A new kind cyborg is evolving

A new kind cyborg is evolving

EDITORIAL LOCATIONS UK Lacon House, 84 Theobald’s Road, London WC1X 8NS Tel +44 (0) 20 7611 1200  Fax +44 (0) 20 7611 1250 Australia Tower 2, 475 Vic...

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Towards a saner future Epigenetics will help shape the mental health of coming generations THROUGHOUT human history, Most tellingly, they bore the same people have realised that many chemical marks on their DNA as illnesses are “in the blood”. their maltreated forebears. More recently, we have The mouse study is the first established that there is a genetic evidence that mental health contribution to psychiatric problems can be “passed down” in diseases too. The extent to which this way. Evidence is growing, too, the environment acts with our that exposure to environmental genes to cause illness is still under cues, from poor maternal diet study, however. during pregnancy to taking An even bigger question is powerful recreational drugs such whether the environment can as cocaine, can and do alter the cause inheritable “epigenetic” chemical markings on key genes changes. These wouldn’t alter the that are linked with mental sequence of your DNA one jot but disorders such as bipolar disorder, instead leave chemical marks on genes that dictate how active they “Environmental cues may alter chemical markings are, not just in you but in your on key genes linked with children and grandchildren. mental disorders” We know plants and fungi can inherit epigenetic changes and in this issue (see page 8), we report schizophrenia and addiction. the best evidence yet that they are Many questions remain. heritable in mammals too. For example, no one knows If male mice suffered from how many generations the depression and social withdrawal “molecular memory” of because of maltreatment in the epigenetic marks can persist for. first weeks of life, so too did their Even so, the implications of this pups and grand-pups even if they new understanding are huge. were well looked after from birth. The more we know about how

genetic effects get passed down this way, the better we can help people make lifestyle choices with the potential to protect their children and even their grandchildren. Of course, the science has a long way to go and converting basic knowledge into public health messages isn’t easy. The success of the campaign to reduce spina bifida with folic acid supplements shows that people will act on advice when lifestyle choices are linked to specific diseases. Imagine a similar dietary intervention that could reduce the risk of your offspring, and their children, suffering from depression. Also, unlike genes themselves, which can only be altered through complex – and sometimes risky – gene therapy, epigenetic marks are reversible, and so could be a target for new, safer treatments. Revealing how these marks work and what they do will open remarkable new chapters in genetics and health policy. n

Walk like a lamprey, dance like a moth CYBORGS have walked among us for many years: humans fused with devices such as pacemakers, prosthetics and cochlear and retinal implants. Now the opposite approach is being embodied in a new kind of cyborg: a robot with an animal’s nervous system (page 22). Some bots run on grey matter culled from a living creature. Others run

software based on “brainjacking”, for example, the pair of robot legs that learned to walk using a lamprey’s nerve signals. This presents an unorthodox future for the cyborg. If lamprey software can help people with spinal injuries, it will be in the shape of animal brain circuitry realised on a chip wired into a human being – a kind of cyborg

sandwich. Other cyborgs will be altogether inorganic but granted animalistic or even human thought patterns. Compared with the traditional image of a cyborg chimaera, such software hybrids may be more adaptable, perhaps even able to merge several kinds of minds. Unsettling perhaps, but we shouldn’t be surprised by the evolution of the cyborgs. n

ULTIMATE INTELLIGENCE TEST Devised by Adrian Owen of the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit in Cambridge, UK, and Roger Highfield, editor of New Scientist magazine, this project has lived up to its name. Since we launched the experiment last week with the Discovery Channel, more than 22,000 people have taken part. To participate in what is now the biggest experiment of its kind, go to bit.ly/9M6NaP

6 November 2010 | NewScientist | 5