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Computational Geneticists Revisit A Mystery In Evolution
Science Daily ^ | Date:Posted 8/8/2002 | Editorial Staff

Posted on 08/16/2002 10:27:48 AM PDT by vannrox


Reprinted from ScienceDaily Magazine ...

Source:             Stanford University
Date Posted:    Thursday, August 08, 2002
Web Address:   http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/08/020807065302.htm


Computational Geneticists Revisit A Mystery In Evolution

You and I are both human, with hearts that beat at roughly the same rates, nervous systems that churn out just about the same chemicals, bodies that are similar enough to peg us as people and not chimpanzees. But despite the fact that we both belong to the same species, our genes are pretty different. Only half the genes are identical among siblings who aren't twins, for example, and for most of us, the degree of genetic relatedness is much smaller. Why, biologists first asked 60 years ago, do members of the same species have such similar traits, or phenotypes, despite the fact that they have such diverse genes, or genotypes? They couldn't fully explore that question until now - when, aided by computers, they can sift through mountains of experimental data. In the June 24 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, senior research scientist Aviv Bergman of Stanford's Center for Computational Genetics and Biological Modeling (CCGBM) and postdoctoral scholar Mark Siegal of the Department of Biological Sciences provide a surprisingly simple answer.

Invariant traits - such as having five fingers to a hand instead of four or six - don't become universal because Nature has somehow selected special genotypes that faithfully direct development of the trait under a wide variety of conditions, the researchers argue. Instead, they show, it is the complexity of our genotypes - the many genes that interact in networks during development, inhibiting and activating each other and even regulating themselves - that provides fidelity. Indeed, Bergman and Siegal show that any functional genetic network that is complex enough has this built-in property of fidelity. This is true whether natural selection on the phenotype produced by the network during development is strong, weak or absent. Natural selection may be important in shaping traits that aid in reproduction and survival, but Bergman and Siegal show that it doesn't matter much during development, when, biologically speaking, all roads lead to Rome.

''We're taking a more sophisticated view of evolution as a process,'' says Bergman, who co-directs the CCGBM with Marcus Feldman, the Burnet C. and Mildred Finley Wohlford Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences. ''We need to take into account not only the genetic system by which the hereditary information is passed on from one generation to the next, but also the developmental system by which the information contained in the fertilized egg is expanded into the functioning structure of the reproducing individuals.'' Researchers at CCGBM, established in 1997 with a grant from the Paul G. Allen Foundation, conduct interdisciplinary research into quantitative problems of biology.

''Evolutionary biologists tend to think of natural selection as the first possibility of a mechanism for explaining most things that they observe,'' says Siegal. ''So it's natural that the first attempts to explain this disconnect between great genotypic variation and little phenotypic variation was through natural selection.''

In 1942, even before it was known that genes were made of DNA, British biologist Conrad H. Waddington coined the term canalization to describe the ''funneling'' that occurs during development to produce just a few end products, or traits, such as the beautifully patterned wings of a butterfly. He envisioned development proceeding the way a ball rolls down a mountain, traveling mainly along well-worn grooves and having the option of rolling one way or the other at only a few forks in the road. The ball rolls to the right, and the result is, say, development of an elaborately patterned forewing. It rolls left, and a different-looking hindwing forms. The puzzle that attracted Bergman and Siegal was not so much the nature of the genetic switches that operate at the ''forks'' but instead what causes the ''grooves'' that keep development faithfully rolling along when both environmental disturbance and genetic mutation could potentially set it off course.

''You can throw a lot of insults at an organism - either genetic ones by mutation or environmental ones by changing the temperature or changing the chemical composition of the food - and in spite of all of those insults, development is pretty robust,'' explains Siegal, who also conducts evolutionary research on fruit flies in the laboratory of Bruce Baker, the Dr. Morris Herzstein Professor in Biology. From larvae incubated in a lab at 18 or 28 degrees Celsius, for instance, similar-looking flies will develop, even though chemical reactions are twice as fast at hotter temperatures than colder ones. The developmental pathway and end products (traits) seem immune to such insults.

Indeed, some biologists argue that canalization may have evolved as a response to environmental change. Under this scenario, Bergman explains, ''When mechanisms evolved to dampen the effect of environmental variation on the phenotype, as a side effect they also happened to buffer genetic variation.'' But the results of Bergman and Siegal suggest that environmental perturbation is not necessary for canalization to evolve. ''We don't know all the details of what makes that funneling process work,'' Siegal admits. ''But our contribution to it is giving one possible reason that hasn't in our view been considered enough.''

Scientists used to think that developmental fidelity evolved via natural selection, principally through survival and reproduction of organisms with redundant genetic systems - that is, ones with copies of important gene sequences. But Siegal and Bergman's results indicate that redundancy may only be one small manifestation of a bigger theme: the complexity of gene networks. In short, more complex systems are more resistant to change in their outputs.

''It is typically assumed that important properties of organisms are crafted by natural selection,'' says Dmitri Petrov, assistant professor of biological sciences. ''What Siegal and Bergman show is that robustness in the face of mutation, or canalization, may be a byproduct of complexity itself and therefore that robustness may be only very indirectly a product of natural selection.''

