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Opinion

Why are Jews compatible? It's in the genes

September 4, 2013 10:43
2 min read

Jews often think about their identity. Who am I? What does it mean to be Jewish? And as a Jew in the third generation from the Holocaust, I often think about the differences between people — and whether or not these differences matter in any way. One way to answer these questions comes from a surprising source — scientific research into the way our bodies fight disease.

All humans have a very similar set of genes but of course, there’s some variation between each of us. It turns out that the biggest genetic difference is not to do with things that are obviously different — say the genes that control hair, eye or skin colour. Instead, the genes that vary the most are our so-called compatibility genes.

These genes vary so much that in effect, they are a hallmark for our individuality. In a database of 18 million people, there are four with genes similar to mine. And six per cent of people in the 18 million are unique. However you view your place in the universe, some part of your individuality — your uniqueness — comes from the versions of these genes that you have inherited.

These are the genes that doctors try to match for some types of medical transplantation — bone marrow transplants for example — to give the best chance of the operation being a success. But of course, the natural role of these genes in the body can’t be to cause problems in transplantation, because that’s such an unnatural situation. It has taken more than six decades of research to work out what these genes really do.

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