To date, it had been assumed that differences in gene activity of the right and left hemisphere might be responsible for a person's handedness.
A preference for moving the left or right hand develops in the womb from the eighth week of pregnancy, according to ultrasound scans carried out in the 1980s.
From the 13th week of pregnancy, unborn children prefer to suck either their right or their left thumb.
Arm and hand movements are initiated through 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 in the brain.
Another study had shown that unborn children carry out asymmetric hand movements just as early as that.
Researchers, moreover, traced the cause of asymmetric gene activity.
Epigenetic factors appear to be at the root of it, reflecting environmental influences. Those influences might, for example, lead to enzymes bonding methyl groups to the DNA, which in turn would affect and minimise the reading of genes.
The study was published in the journal eLife.
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