Posted on 04/14/2004 6:15:04 AM PDT by Momaw Nadon
Every species seems to come and go. Some last longer than others, but nothing lasts forever. Humans are a relatively recent phenomenon, jumping out of trees and striding across the land around 200 000 years ago. Will we persist for many millions of years to come, or are we headed for an evolutionary makeover, or even extinction?
According to Reinhard Stindl, of the Institute of Medical Biology in Vienna, the answer to this question could lie at the tips of our chromosomes. In a controversial new theory he suggests that all eukaryotic species (everything except bacteria and algae) have an evolutionary "clock" that ticks through generations, counting down to an eventual extinction date. This clock might help to explain some of the more puzzling aspects of evolution, but it also overturns current thinking and even questions the orthodoxy of Darwin's natural selection.
For over 100 years, scientists have grappled with the cause of "background" extinction. Mass extinction events, like the wiping out of dinosaurs 65m years ago, are impressive and dramatic, but account for only around 4% of now extinct species. The majority slip away quietly and without any fanfare. Over 99% of all the species that ever lived on Earth have already passed on, so what happened to the species that weren't annihilated during mass extinction events?
Charles Darwin proposed that evolution is controlled by "survival of the fittest". Current natural selection models imply that evolution is a slow and steady process, with continuous genetic mutations leading to new species that find a niche to live in, or die. But digging through the layers of rock, palaeontologists have found that evolution seems to go in fits and starts. Most species seem to have long stable periods followed by a burst of change: not the slow, steady process predicted by natural selection. Originally scientists attributed this jagged pattern to the imperfections of the fossil record. But in recent years more detailed studies have backed up the idea that evolution proceeds in fits and starts.
The quiet periods in the fossil record where evolution seems to stagnate are a big problem for natural selection: evolution can't just switch on and off. Over 20 years ago the late Stephen Jay Gould suggested internal genetic mechanisms could regulate these quiet evolutionary periods but until now no-one could explain how it would work.
Stindl argues that the protective caps on the end of chromosomes, called telomeres, provide the answer. Like plastic tips on the end of shoelaces, all eukaryotic species have telomeres on the end of their chromosomes to prevent instability. However, cells seem to struggle to copy telomeres properly when they divide, and very gradually the telomeres become shorter.
Stindl's idea is that there is also a tiny loss of telomere length between each generations, mirroring the individual ageing process.
Once a telomere becomes critically short it causes diseases related to chromosomal instability, or limited tissue regeneration, such as cancer and immunodeficiency. "The shortening of telomeres between generations means that eventually the telomeres become critically short for a particular species, causing outbreaks of disease and finally a population crash," says Stindl. "It could explain the disappearance of a seemingly successful species, like Neanderthal man, with no need for external factors such as climate change."
After a population crash there are likely to be isolated groups remaining. Stindl postulates that inbreeding within these groups could "reset" the species clock, elongating telomeres and potentially starting a new species. Studies on mice provide strong evidence to support this. "Established strains of lab mice have exceptionally long telomeres compared to those in wild mice, their ancestors," says Stindl. "Those strains of lab mice were inbred intensively from a small population."
Current estimates suggest telomeres shorten only a tiny amount between each generation, taking thousands of generations to erode to a critical level. Many species can remain stable for tens to hundreds of thousands of years, creating long flat periods in evolution, when nothing much seems to happen.
Telomere erosion is a compelling theory, helping to explain some of the more mysterious patterns in evolution and extinction. There are few data - partly because telomeres are tiny and difficult to measure - but new DNA sequencing techniques could soon change that. Studies have already shown a huge variation in telomere length between different species.
Other scientists are going to take some convincing. David Jablonski, a palaeontologist from the University of Chicago, says: "The telomere hypothesis is interesting, but must be tested against factors like geographic extent, or population size and variability, that have already been proven effective in predicting extinction risk."
Stindl accepts that more experiments need to be done to test his ideas. "We need to compare average telomere lengths between endangered species and current successful species," he says. "I don't expect all endangered species to have short telomeres, since there are clearly other extinction mechanisms resulting from human threats to ecosystems, but I would expect some correlation between extinction risk and telomere length."
If Stindl is correct it will have interesting implications for mankind. Although inbreeding seems to have been the traditional way of lengthening telomeres, there could be a less drastic alternative. Stindl believes that it may be possible to elongate telomeres by increasing the activity of the enzyme telomerase in the embryo. So humans could perhaps boost biodiversity and save endangered species simply by elongating their telomeres. We may even be able to save ourselves when our own telomeres become critically short, making humans the first species to take hold of destiny and prevent their own extinction.
