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  • I hate winter, it’s cold, it’s grey, it gets dark so dang early. Turns out your body

  • hates it too. Axial tilt maybe be the reason for the season, but it’s technically changing

  • our genes.

  • Hey guys julia here for DNews

  • Winter is rough for those of us who live in cold climates. As the wind chill dips below

  • zero degrees, you ask yourself, why do I live somewhere where the air HURTS MY FACE!? But

  • it’s not just the cold that’s rough on our bodies, it’s the lack of sunlight too.

  • Almost all living things have a circadian rhythm that changes with the light. From sleep

  • cycles to hibernation, light regulates most of life on Earth. The Earth is tilted at a

  • comfortable 23.5 degrees. This means that at some parts of the year the northern hemisphere

  • leans slightly closer to the sun and other parts of the year the southern hemisphere

  • gets a little cozier with the sun. And with that, it means the amount of light that reaches

  • your little section of the planet changes throughout the year. Those grey skies and

  • fading evening light can have profound changes on your body.

  • The change in light can cause problems like seasonal affective disorder, a condition which

  • brings about a low mood as levels of sunlight induced Vitamin D drop. But there’s a few

  • other lesser known effects of less sunlight.

  • In a study published in the journal Drug Metabolism & Disposition researchers found how less sunlight

  • changes how your body metabolizes medication. They focused on two types of immune suppressing

  • drugs, tacrolimus and sirolimus. Basically the more Vitamin D, the more an enzyme CYP3A4

  • is produced. The more of this enzyme, the faster the drugs were metabolized. While the

  • study focused on just these two medications, the researchers think these results might

  • be true for other types of medications. So the study suggests that sunlight could affect

  • your sensitivity to certain drugs.

  • One study from the American College of Cardiology, found that cholesterol levels vary from season

  • to season. In a large study of over 2.8 million adults, researchers from Johns Hopkins Ciccarone

  • Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease found that for many people, cholesterol levels

  • seem to be higher in the winter. The researchers think that less sunlight plays a role in these

  • rising levels. As we are exposed to less light during the winter, because of staying inside

  • and shorter days, we get less vitamin D. Another study published in the journal Menopause found

  • a link between more vitamin D and lower cholesterol levels. So with less vitamin D, cholesterol

  • levels might rise. But even though more research is needed, there’s other evidence that shows

  • how your body takes a whopping in the winter. So much so, that it affects your gene!

  • One study published in the journal Nature Communications found that around 23% of human

  • genome expression changes from season to season mostly to boost your immune system.

  • This time of year is prime cold and flu season, so to fight off infections, your body switches

  • on certain pro-inflammatory genes.

  • Your DNA is made up of two strains that wrap around each other in the famous double helix

  • structure, to get even more compact and tiny, that DNA is wrapped around little proteins

  • called histones. Think of how thread is wrapped around spool, that’s kind of what histones

  • look like. When DNA needs to be translated to make proteins, these histones unravel to

  • let out a little bit of DNA at a time. But which histones unravel when depends on various

  • influences. In this case, it’s seasonal influences, probably the amount of sunlight.

  • When the participants went through winter months, no matter what hemisphere they were

  • in, the lack of sunlight seemed to activate pro-inflammatory genes. And like we know from

  • other DNews episodes, inflammation, while it can help us fight off some infections,

  • too much can also harm our health, leading to heart disease, diabetes, or stress related

  • mental health issues. Which interestingly, the authors think could be another reason

  • for more cardiovascular deaths in the winter.

  • But if you live somewhere where there isn’t a winter, your immune system is impacted by

  • other kinds of seasonal changes. In this study, the researchers found that those who live

  • in Gambia have seasonal peaks correlated with the rainy season (June to October), when infectious

  • diseases seem to be more prevalent.

  • So happy winter to everyone who’s in it! Enjoy your body’s changes. I hope this season

  • brings you more joy than it brings cardiovascular, psychiatric or inflammatory issues!

  • Or maybe if you wait long enough, climate change could take away our seasons, starting

  • with fall. To find out more about the end of autumn, Trace has the scoop in this episode

  • right here.

  • So are you a fan of winter? Love to build snowmen in the frozen outdoors? Or are you

  • a curl up by the fire with a good book kind of person? Tell us your thoughts down below

I hate winter, it’s cold, it’s grey, it gets dark so dang early. Turns out your body

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