation:
1. Université Laval Québec Canada
2. Douglas Mental Health University Institute Montreal Quebec Canada
3. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Institut des Neurosciences Cellulaires et Intégratives (UPR3212) 8 allée du général Rouvillois Strasbourg France
Abstract
AbstractJust over 20 years ago, molecular biologists Leonie Ringrose and Renato Paro published an article with a provocative title, “Remembering Silence”, in BioEssays. The article focused on how epigenetic elements could return to their silent state, operationally defined as their epigenetic status before their modulation by experimental or environmental factors. Though Ringrose and Paro's article was on fruit flies and factors affecting embryological growth, the article asked a question of considerable importance to rapidly expanding research in neuroepigenetics on the correlation between trauma and neuropsychiatric risk: If you experience a traumatic event and, as a result, acquire an epigenetic trait that is considered pathological, can you free yourself of that trait? Ultimately, we are interested in how a return to silence is envisioned in neuroepigenetics research, how interventions purported to bring about that silence might function, and what this might mean for people who live in the aftermath of trauma.
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
1 articles.
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