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On Sun, 05 May 2024 05:36:06 GMT, Jan PanteltjeOnly an idiot could think that. The DNA that ends up in eggs and sperm gets there very early, and isn't in a position to benefit from the life experience of the potential parent.
<pNaonStpealmtje@yahoo.com> wrote:
Dynamic DNA structures and the formation of memoryMore likely RNA or some other protein.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240501125755.htm
Summary:
An international collaborative research team has discovered that G-quadraplex DNA
(G4-DNA) accumulates in neurons and dynamically controls the activation and
repression of genes underlying long-term memory formation.
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I have always though that memory could be stored as DNA sequenxes...
The oft-mocked Lamarckian concept, of genetic learning (not just
natural selection) is probably real, and some reverse transcription
does happen, namely that DNA is edited within the life of one
organism.
But remembering where you left your glasses is probablyChromosome editing by methylation (which we do know about) and the vaguely specified "structural changes" that Jan Panteltje's waffle invokes isn't going to edit the chromosomes you pass on to the next generation.
handled at a lower level than editing your chromosones.
We do have short-term memory too. We don't want to junk up ourWhat we want doesn't come into evolution. It's a process of putting changes into a our genome at random, and selecting out the changes that don't work. The only "want" involved is the desire to stay alive and have off-spring.
chromosomes remembering every grocery list.
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