4/29/15

mimicked heredity? (eating habits - an all sports issue)

mimicked heredity? (eating habits - an all sports issue)
again, a google search here will not return this above chosen title, ... yet...

could this be that much needed story for changing lifestyles, or is it just out of
an impulse against a possible bad heredity?

ex:
the author would like to point out in advance here, that this ex.:
- uses analogy, to "go" from mouse models to cancer issues...
- in its novelty, has purely the purpose of keeeping our readers informed.
- tackles only mimicked heredity, be it as a connotation for us all, or not..
  (for cancer pathologies, strictly speaking, pls. address your gp at all times.)  

- uses conclusions given in two scientific works, below, namely:
   "vertically transmitted faecal immunoglobulin a levels determine
    extra-chromosomal phenotypic variation." (2/16/15)
    authors: Clara Moon, Megan T. Baldridge, Meghan A. Wallace,
                 Carey-Ann D. Burnham, Herbert W. Virgin &
                 Thaddeus S. Stappenbeck, (nature)  
   "risk factors and prevalence of helicobacter pylori infection in persistent
    high incidence area of gastric carcinoma in Yangzhong city." (1/14/14)
    authors  Yangchun Zhu, Xiaoying Zhou, Junbei Wu, (hindawi)
   
the question here:
if the results in the 1st work (published 2/16/15), showed that female mice 
can pass down a bacterium (sutterella), to their offspring, that causes them to 
have intestinal problems, mimicking a genetic disease, what can be said then, 
with regard to the results in the 2nd work (published 1/14/14), about the 
spreading of this other bacterium (helicobacter pylori (immunoglobulin g))?

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