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Biotech

The One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without 111

sciencehabit writes Today researchers unveiled the largest ever set of full genomes from a single population: Iceland. The massive project, carried out by a private company in the country, deCODE genetics, has yielded new disease risk genes, insights into human evolution, and a list of more than 1000 genes that people can apparently live without. The project also serves as a model for other countries' efforts to sequence their people's DNA for research on personalized medical care, says study leader Kári Stefánsson, deCODE's CEO. For example, the United States is planning to sequence the genomes of 1 million Americans over the next few years and use the data to devise individualized treatments.
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The One Thousand Genes You Could Live Without

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  • by mikaere ( 748605 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:38PM (#49341703)
    is not evidence of absence. I'll be keeping mine, thanks.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Presumably you can live without them because there are people who live without them and are fine for it.

      • by RoknrolZombie ( 2504888 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @12:14AM (#49342293) Homepage

        Yes, but other people are are largely stupid and completely insane.

        • Humanpedia deletionists are fine with that.
        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          DNA is a complex language that we are barely beginning to understand. Unlike CRISPr, this kind of thing actually is "hacking the genome" in a clueless fashion. I think this is an area where clearly some corrolary of the Hypocratic Oath should be in effect.

          If it's not broken, then don't try to fix it. Leave it alone. The best thing to do (barring any indications to the contrary) is nothing.

          I suspect that we are still at the "don't know how much we don't know" stage of genetics at this point.

      • The thing about genetic variation is that there's a minimum set you need to live and extras which make it easier to survive if conditions change (as well as others which may well be negative, such as ones which predispose the carrier to nasty cancers after the reproductive period ends)

        Just because you can live without them _now_ is not evidence they may not be useful later.

    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:56PM (#49342041)

      careful my dear replicant, those are kernel extensions injected into your DNA by the Sony reverse transciptase root kit. Evidently you are a replicant. Look for the Sony Copyright and your model number to see if you have a null pre-programmed life expectancy.

      • What I find staggering to comprehend is that your genome will easily fit on a CD. Even if you allow for all the midochondrial DNA, and epigenetic information it still would fit on a CD. If not all of it's needed maybe there's a Damn Small Linux version of your DNA that would fit on a floppy.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          Where do you get that? Wikipedia says that the human genome is 3,23473 billion base pairs. I mean, you could compress that to fit on a CD, but it won't fit at one byte per BP. Won't even fit at 2 bits per BP.

          And if we want to think of a BP like a letter in a piece of code, with an average programming code line length of say 15 non-whitespace characters, that corresponds to a program 216 million lines long. That'd be no little program...

          Of course, only a tiny fraction of our DNA codes for what we would consi

          • by Anonymous Coward

            I mean, you could compress that to fit on a CD, but it won't fit at one byte per BP.

            Speaking of compression, in a certain sense, a person only needs to know their differences from one of the standard reference sequences. But there's a subtle point: there are still parts of the human genome where we don't know the sequence (e.g. highly repetitive regions near the centromeres). For the well behaved (unique/non-repetitive) parts of the human genome, a person might have somewhere around one difference from the reference every hundred base pairs. So we're talking about very roughly tens of mill

          • Math (Score:4, Interesting)

            by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @09:37AM (#49344881)

            3 billion base pairs.

            Each base pair is 2 bits (AGC or T). A byte is 8 bits or 4 base pairs. so

            3E9 / 4 = 750 MegaBytes.

            A CD holds up to 900MB of data. No need to even compress the data, and it would be highly(!) compressible

            Q.E.D.

          • there are 3 billion (US definition of Billion not british) base pairs not 3 trillion.

            base pair = 2 bits (AGC or T).

            3billion bases = 6 billion bits = 750 megaBytes.

            A CD holds up to 900MB.

            So plenty of room even uncompressed.

          • > Of course, only a tiny fraction of our DNA codes for what we would consider to be the "interesting stuff".

            The hard part is tellling what's "junk" and what's useful data embedded in it. It's a bit like having a ROM dump and trying to work backwards from it without actually knowing what the CPU is. We know what some genes do, but not all of them, nor do we entirely know if they refer to offsets within the code as this changes when DNA is folded up as it is under normal operating conditions.

