I was looking for something else and just found this in Sept 1, 2010 Biological Psychiatry:
Methylation Matters: Interaction Between Methylation Density and Serotonin Transporter Genotype Predicts Unresolved Loss or Trauma by M.H. van IJzendoorn (sic) et al. Background
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While I have you here: I don't understand methylation, beyond "methyls stuck on DNA histones change gene expression" [fixed]. I would like to understand it to the same level I grasp protein synthesis -- a basic grasp of the mechanism; also, I'd like to have some knowledge of representative ways that environment changes methylations (examples of and their mechanisms). Is this information available anywhere? I mean, (1) is this known to science in the first place and (2) has anybody yet made a nice YouTube video or interpretive dance or TV science show episode about it yet?
ETA: I did find this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYrQ0EhVCYA which is exactly the sort of groovy thing I was hoping to find, but it only covers How Methylation Modulates Expression Through Accessibility. Not Ways Methylation Is Itself Modulated By "The Environment", which is what I'm particularly keen to know.
ETA2: It doesn't explain if or how methylation is localized to certain regions of the DNA, which strikes me as critical to understanding the relevance of methylation.
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A reasonably useful starting point is Epigenetics?, which has a bunch of one-page, fairly simple articles about the most important discoveries in epigenetics in the past 3 or 4 years. It's not very groovy, it's a bit earnest and EU-ish, but it's fairly accessible and does link to the original papers. I think it would be good at telling you what questions you should be asking, allowing you to use your considerable research skills to find the information with the level and format you want. And just an expert-provided list of what's significant in the field is a very good start IMO. This article on abuse and methylation should point you to the kind of stuff you want to know, I think.
Note this stuff is fairly cutting edge; epigenetics as a field has been around for just over a decade, only really being taken seriously in the past five years or so. That means it hasn't quite trickled down to the level of "everybody needs to know this" yet. Anyway, I'm happy to translate / expound articles, or answer any questions that still seem burning after you've browsed the EU site.
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