Indicators for human extinction Human telomeres are already relatively short. Are we likely to become extinct soon?
Cancer: Cancer incidence does seem to have increased, but it is hard to say whether this is due to longer lifespans, more pollution, or telomere erosion. The shortest telomere in humans occurs on the short arm of chromosome 17; most human cancers are affected by the loss of a tumour suppressor gene on this chromosome.
Immunodeficiency: Symptoms of an impaired immune system (like those seen in the Aids patients or the elderly) are related to telomere erosion through immune cells being unable to regenerate. Young people starting to suffer more from diseases caused by an impaired immune system might be a result of telomere shortening between generations.
Heart attacks and strokes: Vascular disease could be caused by cells lining blood vessels being unable to replace themselves - a potential symptom of telomere erosion.
Sperm counts: Reduction in male sperm count (the jury is still out on whether this is the case) may indicate severe telomere erosion, but other causes are possible.
And same if they do.
I like my theory better. It seems more in keeping with such of human nature as I have observed. I do remember that all those closed jar experiments with mealy bugs at the U. of Chicago showed that breeding rates tell the story inexorably--in a closed bottle. The fact that Neander and our occupancies have tended to overlap in space, but not in time, suggests to me that this isn't a closed bottle situation. I have long suspected that Neander was designed as a big game opportunist on the verge of ice sheets, while yours truly was designed as a, by comparison, relatively unarmed, sustained harvester on the veldt.--not a closed bottle, I conclude--and that still leaves neander looking like a prize taste treat, in my mind.
I guess the question is what you consider to be human. What makes highly genetically-engineered humans any less human than the free-range kind?
Not accurate. In the first place, humans are way to interbreed-centric, and way to unreliably haphazard committers of genocide for that to be the case, under most circumstances. I'd say the last genuine genocide that really took was probably in the Phillipines about a century ago, under our auspices, as reported by none other than Mark Twain.
Wars do not generally have as remarkable an effect on long term populations as seems to take hold in the popular imagination. All the casualties from the combined genocides and war losses of the twentieth century are a drop in the bucket compared to world population, or, indeed, the populations of the most effected countries, or, indeed, the delta's of population in that century. The biggest losers were crowded before WWII, and crowded after. Iraq was crowded before and crowded afterwards. Wars make headlines reliably, they don't deplete populations reliably.
Does that mean cheetah's are stupider than army ants?
Vaguely possible, but that doesn't make a compelling criteria here.
War is a high speed genetic test.
In a veldt with primative weapons, where the impact of failure can be felt in a genetically confined tribe, maybe. With nation-states engaged in carpet bombing, forced conscription and indiscriminate fields of fire? Not likely at all.
The Neanderthals must have been comparatively less genetically developed.
Not remotely demonstrated, even if it meant anything tangibly measureable. Survival is a measure of fitness to a given environment. A lock by the most "developed" gene pool is by no means assured.
We didn't hunt them for food.
Of course we did--we hunted anything available and digestable for food, including our sterling, if a bit stringy, selves.
My first guess would be: can't interbreed with us.
'Spose yer right about that. Time is a cold hearted bitch.
The explorer says: It's possible, but guess what, if I stay home I'll die anyway.
Tell that to the Native North Americans, who almost joined the Neanderthals recently if not for our mercy. And tell that to the Jewish population in Europe, where 2 out of 3 were removed from the gene pool 60 years ago. There must be a lasting genetic impact. Which Jews survived? Statistically it was more the Einsteins. On a general level, the Jewish people alive today have the reputation of being smarter than average people. The genocide they've experienced multiple times in their past is the genetic mechanism behind this.
If you look at plants and animals you'll see many variations of a theme. In humans there is no such variation. Those of us alive today are all remarkably the same. Obviously we don't share the same natural evolutionary process that other animals do. The difference is humans make war, and lots of it. We've killed off all the branches of the human genetic tree other than our own.
Oh Dear God, Please NO!
Arkansite could be our future!
Cro-Magnon Man had a bigger brain case than modern humans and consequently had a bigger brain and likely a higher IQ than modern humans. We are the product of the mixing that occurred with smaller brained peoples and Cro-Magnon.
What is that, a clown? Eaaash!
Some think we are Neanderthals.
They were called the Dark Ages because it was dark.
Popping the cork off Yellowstone will eliminate the population carrying capacity of the American farmer. I'm only 200 miles from Yellowstone in Pocatello. The local area is built on top of an old lava flow from the last time Yellowstone popped. We'll get about a 20 minute warning before the pyroclastic flow rolls though here.
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