Artículo de revista
Did Paul Kammerer Discover Epigenetic Inheritance? A Modern Look at the Controversial Midwife Toad Experiments
Fecha
2009-07-25Registro en:
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL ZOOLOGY PART B-MOLECULAR AND DEVELOPMENTAL EVOLUTION, Volume: 312B, Issue: 7, Pages: 667-678, 2009
1552-5007
Autor
Vargas, Alexander O.
Institución
Resumen
The controversy surrounding the alleged Lamarckian fraud of Paul Kammerer’s
midwife toad experiments has intrigued generations of biologists. A re-examination of his
descriptions of hybrid crosses of treated and nontreated toads reveals parent-of-origin effects like
those documented in epigenetic inheritance. Modification of the extracellular matrix of the egg as
described by Kammerer provides a plausible cause for altered gene methylation patterns. Traits such
as altered egg and adult body size in Kammerer’s ‘‘treated’’ toads are inherited epigenetically in
other tetrapods. A preliminary model involving the environmental silencing of a maternally
inherited allele can be attempted to explain the midwife toad experiments. Given available molecular
tools and our current understanding of epigenetics, new experimentation with the midwife toad is
strongly encouraged.