Literature DB >> 26994357

Enacting the molecular imperative: How gene-environment interaction research links bodies and environments in the post-genomic age.

Katherine Weatherford Darling1, Sara L Ackerman2, Robert H Hiatt3, Sandra Soo-Jin Lee4, Janet K Shim5.   

Abstract

Despite a proclaimed shift from 'nature versus nurture' to 'genes and environment' paradigms within biomedical and genomic science, capturing the environment and identifying gene-environment interactions (GEIs) has remained a challenge. What does 'the environment' mean in the post-genomic age? In this paper, we present qualitative data from a study of 33 principal investigators funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health to conduct etiological research on three complex diseases (cancer, cardiovascular disease and diabetes). We examine their research practices and perspectives on the environment through the concept of molecularization: the social processes and transformations through which phenomena (diseases, identities, pollution, food, racial/ethnic classifications) are re-defined in terms of their molecular components and described in the language of molecular biology. We show how GEI researchers' expansive conceptualizations of the environment ultimately yield to the imperative to molecularize and personalize the environment. They seek to 'go into the body' and re-work the boundaries between bodies and environments. In the process, they create epistemic hinges to facilitate a turn from efforts to understand social and environmental exposures outside the body, to quantifying their effects inside the body. GEI researchers respond to these emergent imperatives with a mixture of excitement, ambivalence and frustration. We reflect on how GEI researchers struggle to make meaning of molecules in their work, and how they grapple with molecularization as a methodological and rhetorical imperative as well as a process transforming biomedical research practices.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Complex disease; Environment; Gene-environment interactions; Genomics; Health inequalities; Molecularization; USA

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26994357      PMCID: PMC4815914          DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.03.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  17 in total

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Review 9.  Understanding social inequalities in health.

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6.  Students' Understanding of the Dynamic Nature of Genetics: Characterizing Undergraduates' Explanations for Interaction between Genetics and Environment.

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