Says Siegal: ''It might be that the complex nature of the genetic system itself is going to give you canalization independent of natural selection. This complexity goes beyond mere redundancy, incorporating all kinds of elaborate connections in the gene network.''

That doesn't mean natural selection doesn't play an important role. Continues Petrov: ''Natural selection has shaped the genetic networks of complex organisms so that they produce appropriate phenotypes - the more highly interconnected these networks are, the more robust the corresponding phenotypes are. The importance of this result is that it shifts the focus of the field away from abstract models of natural selection and toward actual genetic networks. In so doing, it will provide a new perspective for analyzing and understanding the current outpouring of genetic data in model organisms.''

A new perspective could prove useful - because invoking natural selection to explain the disparity between genotypic and phenotypic variation has several problems. First, a prerequisite for canalization is genetic variation - but if selection for a trait is too strong, it shrinks the gene pool. ''Once that limits the genetic variation, it removes the pressure to have canalization,'' Bergman says.

Second, modeling has shown that if nature ''selects'' a trait, canalization evolves - but very, very slowly, over millions and millions of generations. ''When you start thinking about time scales like that,'' Siegal says, ''you have to wonder whether any evolutionary force can be consistent over that amount of time to actually cause the outcome that you see.''

And third, what's ''optimal'' today may not be optimal tomorrow. Says Bergman: ''As [scientist Stephen Jay] Gould said, as the environment changes what was once fit may not be fit today, and with further change in the environment could become fit again.''

For their project, Siegal and Bergman chose to model an abstract system that is important in the development of most organisms - transcription factors, or proteins that regulate the expression of genes. In the model they developed, 10 genes each encode a protein that in principle is capable of regulating the expression of each of the other nine genes, as well as itself. To compare the complexity of the abstract system with that of an actual system, consider that yeast, for example, has about 6,000 genes, around 500 of which regulate each other.

Bergman and Siegal's collaboration comes at a time when - thanks to the use of microarray technology in a new field known as functional genomics - scientists have greater knowledge about sophisticated gene interactions during development. This technology helps scientists analyze the functions of genes in an organism's genome - all the genes that make up its genetic blueprint - and allows them to look closer than ever before at the intricacies of heredity. So, although the song remains the same as that sung by previous giants of biology, such as Darwin and Gould, Bergman and Siegal are studying the individual musical notes to better understand how evolution's song plays out.

''The evolution of genetic robustness is a whole new game now that we have the results from Drs. Bergman and Siegal,'' says Gunter Wagner, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale University. ''[It] shows that selection against lethal mutations [those that make the network incapable of producing any phenotype] can lead to the evolution of mutational robustness of any character state, even in the absence of stabilizing selection for that character state itself.''

Says Siegal: ''In many ways canalization was sort of a smokescreen that was dividing evolutionary biologists and developmental biologists. The developmental biologists were studying their genetic networks and the evolutionary biologists were in the abstract saying, 'Well, these networks must have evolved to produce certain properties, like robustness in the face of mutational insult.' But since we have shown in our model that it's actually the nature of the developmental system that can give you this property, they're really not two separate things to study. They're the same thing to study. I think a lot will come out of looking at actual genetic networks and how the structure of those networks gives them the property of being robust.''



Copyright © 1995-2002 ScienceDaily Magazine | Email: editor@sciencedaily.com


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bible; computational; crevolist; discovery; diversity; evolution; gene; geneticist; human; mystery; nature; phenotypes; science
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Very Interesting.
1 posted on 08/16/2002 10:27:49 AM PDT by vannrox
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To: vannrox
As a special favor, can you find the main point and restate it in a single sentence of 50 words or less?

As Wolfram's Principle of Complexity evolves, it will probably cover all this field of genetics quite well and simply.

2 posted on 08/16/2002 10:34:32 AM PDT by RightWhale
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To: vannrox
In the June 24 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences...

It's the August 6 issue. There is not June 24 issue.

3 posted on 08/16/2002 11:02:58 AM PDT by tallhappy
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To: RightWhale
I think the second paragraph pretty much sums up the general idea.

EBUCK

4 posted on 08/16/2002 11:04:45 AM PDT by EBUCK
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To: EBUCK; *crevo_list
Bump to list.

EBUCK

5 posted on 08/16/2002 11:06:47 AM PDT by EBUCK
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To: RightWhale
From the actual PNAS article:

...selection for developmental stability, independent of selection for particular phenotypes, is sufficient to evolve insensitivity to mutation.

6 posted on 08/16/2002 11:09:52 AM PDT by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
...selection for developmental stability, independent of selection for particular phenotypes, is sufficient to evolve insensitivity to mutation

Is that the main statement? It could be. According to Wolfram we could be looking at the root phenomenon for all these years and not see; although once we see, it will be obvious.

