Noted geneticist Snoop Dogg once said--and I’m paraphrasing  here--that no matter where one goes in life, one’s surroundings during  one's formative years stay with one for life. No matter where you go,  you can’t change where you’re from (I think Prof. Dogg was actually  calling back to an old Comrads lyric from the song Homeboyz--I’m  sure you all will correct me in the comments). Findings published today  in the International Journal of Epidemiology suggest that he may have been correct--socio-economic  status and living standards early in life may actually cause changes to  your DNA that you carry with you for life, regardless of how your  living conditions change along the way.
In some ways, we already knew that. Some adult diseases--type 2  diabetes, coronary heart disease, etc.--have been linked to  socio-economic disadvantages in early life. But we don’t really know why  or how. Researchers in Canada and the UK may have just found the key.
 Their sample size is admittedly small, but what they found was  significant. In 40 research patients in the UK that are participating in  an ongoing study that has documented many aspects of their lives,  researchers looked at differences in gene methylation. Methylation is an  epigenetic modification to one’s DNA that changes a gene’s activity,  generally reducing that activity within the genome. Various factors can  influence methylation, including environmental conditions.
In their sample, the researchers looked at DNA taken from the  subjects at age 45. They chose subjects that had come from either very  high or very low standards of living, and they looked at differences in  DNA methylation across some 20,000 genes. They found that 1,252  methylation differences were associated with socio-economic  circumstances in early life while just 545 were associated with  socio-economic circumstances in adulthood, suggesting that where you  come from really does make an impact on the very fiber of your  biological being.
Moreover, the methylation patterns were clustered together in large  swaths of DNA, suggesting an epigenetic pattern linked to humans’ early  environments. That’s actually good news. If we know some diseases are  linked to a person’t early upbringing, and we can see where there are  changes happening in the DNA during early life, then we can narrow the  window on where in the genome things like coronary heart disease and  diabetes take root. Future research could peg where certain methylation  differences are associated with specific diseases, then target those  areas with drugs or other treatments.
by "environment clean generations" 

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