First Lab Demonstration That the Ability To Evolve Can Itself Evolve 72
ananyo writes "Research on Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease, shows that the capacity to evolve can itself be the target of natural selection. B. burgdorferi can cause a chronic infection even if its animal host mounts a strong immune response — evading those defenses by tweaking the shape and expression of its main surface antigen, VIsE. A series of unexpressed genetic sequences organized into 'cassettes' recombine with the VIsE gene, changing the resulting protein such that it escapes detection by the host's immune system. The researchers studied the molecular evolution of the cassettes' genetic sequences in 12 strains of B. burgdorferi. They found that natural selection seemed to favor bacteria with more genetic variability within their cassettes, and hence a greater capacity to generate different versions of the antigen. 'Greater diversity among the cassettes in itself shouldn't be a selective advantage considering they aren't expressed and don't do anything else,' says lead author Dustin Brisson. 'But we did find evidence of selection, so the question is: what else could it be for besides evolvability?'"
All I know is... (Score:4, Funny)
My cassettes all migrated to CD's, and then from there to digital audio.
So extrapolating from that it seems the end game for all evolution is becoming beings of pure energy, DRM optional.
evolution has no goal (Score:3)
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Matter-energy conversion principle says that you already are pure energy, just that some of that energy is expressed as mass.
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My cassettes all migrated to CD's, and then from there to digital audio.
So extrapolating from that it seems the end game for all evolution is becoming beings of pure energy, DRM optional.
Not trying to do the "one up" thing here, but IMHO, the end game for evolution would be to become beings of pure information. Energy and matter are merely vehicles to store and transfer information content. We would probably get equally frustrated with the limitations of existing as energy beings as we currently do with the flaccid biological bags that we exist in.
And your DRM comment is indeed something to ponder on - the artificial copy protection mechanisms that we have slapped on top of our existence -
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Its from bits [wikipedia.org] - - we already are beings of pure information. It's information all the way down and all the way up, even us lumpy bags of dirty water.
Common sense (Score:4, Insightful)
It just seems common sense to me that if evolution can/does affect every mechanism in a living organism, then the mechanism governing the ability to evolve must itself be included.
Re:Common sense (Score:5, Insightful)
exactly_research 'begs the question' (Score:4, Insightful)
yes.
these researchers created a *false distinction* in their research question
They took what you call 'the mechanism governing the ability to evolve' and found a behavior in nature that they could drive a false dichotomy wedge into to create a *factor* where none exists. Here is where they invent the distinction out of *thin air* based on their personal opinion:
highlighted portion is **pure speculation** and forms the leverage for their whole experiment...if that ***opinion*** by the research is wrong the whole thing sinks...and it is just that one dude's opinion...which is not how a scientific research question is formed
bottom line: the process they describe, the bacteria being selected b/c some are more likely to survive is absolutely 100% main line accepted theory...their work does not in any way represent a new or different behavior in life
disclaimer: I am not a creation science supporter...i hate it...but I also hate equally the notion that **science can prove God does or does not exist**...looking at bacteria to somehow 'prove' evolution makes 'god' a delusion is itself a delusion.
science cannot prove **OR** disprove something abstract like a supernatural 'god'
trolls bring it... (Score:2)
I made a ****disclaimer**** to head off common trolling subjects...
seems like I need to adapt my anti-troll comment strategy a bit considering your comment
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It certainly is the way science is done. It's called an hypothesis.
And yes, this research isn't seeking to overturn current dogma. It's seeking to support it.
You are completely missing the basis and point of this research. It's not all that controversial or unusual. God may or may not still exist and TFA isn't anywhere near trying to bring up that question.
piss in a jar with Richard Dawkins (Score:2)
I can piss in a jar and call it a "hypothesis"....
That...doesn't...necessarily...make...it...so....
The hypothesis is just one glaring area where the **false distinction** error is evident.
It is an error in logic....based on a false distinction that invents a factor to test where none should logically exist in an area of a theory that has been proven.
Another way to say this is, proving that 'the ability to evolve' itself has the ability to ev
that was my point (Score:2)
you know what else there's 'a lot' of?
random bullshit masquerading as scientific research
the way you felt when you read those '...'s is exactly the same frustration I feel when I have to read about another bullshit 'research' study
your arguments will never work or not work (Score:2)
here's why:
the definition of 'god' changes in indescribable ways depending on **which person you ask**...and of course **when you ask that person**
any 'CLAIMS' made by religious people about what a **supernatural** god does are not provable or disprovable by any **natural** means...if X religious nutjob says 'god makes it rain' and you prove them wrong by explaining the natural process of rainfall, the religious nutjob can
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I agree with you, and try to explain it as two questions normally. "Is there a God" and "Is there a Theology". Numerous atheists mix the two arguments to claim that there is no God. Numerous Religious people mix the two arguments to claim that there is a God. Philosophers don't delve very deep into the Theology portion until they have a reasonable answer for having a God.
