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Medicine Science

After Death, Hundreds of Genes Spring Back to Life 62

Two surprising studies reveal new information about what genes do after death. Slashdot reader gurps_npc writes: You think your body stops after death, but up to two days later certain genes may turn on and start doing stuff for another two days before they give up the ghost. We are all zombies for up to four days after death.
Gizmodo reports that in fact "hundreds" of genes apparently spring back to life. "[P]revious work on human cadavers demonstrated that some genes remain active after death, but we had no idea as to the extent of this strange phenomenon."
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After Death, Hundreds of Genes Spring Back to Life

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  • Its simple (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bazmail ( 764941 ) on Sunday June 26, 2016 @10:44AM (#52392853)
    The death of suppression genes allow some of the surpressed to activate post mortem. But to no end. They die soon.
    • Re:Its simple (Score:5, Interesting)

      by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Sunday June 26, 2016 @11:37AM (#52393135)

      A large portion of our (and virtually all other life) is partially composed of virus-inserted code.

      To a virus, life isn't really a thing to begin with, only DNA interactions, with rare opportunities to copy.

      From that perspective, death of the host body just means it's bacteria party time, and even if 99% of organelles used to copy are kaput, almost all viruses are bacteria-predators anyway. So, hiding away in human DNA for a few hundred generations or whatever is just a distraction from getting to the (ambiguous) goal of a bacteria to infect.

      So, now that they're not suppressed, some random virus code passively sends a request to the organelles to write a copy of themselves for the 83rd billionth time, and this time don't get their message scrambled. All this happens trillions of times, infects perhaps millions of bacteria that manage to escape, which spread off into the world to keep the messy process going.

      Niches for DNA code are massively multidimensional, and even though the possibility space for success is outrageously sparse, the life that lives in the outer reaches of possiblity doesn't have be intelligent to know it's a bad idea, and so spreads where we can't imagine. Things like life that only has the chance to reproduce every few hundred years (using another life form's mechanisms to keep their DNA active in the meantime), or has to jump between 3 species in order to continue a full reproduction cycle.

      Heck, the only reason we can move around and talk and stuff is because some odd other microlife got mixed in with an ancestors cells to become mitocondria. With that, we can live away from immediate energy sources, and use sugars. To this day, bacteria are constantly mixing DNA with eachother, getting into the oddest combinations, with some help from viruses, who get everyone else involved in the party.

      And from a microscopic perspective, we're mostly mobile apartments for bacteria, that protect the bacteria/helpful viruses we like from the bacteria/viruses that tend to wreck the apartment. Fortunately, most bacteria are boring tenants, and most viruses only target bacteria.

      Ryan Fenton

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by quantaman ( 517394 )

        A large portion of our (and virtually all other life) is partially composed of virus-inserted code.

        To a virus, life isn't really a thing to begin with, only DNA interactions, with rare opportunities to copy.

        From that perspective, death of the host body just means it's bacteria party time, and even if 99% of organelles used to copy are kaput, almost all viruses are bacteria-predators anyway. So, hiding away in human DNA for a few hundred generations or whatever is just a distraction from getting to the (ambiguous) goal of a bacteria to infect.

        [...]

        Niches for DNA code are massively multidimensional, and even though the possibility space for success is outrageously sparse, the life that lives in the outer reaches of possiblity doesn't have be intelligent to know it's a bad idea, and so spreads where we can't imagine. Things like life that only has the chance to reproduce every few hundred years (using another life form's mechanisms to keep their DNA active in the meantime), or has to jump between 3 species in order to continue a full reproduction cycle.

        I'm not sure this story holds up. The moment a virus gene is inserted into our genome its reproductive cycle becomes tied to ours. Even if some virus DNA could escape our cells and infect bacteria post-mortem they'd just become ordinary viruses.

        The only way for genes to retain function is for that function to be subject to natural selection. But as long as those virus genes are trapped in a human DNA strand the only way for them to propagate is through people, and the moment they escaped they'd be tied

  • Click bait? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by turbidostato ( 878842 ) on Sunday June 26, 2016 @10:57AM (#52392943)

    What's that article beside click-bait?

    "previous work on human cadavers demonstrated that some genes remain active after death" What does mean "remain active" with regards to genes? For all that I know (and I own a Biology major) genes just "stay there" (more or less) for RNA to make use of them so, what this does mean? That supressing factors, as they are supressing no more after death, allow for some genes to be expressed after death? What a surprise! I don't mean the details not to be worthnoting as I'm not aware too many time/money has been thrown towards that target but that the general assertion is of little surprise. We already knew death is not an event but a process (despite all legal interest in the contrary).

  • Though the individual dies, the life "virus" (DNA, genetic material) leaps from host to host. From what I've seen and read, it seems that the individual's behavior and its life and death itself are designed, by the "virus", to maximize the health and size of the herd. In that context, it could well be mechanisms are then activated to quickly break down the individual body back into its components for re-use, which maximizes herd health in some way.

    However, that could be driven to maximize not merely the po

  • by shess ( 31691 ) on Sunday June 26, 2016 @11:26AM (#52393083) Homepage

    Sometimes, after you turn your computer off, activity does not immediately cease! There are various thermal adjustments which continue to happen for hours after power down! Sometimes random electrical signals can be sent for no apparent reason!

    Seriously, the human body is a complicated chemical plant without centralized control. Some stuff keeps happening. Other stuff doesn't. Big deal.

  • The cells in our bodies remain capable of being awoken long after we stop breathing. This is why organ transplant works. It may be possible to awake the dead. We just don't know how. But I think we need to look into it because it would make a lot of things easier including surgery.
    • We already do this. In some surgeries the body is cooled to the point where the brain and heart cease to function temporarily. But in normal situations the cells of the body, especially the important ones in our brain, are not capable of being awoken long after we stop breathing. At normal temperatures brain damage begins within minutes and that can not be undone.

  • Considering we're not really a unitary being, but more or less a hundred million separate entities living in a staggeringly complicated symbiosis, is this really a shock?

    Complex systems don't just "stop" on a dime; there's energy distributed through the system that ultimately will be used locally before local processes stop.

    Obviously, the 'independent' organisms within us continue to operate after death - bloating, decomposition, etc. How different is it if some of our own more-dependent bits keep cycling

    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      Technically do you ever really "die"? There's so much bacteria and other things running around in the body, it's more like you get recycled.

      Nothing goes to waste, but it's just not "you" any more. Stick a body in a sterile atmosphere and come back to teeming life using whatever resources it can for as long as it can, even if that's moulds or bacteria or mites or whatever. Isn't there something like thousands of mites per square foot of the body skin alone?

      • Technically do you ever really "die"?

        That's a good question

        Nothing goes to waste, but it's just not "you" any more.

        Oh right. Never mind then.

  • by drunken_boxer777 ( 985820 ) on Sunday June 26, 2016 @12:54PM (#52393541)

    Here is the pre-print article:

    http://www.biorxiv.org/content... [biorxiv.org]

  • While a lot of Slashdotters might see the summary and say, "Duh!", it is a largely unexplored area of biology. Since "Biology" literally means "the study of life", it shouldn't be surprising that not too much time is spent on what happens after death.

    A simple explanation for some of the changes in gene expression probably relates to the fact that the organs are no longer working together to keep the organism alive. Furthermore, cells within an organism are in competition for the increasingly scarce resource

  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Sunday June 26, 2016 @02:18PM (#52393927) Homepage Journal

    Things unexpectedly activating is usually due to a virus that goes by the common name of systemd.

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