Tag Archives: twins

It depends on which tissues you’re talking about. And epigenetic modification — or at least methylation — in newborns is dictated by genetic, environmental, and tissue-specific factors, according to research published this month by Lavinia Gordon and colleagues at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute and six other universities, research centers, and hospitals. First the tissue-based factor. Using statistical clustering, the mostly Australian multi-institutional group found that the methylation profiles of identical twins segregated into the same categories — the same general patterns of DNA modification — more often or less often, depending on the DNA’s tissue of origin. in  placental tissue, 71 percent of twin pairs’ methylation patterns “clustered” together statistically. In cord blood mononuclear cells (CBMC), identical twins shared … Continue reading

Posted in Applications, DNA Methylation, Genomewide Methylation Profiling | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Researchers are keen to identify environmental causes of autism, using epigenetics. Twin studies in particular offer unique opportunities for clever researchers. The eye opening results of the California Autism Twins Study (CATS) study, were that autism had a ~60% genetics basis and a ~40% environmental basis. This news has facilitated the idea that there is an epigenetic molecular trail to follow, to identify environmental causes of autism. One of those environmental factors correlating to autism risk is low birth weight. Yes, yes, well that seems to makes sense when you think of it in the context of premature births. But here again, twin studies show us further complexity. (As a side bar check out this blog post from Genomes Unzipped,  … Continue reading

Posted in Autism, DNA Extraction / Purification, DNA Methylation, Developmental Biology, Immunohistochemistry, In Utero, Neuroscience, Twin studies | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

As is the case with their fingerprints, imprinted genes are NOT identical in identical twins. In fact, methylation levels vary notably, yet randomly, in localized imprinted regulatory regions, between MZ twins. Even cooler, a new epigenetics clue came out of demonstrating this imprinting variability. This month in PloS one, the collaborators from the Garvin Institute, the University of Nijmegen Medical Centre, the Queensland Institute of Medical Research and St. Vincent’s Clinical School, University of NSW, produced the paper Impact of the Genome on the Epigenome Is Manifested in DNA Methylation Patterns of Imprinted Regions in Monozygotic and Dizygotic Twins. by Marcel W. Coolen et al. Blood samples from 128 pairs of identical, and 128 pairs of fraternal teen aged twins, … Continue reading

Posted in Autism, Bioinformatics, DNA Methylation, Developmental Biology, Divergent Transcription, Gene Regulation, Gene Silencing, Genomewide Methylation Profiling, In Utero, Mass Spec, Methylation Specific PCR, Next Gen Sequencing, Sodium Bisulfite Sequencing, Transcriptome microarray | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment