Posted on 12/09/2003 7:47:21 AM PST by PatrickHenry
In what has been described as the "perfect experiment," evolutionary biologists at the University of Chicago replaced a single gene in fruit flies and discovered a mechanism by which two different "races" begin to become different species, with one group adapted to life in the tropics and the other suited to cooler climates. The tropical group was more tolerant of starvation but less tolerant of cold. The temperate group was less able to resist starvation but better adapted to cool weather.
The altered gene also changed the flies' pheromones, chemical signals that influence mating behavior. As a result, the researchers show in the Dec. 5 issue of Science, the two groups of flies are not only fit for different environments but may also be on their way to sexual isolation, a crucial divide in the emergence of a new species.
"This study directly connects genetics with evolution," said Chung-I Wu, Ph.D., professor and chairman of ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago and director of the study. For the first time, we were able to demonstrate the vast importance in an evolutionary context of a small genetic change that has already occurred in nature."
"We had the luxury," added co-author Tony Greenberg, Ph.D., a postdoctoral student in Wu's laboratory, "of watching the essential event in Darwinian evolution, the first step in the origin of a new species. We were quite impressed, that this simple alteration played such a dramatic role, both adapting flies to a new environment and changing their sex appeal. Once two groups become sexually isolated, there's no turning back."
The scientists used a new technique to knock out one gene from fruit flies and then replace it with one of two slightly different versions of the same gene.
They focused on a gene called desaturase2 that plays a role in fat metabolism. Flies from Africa and the Caribbean, where there is tremendous competition for food but cold temperatures are not a problem, have one version of ds2. Flies from cooler climates, where there is less competition for food but greater temperature variation, have a smaller, inactive version of ds2.
The same gene plays a role in the production of cuticular hydrocarbons -- waxy, aromatic compounds that coat the abdomen of female flies. A male fly, in a romantic mood, strokes the female's abdomen with his feet, which have sensors that recognize specific hydrocarbons, like a perfume.
In a previous report, Wu's laboratory found most males with the temperate version of the ds2 gene preferred females with the same gene; tropical males preferred tropical females.
"Developing increased cold tolerance was an important step for flies that migrated out of Africa to Europe and Asia," Wu said. The change in pheromones, which altered patterns of sexual attraction, "was a by-product of adaptation to colder weather."
Fruit flies have a migratory history similar to humans. They originated in Africa, spread to Europe and Asia and went on to populate the world. As with humans, there is greater diversity within African flies than between flies from Africa and other continents.
Although fruit flies have been a favorite model for the study of genetics since the early 20th century, recognition of consistent differences between tropical and temperate flies came only in 1995. The discovery, however, "has allowed a lot of analysis of the evolution of adaptive traits," Wu said.
"But this was the first time we have been able to study the process from the very beginning," he added, "to watch the first steps as one species begins to split into two, then seals the bargain by increasing sexual isolation. This is the essence of biodiversity."
Additional authors include Jennifer Moran from the Wu lab and Jerry Coyne of the University of Chicago. The National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation funded the study.
Notice that groups were altered.
Let's try the experiment again altering one fruit fly.
If evolution is based on chance mutation, the odds of several fruit flys altering in the same way, that one gene, are slim.
The Fruit Fly in the Flight Simulator 12/08/2003
The simplest things can be the most extraordinary. If you like finding amazing wonders in everyday things, youll be fascinated to read about the common fly in the cover story of Caltechs magazine E&S (Engineering and Science).1 Michael Dickinson, a zoologist turned engineer, has described his Caltech teams work trying to reverse-engineer the flight systems of the common fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster.
Part of the fascination of this article is the teams cleverness in experiments. Dickinson and his students have built elaborate flight simulators for the tiny insects. Imagine taking a fly, not much bigger than a large speck of dust, and putting it into a custom arena in which the scenery is computer controlled, and every response of the flys wings and muscles can be measured. Imagine fastening a tiny fly with a tether and monitoring its every movement. (This is reminiscent of the monarch butterfly flight simulator see 07/09/2002 headline only more elaborate.) Dickinsons team measured the swatting reflex, to see how the fly changes its angle when a large unknown object approaches. They studied flight motion with high-speed cameras, and even built "RoboFly", a computer-controlled set of wings fed the exact motions of a real fly, to study the aerodynamic forces on the wings. Next, they are taking on the ambitious project of building a housefly-sized robotic insect that might be able to hover like the real thing.
All this pales in comparison, however, to the profuse praise Dickinson lavishes on the engineering capabilities of the real live insect. Listen to what he says, and you will take his concluding statement to heart, I hope you will think before you swat. Here are some samples from his 10-page, illustrated article (emphasis added):
Wow. All this in a tiny fly! Wrapping up this amazing journey into miniaturized ultrasophisticated engineering, Dickinson puts his work into perspective:
In the end, its just a fly. Is such an insignificant organism really worth all this effort? The natural world is filled with complex things, like immune cells, the human brain, and ecosystems. Although were made great progress in deconstructing life into its constituent parts such as genes and proteins, we have a ways to go before we have a deeper understanding of how elemental components function collectively to create rich behavior. The integrative approach that we are using to study fly flight is an attempt to move beyond reductionism and gain a formal understanding of the workings of a complex entity. The fly seems a reasonable place to start, and if successful, I hope such work will stimulate similar attempts throughout biology. The lessons learned along the way may provide useful insight for engineers and biologists alike. Even if you dont buy such grand visions, I hope you will at least think before you swat.
