Announcing a new research initiative and small project : Epigenetics and Naturalised Information

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For a long time the central dogma of molecular biology - that information cannot pass from the phenotype to the genotype - held rigid influence over the molecular biosciences. While the central dogma still has a place, the challenge to its scope from the field of epigenetics has now taken hold in the biosciences worldwide.

It's well understood that methylation effects in the cytoplasm during certain stages of development can be transmitted (Bird, A. (2002). DNA methylation patterns and epigenetic memory. Genes & Development16(1), 6–21. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.947102). 

Another well known example of epigenetic information transmission is prions, or proteinaceous infectious particles. These are the kind of non-viral and non-bacterial pathogens that cause such diseases as Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease/syndrome. Because the disease agents are fragments of protein, and not genetic information like that which viruses advantage, the transmission of information in the disease is from  Protein fragments to cellular DNA (Chakravarty, A. K., & Jarosz, D. F. (2018). More than Just a Phase: Prions at the Crossroads of Epigenetic Inheritance and Evolutionary Change. Journal of Molecular Biology430(23), 4607–4618. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2018.07.017.)
This IIMx research project, initiated and being undertaken by research director Dr Bruce Long, is aimed at identifying the best conception(s) of causation and naturalised information for application to epigenetic information transmission.

If you would like to participate by way of funding (and have IP and publishing/copyright rights at certain funding levels) please contact research.director@iimx.info or visit our Patreon funding page:


VISIT THIS PROJECT AT IIMx.info

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