Newswise — If you’ve ever wondered why you aren’t a little taller, it turns out it’s not all about genetics. In findings published in the Journal of Pediatrics (January 2015), an Israeli research team shows that the environment in which one lives from the womb to about age one largely determines an adult’s height. The pioneering study was conducted by researchers at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Tel Aviv University and Bnai Zion Hospital, in collaboration with Regional Health Offices in Haifa and Tel Aviv.

Led by Professor Ze'ev Hochberg, of the Technion’s Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, and Dr. Alina German, of Bnai Zion Hospital, the team found that while genetics do have a significant effect on a person’s height, so, too, do environmental elements that include the environment in the womb, nutrition and health status in the first year of life, parents and family structure, and economic and emotional events.

“Following the genetics revolution, today it is customary to attribute our personal traits to the genes,” explains Prof. Hochberg. “Indeed, there is no doubt that many of our features are genetic. However, as can be seen in our study, environmental conditions have a very significant role – around 50 percent – in determining growth and height.”

The range-difference between people who are tall or short is about 10 inches in men and 9 inches in women. Half of the variation is set at a decisive growth stage – when the child transitions from infantile growth to childhood – and the new study shows that this part is due only to environmental conditions before birth and during infancy. The researchers determined this phase transition in 162 sets of twins [56 pairs of identical twins (who have identical genes), 106 pairs of fraternal twins (who share only half their genes)], and 106 pairs of non-twin siblings, who also share half their genes.

“Studies on twins let us test the balance between genes and the environment,” explains Prof. Hochberg. “The difference between identical and fraternal twins shows the impact of genetics. Here we discovered the remarkable power of the environment in shaping a person. This is called plasticity in human development, which means that environmental conditions such as mother and baby nutrition, social and family interactions, can influence our growth and height.”

From an evolutionary perspective, say the researchers, this plasticity helps ‘shape’ characteristics to suit future living conditions, which are 'adaptively predicted' based on current conditions. For example, “children who are born into and grow up in a malnourished environment will be shorter, and therefore require less food as they get older, while children born into a well-nourished environment will grow to be tall,” says Prof. Hochberg.

The research team also included Prof. Zvi Livshitz, Dr. Ida Malkin and Dr. Inga Peter from Tel Aviv University; Dr. Yonatan Dubnov and Dr. Hana Akones from Haifa’s Regional Health Office, and Dr. Michael Shmoish of the Lorry I. Lokey Interdisciplinary Center for Life Sciences and Engineering at the Technion.

The Technion-Israel Institute of Technology is a major source of the innovation and brainpower that drives the Israeli economy, and a key to Israel’s renown as the world’s “Start-Up Nation.” Its three Nobel Prize winners exemplify academic excellence. Technion people, ideas and inventions make immeasurable contributions to the world including life-saving medicine, sustainable energy, computer science, water conservation and nanotechnology. The Joan and Irwin Jacobs Technion-Cornell Institute is a vital component of Cornell Tech, and a model for graduate applied science education that is expected to transform New York City’s economy.

American Technion Society (ATS) donors provide critical support for the Technion—more than $2 billion since its inception in 1940. Based in New York City, the ATS and its network of chapters across the U.S. provide funds for scholarships, fellowships, faculty recruitment and chairs, research, buildings, laboratories, classrooms and dormitories, and more.

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CITATIONS

Journal of Pediatrics, Jan-2015