        • by hodet ( 620484 )

          And when I put it in a CD player, it plays Mozart. True story....

        • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

          3.3 Billion base pairs (nibbles) is not quite that small in terms of raw data. It will fit onto a DVD though.

    • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @12:26AM (#49342337)

      Yar, something as complex and time-tested as the human genome can surely be understood and manipulated by us with no unforeseen consequences.

  • by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @09:42PM (#49341721) Journal
    They said the same thing about "junk" DNA [wikipedia.org]. 10-15 years from now, it may no longer be apparent that you can do without them.
    • by s.petry ( 762400 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:11PM (#49341821)

      Today's fad is to try and come up with the "perfect" human. Always happy, 200 IQ, and the personality of a turnip as to not be offensive to anyone at any time. Of course they must be orange skinned, no hair, and no gender features (I hope you saw the South Park episode) because if anything visible marked one of them as "different" the project would be a failure. Perfect is quoted, because this perfection is severely subjective and the person who's ideal you are going to meet probably does not match your own.

      As you point out, there is no way to know what these apparently unused genes do until we start making modifications. These are pretty dangerous times we live in for many reasons. People believing they are smarter than billions of years of evolution gives me no assurance that these people have a clue, let alone care about modifying people.

      • +1 Eloquent. Apologies for the lack of mod points.
      • by turbidostato ( 878842 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:50PM (#49342019)

        "there is no way to know what these apparently unused genes do until we start making modifications."

        No way? sure?

        What if, for instance, you find a person that simply lacks a gene and still is perfectly functional?

        Now, go read the article.

        • What if, for instance, you find that that "perfectly functional" person has a rare modification to another gene that allows them to get by without the missing gene?

          What if, for instance, that gene is only required when you've been exposed to some common element or set of circumstances that the "perfectly functional" person just happened to avoid, by chance?

          What if, for instance, that "perfectly functional" individual isn't, in fact, perfectly functional? What if, for instance, any complications simply haven
          • Hah, I just read the article. Not even the article is sensationalistic - just the headline. The article clearly states that these people haven't been brought in for clinical tests yet, so they can't possibly know whether the subjects missing one of the genes in question are healthy or not.
        • What if that is the gene to be allergic to poison ivy, and we just didn't think to check for that? There's no way to know that a gene doesn't just serve some rarely-used purpose. What if it increases your intelligence by 1%, or some other feature that is affected by hundreds of other factors, like weight or hairline. Or maybe that gene's function is being suppressed by some epigenomic thing. Even the GP's suggestion of making changes isn't a winner, either. If the gene has a subtle purpose, changing it isn'
      • by Nemyst ( 1383049 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @11:40PM (#49342219) Homepage

        People believing they are smarter than billions of years of evolution gives me no assurance that these people have a clue, let alone care about modifying people.

        Putting evolution on a pedestal isn't much smarter. It's not some godlike entity which designed humans with a goal in mind, it's a very long, very sinuous process which often gives locally optimal but globally suboptimal results. There is no reason to think that humans, for some reason, can't do better.

        • by s.petry ( 762400 )

          I'll avoid the troll because you would lose that debate in a fair platform but alas, Slashdot is not such a platform... I will however address your insinuation that we know enough to be superior to nature. Science today is run by profits, not by philosophical standards. Ethics and Morality are not being questioned, only the outcome which yields the best profits receives funding and publication.

          Long time anti-GMO scientist Bill Nye is a great example, who after spending a month with Monsanto suddenly says

          • Humans can do it better. It's a fact proven by a few thousand years of doing it better and so much faster.

            I've lost too much faith in average intelligence to spend time in trying futilely to further explain to you why you're an imbecile.

            Ok, that's enough slashdot for today. I'm tired of this shit.

            • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

              The funny thing is that humans are "so good at it" that they don't really need the new fangled approaches with the higher risks. We have been doing "conventional" genetic manipulation for thousands of years. Compared to that, our relatively short experience with direct genetic manipulation really doesn't hold up.

              The "conventional" approach just takes longer and confers no monopoly benefits to any herbicide mongers.

          • That humans don't always do it better doesn't mean that humans can''t do it better.

            the worst fucks you can imagine end up rich and funding "science" for their own benefit.

