It sounds like science fiction: simply swallowing a pill,
or eating a specific food supplement, could permanently
change your behaviour for the better, or reverse diseases
such as schizophrenia, Huntington's or cancer.
Yet such treatments are looking increasingly plausible.
In the latest development, normal rats have been made
to behave differently just by injecting them with a specific
amino acid. The change to their behaviour was permanent.
The amino acid altered the way the rat's genes were expressed,
raising the idea that drugs or dietary supplements might
permanently halt the genetic effects that predispose people
to mental or physical illness.
It is not yet clear whether such interventions could
work in humans. But there is good reason to believe they
could, as evidence mounts that a range of simple nutrients
might have such effects.
Two years ago, researchers led by Randy Jirtle of Duke
University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, showed
that the activity of a mouse's genes can be influenced
by food supplements eaten by its mother just prior to,
or during, very early pregnancy (New Scientist,
9 August 2003, p 14). Then last year, Moshe Szyf, Michael
Meaney and colleagues at McGill University in Montreal,
Canada, showed that mothers could influence the way a
rat's genes are expressed after it has been born. If a
rat is not licked, groomed and nursed enough by its mother,
chemical tags known as methyl groups are added to the
DNA of a particular gene.
The affected gene codes for the glucocorticoid receptor
gene, expressed in the hippocampus of the brain. The gene
helps mediate the animal's response to stress, and in
poorly raised rats, the methylation damped down the gene's
activity. Such pups produced higher levels of stress hormones
and were less confident exploring new environments. The
effect lasted for life (Nature Neuroscience, vol
7, p 847).
Now the team has shown that a food supplement can have
the same effect on well-reared rats at 90 days old - well
into adulthood. The researchers injected L-methionine,
a common amino acid and food supplement, into the brains
of well-reared rats. The amino acid methylated the glucocorticoid
gene, and the animals' behaviour changed. "They were almost
exactly like the poorly raised group," says Szyf, who
announced his findings at a small meeting on environmental
epigenomics earlier this month in Durham, North Carolina.
This opens
up new ways of thinking about treating and preventing
diseases caused by how our DNA is expressed
Though the experiment impaired well-adjusted animals,
the opposite should be possible, and Szyf has already
shown that a chemical called TSA that is designed to strip
away methyl groups can turn a badly raised rat into a
more normal one.
No one is envisaging injecting supplements into people's
brains, but Szyf says his study shows how important subtle
nutrients and supplements can be. "Food has a dramatic
effect," he says. "But it can go both ways," he cautions.
Methionine, for instance, the supplement he used to make
healthy rats stressed, is widely available in capsule
form online or in health-food stores - and the molecules
are small enough to get into the brain via the bloodstream.
Rob Waterland from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston,
Texas, who attended the meeting, says Szyf's ideas are
creating a buzz, as they suggest that methylation can
influence our DNA well into adulthood. A huge number of
diseases are caused by changes to how our DNA is expressed,
and this opens up new ways of thinking about how to prevent
and treat them, he says.
But Waterland points out there is still much work to
be done. Substances like methionine and TSA are, he says,
a "sledgehammer approach", in that they are likely to
demethylate lots of genes, and we don't even know which
they will affect. But he speculates that techniques such
as "RNA-directed DNA methylation", so far tested only
in plants but theoretically possible in mammals, may allow
us to target such methylation much more precisely.
From issue 2526
of New Scientist magazine, 17 November 2005.
Reference
Source 134
November
17, 2005