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EMOTION-ENCODED DNA: Trauma Directly Alters Base-Pair Sequencing in Hours
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235479890
- EAN9798235479890
- Date de parution29/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
In 2015, a graduate student ran a routine DNA sequencing comparison on bereaved individuals and their matched controls. He was looking for nothing. He expected nothing. What appeared in the data changed everything. Specific base pairs in the DNA of grieving people had changed. Not epigenetically. Not in the regulatory layer above the genome. In the sequence itself. And the changes had happened within weeks of the loss.
In Emotion-Encoded DNA, molecular epigeneticist Prof. Querina Soldavex presents the most provocative finding in twenty-first-century biology: that acute emotional trauma produces specific, reproducible alterations in DNA base-pair sequences in human immune cells within hours of the traumatic event, through a mechanism rooted entirely in established molecular biology. The changes are G-to-T transversions at guanine-rich G-quadruplex sequences near the promoters of stress-response genes, produced by reactive oxygen species generated during acute stress, occurring during the narrow window in which the cell's DNA repair capacity is simultaneously overwhelmed and redirected.
The finding has been confirmed by four research groups using whole-genome sequencing, targeted promoter sequencing, single-cell sequencing, and a controlled cellular model. It appears in mass shooting survivors, in bereaved spouses, and in isolated human lymphocytes stressed with precisely defined concentrations of cortisol and hydrogen peroxide. It is not an epigenetic mark. It is not a methylation change.
It is a permanent alteration of the base-pair sequence. Drawing on two decades of research in molecular epigenetics, DNA repair biochemistry, and the biology of post-traumatic stress disorder, Soldavex builds a rigorous mechanistic case while being scrupulously honest about what is established and what remains uncertain. She confronts the central dogma directly, examines the intergenerational evidence, explores the implications for PTSD diagnosis and treatment, and addresses the strongest scientific objections with the precision of a researcher who has spent years trying to disprove her own discovery.
The book closes not with triumphalism but with something rarer and more valuable: an honest account of what it means to have found something real that you did not expect and cannot yet fully explain, and what it means for every person who has ever felt that their body was permanently changed by what happened to them. It was. The data says so. Down to the base pairs. Grief does not stay in the mind.
It goes all the way to the molecule. And now we can read it there.
In Emotion-Encoded DNA, molecular epigeneticist Prof. Querina Soldavex presents the most provocative finding in twenty-first-century biology: that acute emotional trauma produces specific, reproducible alterations in DNA base-pair sequences in human immune cells within hours of the traumatic event, through a mechanism rooted entirely in established molecular biology. The changes are G-to-T transversions at guanine-rich G-quadruplex sequences near the promoters of stress-response genes, produced by reactive oxygen species generated during acute stress, occurring during the narrow window in which the cell's DNA repair capacity is simultaneously overwhelmed and redirected.
The finding has been confirmed by four research groups using whole-genome sequencing, targeted promoter sequencing, single-cell sequencing, and a controlled cellular model. It appears in mass shooting survivors, in bereaved spouses, and in isolated human lymphocytes stressed with precisely defined concentrations of cortisol and hydrogen peroxide. It is not an epigenetic mark. It is not a methylation change.
It is a permanent alteration of the base-pair sequence. Drawing on two decades of research in molecular epigenetics, DNA repair biochemistry, and the biology of post-traumatic stress disorder, Soldavex builds a rigorous mechanistic case while being scrupulously honest about what is established and what remains uncertain. She confronts the central dogma directly, examines the intergenerational evidence, explores the implications for PTSD diagnosis and treatment, and addresses the strongest scientific objections with the precision of a researcher who has spent years trying to disprove her own discovery.
The book closes not with triumphalism but with something rarer and more valuable: an honest account of what it means to have found something real that you did not expect and cannot yet fully explain, and what it means for every person who has ever felt that their body was permanently changed by what happened to them. It was. The data says so. Down to the base pairs. Grief does not stay in the mind.
It goes all the way to the molecule. And now we can read it there.



