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23/11/2020 Understanding Genetics

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Commonly Asked
Questions Why did the very blue eyes of a kid become brown when he grew up?
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Why did the very -A curious adult from Brazil
blue eyes of a kid
become brown when June 6, 2006

he grew up?
People tend to think of traits like eye color as rock steady. But they're not.
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Online Exhibits Many babies born with blue eyes end up with green or brown eyes. Children's
hair will often darken with age. And eye color can and does change for some
Genetics in the adults.
News
So what is going on here? How can you get the genes for brown eyes but not
Books
have the brown appear until later in life? It has to do with how genes work.
Courses
The genes for eye color really just determine how much pigment is in a part of
Sponsors the eye called the stroma of the iris. As you can see from the picture, the more

Links pigment you have the darker your eye color.

People with very little pigment have blue eyes, some pigment gives green eyes
A Handy Guide to and lots of pigment gives brown eyes*. The same phenomenon that makes the
Ancestry and sky blue is also what makes people with little or no pigment in their stroma have
Relationship DNA blue eyes. (Click here for a full explanation.)
Tests
Let's say you have the gene(s) that lead to lots of pigment in the stroma of the
iris. Why would you be born with blue eyes?

Remember genes are simply recipes for making proteins. Think about a recipe
for making spaghetti. If no one reads the recipe, gets the ingredients and follows
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23/11/2020 Understanding Genetics

the directions, what do you have? A piece of paper.

Same thing with a gene. If the cell doesn't read the gene then you don't get a
protein (no "spaghetti"). An unread gene is just a piece of DNA -- an unused
recipe. And for eye color, an unread recipe means blue eyes.

Click here to order our


At birth, the genes that make the pigment protein are not being read by the cell
latest book, A Handy
(they are turned off). This means that a lot of babies start off with blue eyes.
Guide to Ancestry and
Relationship DNA Tests Light then triggers the cell to start reading the gene. But it can take a while for
the cell to ramp up to the final levels of pigment. That is why so many babies
have blue eyes for their first months of life. Usually by their first birthday, a
baby's eye color has settled in (although it can sometimes take three years or
even longer).

But what about changes later in life such as in the case of the boy that you ask
about? The boy you mentioned may have had an eye color change later in life
because for some reason the start up of the eye color gene was delayed. Or
maybe the gene became more active and started to make more pigment protein
later in life.

It is important to remember that genes are not just on or off. Basically, genes
can become more or less active.

You can think of genes like your own exercise habits. Ideally you would faithfully
exercise everyday but in reality you miss a day here or there or sometimes quit
or maybe workout really hard for a few weeks and then stop. Well genes have
the same "motivational" issues.

You have a number of genes that together are involved in making your protein
pigments and these genes can change in their activity. In most cases the genes
that make our pigment protein are pretty disciplined. This means they make
close to a constant amount of protein so that our eye color stays pretty much the
same after infancy.

But sometimes these genes get lazy or more motivated. What could have made
this kid's eye color genes more active? It is hard to know.

Perhaps it had something to do with puberty. At puberty, all those new hormones
change how lots of genes work. Maybe for this boy, his eye color gene was
affected by these hormones.

Or maybe a virus turned up the gene. Some viral DNA can settle into our DNA. If
the virus inserts itself near one our genes, it can sometimes turn that gene up
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(or down). And there are lots of other possibilities too.

Some diseases can also change eye color. For example, there are a few diseases
that are known to result in a progressive loss of iris color (Horner's syndrome
and Fuchs' heterochromic iridocyclitis are two examples).

And that's just half the story. So far we've only talked about making more
pigment as a way for eye color to darken. Another possibility is that the pigment
that gets made is more stable.

The amount of pigment in our eyes is really a balance between the amount being
made and the amount being destroyed. How would the pigment protein suddenly
become more stable?

Some genes make proteins that destroy other proteins. If a pigment-destroying


gene makes less protein, then someone's eye color might darken. And vice
versa.

OK, so there are lots of ways that eye color can change later in life. Is there any
evidence that the change can be genetic? Yes.

Scientists found this out by looking at identical and fraternal twins. Remember,
identical twins have the same DNA (and therefore the same genes). Fraternal
twins are no more alike than any brother or sister.

So if the eye color of both twins in an identical twin pair change color at the
same rate, then genetics may be involved. The clincher is if the eye color of
twins in a fraternal pair change at a different rate. This would argue that genes
are very important in this process.
When a gene loses its motivation, it
And this is what researchers saw. Researchers observed the eyes of identical and makes less protein.
fraternal twins of American Caucasians older than 6 years.

Both sets of twins showed a darkening of their eye color with age. The identical
twins changed color together, at essentially the same rate. The fraternal twins
changed color but at different rates, which indicates a "strong genetic influence
in the timing of these color changes."

As you can see, there are lots of ways to change how a gene works over time. In
fact, this is one of the reasons identical twins become more different over time.
They have the same DNA but their genes are turned up or down to different
levels.

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All in all, our genes are pretty dynamic and unpredictable- but hey that's what
makes being a geneticist fun right?

*Some people with albinism have red eyes because their bodies make no
pigment. The red comes from the blood vessels at the back of the eye.

By Dr. Aaron Shafer

If their eye color changes at the same


More Information rate, then genes are probably involved.
Another question about eye color change
Eye color change twin study

Back to Eye Color

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