Thank you, Dr. Dickinson, for a wonderful glimpse into one of natures miniature engineering marvels. We feel like we were sitting behind you on the flys back, soaring on a thrill ride, like your first picture humorously illustrates. Thank you, also for reminding us that the world is filled with wonders like this, from bacteria to blue whales. Wow. Who would have suspected such wonders exist in a tiny fly? Certainly not Charles Darwin. Which reminds us, we were about to award you Story of the Month for this outstanding scientific article, but you included this one statement which acts like the proverbial fly in the ointment: The information coming from the haltere, a hindwing modified by evolution and resembling a very small chicken drumstick, is particularly important because it is essential in stabilizing reflexes. We regret, therefore, to have to award you, instead, Stupid Evolution Quote of the Week.
It's always a delight to receive one of your posts. God bless you, Phaedrus!
A little imagination would be nice, Patrick, although as I've said before, your blessings are always welcome. Did God do it, Patrick, or some scientist? Darwinism is in the eye of the beholder, Patrick. Are you a beholder?
Good stuff. Keep 'em coming!
- It's a designed experiment. That proves ID!
- It's a lie!
- It hasn't speciated yet!
- Blasphemy!
- They're interpreting it through their naturalistic materialistic worldview.
- How dare you use the screen name "PatrickHenry"?
- Yeah, but "get your own dirt!"
- This is only micro evolution, not macro evolution
- They said: "... may also be on their way to sexual isolation ..." so it's typical evo weasel wording!
- Playing god is what they are doing.
- The point is this was done MANUALLY, It was NOT observed naturally ...
- ... we as a people aren't all that bright. How much tweaking does it to take to do serious damage.
- A deliberate laboratory forced change does NOT equal natural change.
- Speciation my butt.
- Now I admit, this is interesting even exciting, but proof? speciation?
- So desperarate for REAL evidence of speciation, they will unashamedly boast of this?
- Gee, a fly got turned into. . . a fly! Imagine that!
- Does the article say if the differentiating species can still interbreed?
- But will the "new species" be able to procreate?
- [Y]ou aren't nearly as intelligent as your reply here indicates you believe yourself to be.
- PatrickHenry, unable to intellectually respond to any of the responses, is forced to merely list them.
- So did God or mutation change the gene or was the change a product of intelligent design by some lab maven?
- If evolution is based on chance mutation, the odds of several fruit flys altering in the same way, that one gene, are slim.
- Did God do it, Patrick, or some scientist? Darwinism is in the eye of the beholder, Patrick.
And the 'acceptance crowd'? What of them?
A round of applause for evidence supporting a point of view they've had faith in all along?
I thought the definition of species was individuals (of opposite sexes) that can reproduce and produce fertile offspring. Am I mistaken?
If you realy want more, try Alexander Pope The Dunciad Book IV
"O! would the Sons of Men once think their Eyes
And Reason giv'n them but to study Flies!
See Nature in some partial narrow shape,
And let the Author of the Whole escape:
Learn but to trifle; or, who most observe,
To wonder at their Maker, not to serve."
Just thought Id through that in.
:)
Isn't odd how the ostensiably "conservative" creationists continually exaptiate the Left's relativist and anti-naturalist arguments for themselves.
I'll answer my own question-no it isn't, because I've encountered several creationists in my academic field, and they're all multiculturalists, and eco-minded anti-capitalists
Not odd at all. The "denial syndrome" is exceedingly common on the left. I'm not saying that creationists are leftists. Most of them around here aren't, and would pass out at the suggestion. But deep down, waaaaay deep, there is a psychological similarity.
Consider how leftists during the 20th century had to deny the terror of Stalin, deny the fact that the American communist party was a tool of Moscow, deny that Hiss was a commie, etc. All some weird, sick, very elaborate kind of mental mechanism to deny reality and thus maintain an insane ideology. How much can one deny in order to cling to a fantasy version of the world? There seems to be no limit.
If you have the "denial-type mentality" are there other reality-denying ideological worldviews in which you can find a home? Sure. Lots of them. And being attracted to one doesn't imply any sympathy for the "content" of the others. They're all "intellectually" unrelated. But they all have reality-denying true believers at their core: holocaust denial, moon-landing denial, Afro-centricism (that is, history-denial), and as you noticed, leftists (whose politics and economics are demonstrably insane).
The great virtue of science is that it faces the data without bias, and is unafraid to abandon an hypothesis that is demonstrably false. This "reality-based" outlook is the source of the success of the scientific worldview. Any other "reality-based" systems? I can think of a few: capitalism, the US Constitution (as originally written), and virtually all of English common law.
Nor was it mentioned anywhere else. But then creationists and ID'ers don't believe in genes.
Incredible!! Boggles the mind, doesn't it?
I have never heard anyone deny the existance of genes. Can you point me to any supporting, or confirming evidence of gene denial?
Also...what is an "ID'er"?
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