7 posted on 08/16/2002 11:14:38 AM PDT by RightWhale
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To: RightWhale
I was thinking "New Kind of Science" while reading this. I think they are saying that a wide variety of programs yield similar results, something that appears to mirror Wolfram's findings. In other words, the robustness of genes in not producing lots of freaks is not a product of evolution, but a product of how the interpretation of genes works.
8 posted on 08/16/2002 11:25:37 AM PDT by eno_
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To: RightWhale
As a special favor, can you find the main point and restate it in a single sentence of 50 words or less?

"In the real world, reducible complexity is far more useful, stable and important than irreducible complexity."

9 posted on 08/16/2002 11:36:05 AM PDT by Physicist
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To: eno_
Perhaps if we drop back to some of the early thought on this:

In Experiments in Plant Hybridization (1865)

by Gregor Mendel

there is discussion of character, hybrid, and generations, but it was too early for genes and chromosomes.

"Gärtner, by the results of these transformation experiments, was led to oppose the opinion of those naturalists who dispute the stability of plant species and believe in a continuous evolution of vegetation. He perceives in the complete transformation of one species into another an indubitable proof that species are fixed with limits beyond which they cannot change."

We might be getting wrapped around the gene axle.

10 posted on 08/16/2002 11:43:14 AM PDT by RightWhale
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To: Physicist
reducible complexity

We'll add that term to our Wolfram search list.

11 posted on 08/16/2002 11:44:57 AM PDT by RightWhale
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To: Physicist
Oh now that helps!

And all the time I just thought they were telling me that once something is set in motion it is more likely to continue (or stop) rather than turn a corner.
12 posted on 08/16/2002 11:45:43 AM PDT by norton
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To: eno_; Physicist
You might find that Stuart Kaufman's "Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution" is even more on point here than the Wolfram book. Kaufman applies the conceptual toolbox of statistical mechanics to look at the evolution of complex systems.

Table of Contents

Themes
1 Conceptual Outline of Current Evolutionary Theory 3
Pt. I Adaptation on the Edge of Chaos 29
2 The Structure of Rugged Fitness Landscapes 33
3 Biological Implications of Rugged Fitness Landscapes 69
4 The Structure of Adaptive Landscapes Underlying Protein Evolution 121
5 Self-Organization and Adaptation in Complex Systems 173
6 The Dynamics of Coevolving Systems 237
Pt. II The Crystallization of Life 285
7 The Origins of Life: A New View 287
8 The Origin of a Connected Metabolism 343
9 Hypercycles and Coding 357
10 Random Grammars: Models of Functional Integration and Transformation 369
Pt. III Order and Ontogeny 407
11 The Architecture of Genetic Regulatory Circuits and Its Evolution 411
12 Differentiation: The Dynamical Behaviors of Genetic Regulatory 441
13 Selection for Cell Types 523
14 Morphology, Maps, and the Spatial Ordering of Integrated Tissues

13 posted on 08/16/2002 11:56:10 AM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: vannrox
genetic bump for later
14 posted on 08/16/2002 7:48:18 PM PDT by DBtoo
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To: The Great Satan
You won't find a creationist post like this.
15 posted on 08/16/2002 8:33:53 PM PDT by DaGman
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To: vannrox
it is the complexity of our genotypes - the many genes that interact in networks during development, inhibiting and activating each other and even regulating themselves - that provides fidelity. Indeed, Bergman and Siegal show that any functional genetic network that is complex enough has this built-in property of fidelity.

Yup, a complete refutation of evolution! Mutations don't count! So what are evolutionists going to come up with next? Miracles? That is essentially all they have ever come up with - excuses and leaps of faith. In the meantime science keeps showing on a daily basis how their little theories are total nonsense.

16 posted on 08/16/2002 10:37:26 PM PDT by gore3000
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To: The Great Satan
Regardless of what Worlfram or Kaufman may say, you cannot develop, you cannot alter a program stochaistically as evolution requires. The developmental process of an organism is definitely a program and could not have evolved at random. Long disertations about what could be, might be do not disprove clearly established scientific facts.
17 posted on 08/16/2002 10:43:16 PM PDT by gore3000
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To: gore3000
You are a complete igoramus who wouldn't understand a scientific fact if it bit you in the ass. Go back to your Bible Study, you pathetic bumpkin.
18 posted on 08/16/2002 10:50:10 PM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: Physicist
"In the real world, reducible complexity is far more useful, stable and important than irreducible complexity."

That may be your belief. That may a requirement for evolution also. However, the article does not say that. Also, everything we keep learning about life, shows that it is more complex than before. Who would have thought that we had duplicate sets of genes which are randomly passed on to the next generation? Who would have thought that genes were so utterly complex? Who would have thought that the entire organism was so closely interrelated? Certainly not Darwin, certainly not evolutionists.

19 posted on 08/16/2002 10:53:03 PM PDT by gore3000
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To: gore3000; Physicist
The developmental process of an organism is definitely a program and could not have evolved at random.

Who would have thought that we had duplicate sets of genes which are randomly passed on to the next generation?

I'm sure I'm going to be sorry I asked, but which is it? Random or not random? Or are you saying an organism's DNA is not part of its development?

20 posted on 08/16/2002 11:02:58 PM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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