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Why People Are Left- Or Right-Handed

Most of us are right-handed, but a fair few happen to be left-handed. Why is this? Is it just something we learn to have a preference for over time, or is it something to do with our neurological wiring from birth?

According to a study in eLife, however, it has nothing to do with our brains or neurological development. In a rather satisfying plot twist, it seems our left- or right-handedness is ingrained in our biological workings from birth, in the form of a particular hubbub of gene activity in the spine, not the brain.

“Our data suggest a spinal, not a cortical, beginning of hemispheric asymmetries,” the team announced in their paper.

A team of researchers from Germany, the Netherlands, and South Africa—led by biophysicists at Ruhr University Bochum—has been carefully monitoring the gene expression taking place within the developing spinal cords of growing babies inside the womb between the eighth and twelfth weeks of pregnancy.

Preference in the womb

A preference for moving the left or right hand develops in the womb from the eighth week of pregnancy. From the 13th week of pregnancy, unborn children prefer to suck either their right or their left thumb.

Arm and hand movements are initiated via the motor cortex in the brain. It sends a corresponding signal to the spinal cord, which in turn translates the command into a motion. The motor cortex, however, is not connected to the spinal cord from the beginning. Even before the connection forms, precursors of handedness become apparent. This is why the researchers have assumed that the cause of right respective left preference must be rooted in the spinal cord rather than the brain.

The influence of environmental factors

It’s long been assumed that gene activity in the brain, depending on which hemisphere shows the most activity, defines whether or not someone is right- or left-handed. However, based on activity in these proto-spinal cords, it seems that there’s some asymmetry going on there that’s never before been detected.

This newly discovered activity is taking place long before the part of the brain responsible for movement – the motor cortex – is actually “wired up” to the spine. It appears to be centered on parts of the spine responsible for transmitting electrical impulses to the hands, arms, legs, and feet, and this asymmetry defines whether a person writes with their right or left hand.

Moreover, the team actually found out what was causing this symmetry. As it so happens, it’s not influenced by regular, inherited genetic mutations or traits but by environmental factors – influences affecting the baby as it grows in the womb.

Although it’s not yet clear what these environmental (“epigenetic”) factors could be, it is possible that they alter how enzymes operate around the developing baby, which in turn changes how their genes are able to express themselves. This, consequently, influences the asymmetry of gene activity present within the spine.
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