I almost laugh at times at how an atheist appears to be as much of an evangelist as the Jehovah's Witness you can't get to leave your
interesting distinction (Score:2)
I like how you break it down to two identifiable concepts and go from there.
That's a good way not to alienate them while you fix their illogical way of thinking ;)
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I realize that this is perhaps difficult, but belief in Theology requires the belief in a God first. The latter is a Philosophical question which can not be answered by science as the person mentioned. They never mentioned a Theology, and your bringing that up distorts the point.
If a person comes to a philosophical conclusion that there is a "God", "Creator" or what ever they wish to call it, then belief in a Theology will normally follow. You don't have to agree with their conclusion of having a God, bu
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Why is this suprising? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I always thought this was the acknowledged importance of sexual reproduction as well: It increases the variability.
There's even a term for it: Requisite Variety (Score:4, Informative)
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Damn, and here I thought the point of sexual reproduction was the sex.
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I'm also surprised about the surprise. After all, the evolutionary success concerns not the individual, but the whole set of descendants. A higher mutation rate (as long as it is low enough to not threaten the reproduction at all) means that the organism will be able to move more quickly adapt to the environment (and the immune system of the host is actively changing, therefore being able to adapt quickly would be a major advantage). On the other hand, organisms which are already well-adapted to an essentia
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I think it's more that the evolutionary pressure is not currently present, so what you're seeing is a genetic holdover from past generations. Imagine you're witnessing the evolution of the giraffe, in years of drought the tallest survive as they can reach leaves higher up on trees than others. What do you see in rainy years when there's plenty food lower down, do you expect giraffes to keep getting taller? Why not, because even though it may seem pointless and irrational in this generation maybe in three ge
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because history has given it reason to and it'll keep selecting for it until there's a stronger selection pressure to the contrary.
No, that's not how evolution works.
In rainy years, they all live. They all reproduce. And taller giraffes will not reproductively fare any better than shorter ones, everything else being equal.
"Selection" is not a concious effort, nor even a subconcious effort, nor even an instinctual biological response at a cellular level. There is no "selection in anticipation" of some future
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Wasn't Lyme disease created in a lab by humans, in Lyme, CT? I'm not sure this is the best example.
Um No. The area of Lyme/Old Lyme, CT is where is was identified. They didn't originally even know that it was a tick-born bacterial infection.
Re:Lab (Score:5, Funny)
Obama's Social Security Number begins 042, a which is only issued to Connecticut residents.
This Social Security Number was issued in the late 1970's.
Lyme Disease was first identified in Connecticut in.... you guess it... the late 1970's.
Coincidence? I THINK NOT!
Obviously Obama created Lyme Disease in a lab in the 1970's, as part of his plan to manufacture fake evidence of evolution, to turn Americans away from God, to ensure he'd be able to usurp the Presidency of the United States after the new Millennium arrived.
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Foxnews has immediately offered you a job
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Foxnews has immediately offered you a job
Screw that, no way in hell I'd take a job working for the Liberal Mainstream Media.
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Well yeah. Why wouldn't it? (Score:1)
Any and all inherited traits can evolve, including the capacity for evolution, itself.
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Any and all inherited traits can evolve, including the capacity for evolution, itself.
Wouldn't that imply that there could possibly be creatures that don't have the capacity for evolution? That does not seem correct to me as even a clone can evolve through cosmic rays hitting the DNA directly. Still counts as evolution.
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Individual organisms don't evolve. Only species and populations evolve. You're talking about mutation.
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Actually I'm talking about a cosmic ray hitting the DNA in the egg or sperm cell of the individual. Or if it was a pure cloning species, then the clone formed from the mutated cells. Both of these would still be considered evolution. Mutation is a cause of evolution isn't it? Evolution just needs changes in the individuals and a selection pressure.
I just think it is crazy to say that evolution can evolve. That's like saying change can change. It's meaningless. The rate that the species can evolve might vary
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That's like saying change can change. It's meaningless.
That's exactly what I told my calculus prof.
Simon G. Powell (Score:1)
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"He goes into depth on evolution, and how it's inherently intelligent"
I can't fathom why so many people buy into this junk.
Because it's an easy intellectual compromise to make.
Heretics, all of them (Score:2)
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Not anymore. G0d evolved.
Soon in the news (Score:2)
The ability to evolve of the ability to evolve may actually evolve.
Evolveablity could be a disadvantage! (Score:2)
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Sounds like other things related to rates of change:
velocity
acceleration
jerk
jounce
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Paradoxically, that would require a miracle.
Well... Sex exists (Score:2)
And it didn't at once time. But when it was developed there was an explosion in the rate of evolution. Because sexual recombination is a superior form of evolution to simple mutation.
That said... I'd like to think that genetic engineering is the next step after sex in the evolution of evolution.
That is... intelligent design. Organisms making themselves into what they want to be... deliberately.