To prevent illness, we need to focus on our lifestyles – not just our genes | 
Deepak Chopra & Rudolphe E Tanzi 
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/04/prevent-illness-lifestyle-genes
 
 
 
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/04/prevent-illness-lifestyle-genes
 
 
 To prevent illness, we need to focus on our lifestyles –... 
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/04/prevent-illness-lifestyle-genes
 Some treatments hold much promise, but they pale in the face of the 
realization that everyday li...
 
 
 
 
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/04/prevent-illness-lifestyle-genes
 
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Some treatments hold much promise, but they pale in the face of the realization 
that everyday life choices are altering gene activity all the time
Individual within meditation class

[Breathe in good health; breathe out disease. Sort of. Photograph: Dougal 
Waters/Getty Images]

Deepak Chopra and Rudolphe E Tanzi

Tuesday 4 August 2015 04.30 EDT
Last modified on Tuesday 4 August 2015 06.16 EDT

Much of the current research on treating disease and staying healthy has 
focused on our genetic makeup – from the Human Genome project, completed in 
2003, to the newer field of epigenetics, which puts our 23,000 genes into the 
context of the chemical reactions that influence their activities. Though these 
are crucial areas of study, scientists are continually forced to confront how 
much human health is not dependent on our genetics.

The original optimism about the potential of genetics has been dampened by the 
immense challenges of translating gene findings into drug discovery as well as 
a gross underestimation of the role of lifestyle on disease risk. Geneticists 
did not –and many still do not – fully appreciate the dynamic manner in which 
our genes interact with each other and our lifestyles, down to the level of our 
cells, eavesdropping on activities everywhere in the body and responding, often 
instantaneously, to a person’s experiences.

Whereas the genes you were born with will never change during your lifetime 
(except in a few cells here and there), the activity of those genes – 
generating hundreds of thousands of complex proteins inside the cell – is 
extremely fluid and responsive to what you are experiencing every day, from the 
food you eat to the daily concerns that are causing you emotional stress. The 
human body is like an orchestra of genetic players; streams of “notes” enter 
and leave all 100tn cells in the body, and the determination as to whether the 
melodies go up or down, increase or decrease in volume and blend or clash with 
one another can be traced to chemical modifications of our DNA and the protein 
sheath that surrounds and cushions the double helix.

Specific genetic-guided treatments hold much promise, but they pale in the face 
of the realization that everyday life choices are altering gene activity all 
the time. Lifestyle choices can have profound genetic effects on health and 
risk for disease. These are summarized in our upcoming book, Super Genes 
(November, 2015).

A clutch of studies, for example, points to the major effect that meditation 
has on genetic activity. We have observed in our own intervention trials 
employing meditation that hundreds of genes and proteins are positively 
influenced, including telomerase, a protein widely believed to hold an 
important key to the aging process. Moreover, these beneficial effects were not 
observed only among lifelong dedicated meditators. One study we helped conduct 
with the Self-Directed Biological Transformation Initiative observed results in 
new meditators within a few days of starting the practice. These exciting new 
findings are currently being prepared for submission to peer-reviewed medical 
journals.

So what kind of lifestyle would your genes want you to maintain? Most of the 
individual recommendations fall in line with a standard model of healthy 
living, such as moderate weight, regular exercise, good sleep and a balanced 
diet. But two other things are new and hold enormous promise. The first is to 
prioritize your lifestyle choices in order to take advantage of what has the 
most benefit. Based on studies of rodents, diet, exercise and stress reduction 
head the list of activities that directly affect your gene activity, for better 
or for worse.

Second, genes and their biological interactions can be traced much farther back 
in time than anyone previously suspected. Late-life disorders like most 
cancers, diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease are now thought to begin with 
epigenetic changes early in life, perhaps as early as childhood. In medicine, 
what comes earliest is usually easiest to treat, as opposed to the full-blown 
disorder. Therefore, treating cancer and Alzheimer’s through simpler, earlier 
interventions prior to symptoms could be the answer everyone has been searching 
for.

The promise of stopping all major diseases based on simply decoding the DNA of 
our genes may have fallen short, but the new prospects for understanding how to 
adapt our lifestyles to promote gene activity that is more salutary may go a 
long way to fill the gap – let’s hope so.

 

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