            There are three available possibilities. People can fund science the harms them - why would they do that? People can fund science that has no effect on them - why would they do that? People can fund science that benefits them - a rational activity. People claiming that there's something wrong with the third alternative either aren't deep

          • by Nemyst ( 1383049 )
            A troll? Get off your high horse mate, you're just sounding petulant that someone dared disagree with you.
            • by s.petry ( 762400 )

              Your troll was this comment "It's not some godlike entity which designed humans with a goal in mind", though you probably know it and are just denying. Nuh uh in this post does not address or argue any of my points, which clearly demonstrate that it's not an issue of my ability or desire to debate. The issue is yours.

      • by pspahn ( 1175617 )

        These are pretty dangerous times we live in for many reasons. People believing they are smarter than billions of years of evolution gives me no assurance that these people have a clue ...

        And CERN? Doesn't it make sense that every black hole in the universe at one time was a really tiny black hole? Is it a good idea to just start making a bunch of those?

        • A black hole isn't a purse where you stuff things and are lost forever. They are energetic balloons that feast and starve, and eventually disappear in a pop. I wouldn't be surprised if collapsed super massive black holes would look like the Big Bang.

      • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

        1. Evolution is not smart.
        2. Evolution just picks for reproduction.

        Basicly you can drop dead after you reproduce a few kids and you are success by the standards of evolution.

    • by Cyberax ( 705495 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @01:57AM (#49342549)
      Most of the junk DNA is still... junk. Basically it's:

      1) 60% of the DNA is _definitely_ junk, as they consist of known repeated elements (LINEs, SINEs and others) and defunct genes. This is not an 'absence of evidence', we know exactly how this DNA has happened.

      2) Around 10% of DNA is structural. While this is technically not 'junk', this DNA does not encode anything useful.

      3) Around 5% are coding sections and regulatory elements.

      4) Another 5% of DNA appear to be stable under mutation pressure. So it might have some function.

      4) And finally we have around 20% of DNA whose purpose is not known, but we know that random mutations in it do not visibly affect the phenotype.
      • 60% of the DNA is _definitely_ junk, as they consist of known repeated elements (LINEs, SINEs and others) and defunct genes. This is not an 'absence of evidence', we know exactly how this DNA has happened.

        How do we know that those repetitions are not needed to accelerate (by parallel processing) some important process which, with a single expression, would otherwise be too slow to survive?

        We don't fully understand how the phenotype is developed from the genotype, and it very well might depend on statistical

        • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

          How do we know that those repetitions are not needed to accelerate (by parallel processing) some important process which, with a single expression, would otherwise be too slow to survive?

          You absolutely do NOT want them to be expressed. In fact, your genome tries really hard to suppress them - all they do is replicating themselves. That's the reason so much of your genome consists of them.

          Dependency on statistical properties is doubtful - organisms have more than 100x natural variance in genome sizes within fairly closely related species (just look at plants) without much outward difference. Even in animals, some species have a small and compact genomes (pufferfish) without much junk.

    • They said the same thing about "junk" DNA [wikipedia.org]. 10-15 years from now, it may no longer be apparent that you can do without them.

      I don't think that's likely. There is a subtle nuance here about what they are claiming. The is a very distinct difference between "genes you can live without" versus something like "these gene are junk and have no function". The claim that you can live without a certain gene is easily proven; find people who have lived to adulthood and are carrying two copies of deletions/disruptions in the same gene (so they have no functional copies of that gene). This is actually not that surprising as your body ha

  • If they have not yet done deletion experiments they can't say that we could "apparently" live without those genes.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @10:07PM (#49341805)
      RTFA... they found people with double deletions.
      • by Chikungunya ( 2998457 ) on Wednesday March 25, 2015 @11:59PM (#49342267)

        Any of those genes could encode a protein whose function can be done by another protein that other people may or not express. Obviously the people identified did not need "that" specific protein to do its work but it may be completely possible that a majority of people do not have the compensating gene.

        Until experimentation is done to evaluate the need of those genes you can say that those "may" not be indispensable, but saying that apparently they are not needed is too strong a conclusion for the work done.

        • So you put your sequences into a database and are a few queries away from determining if everyone with a double deletion in one position always has an active copy of a gene only likewise required in the converse situation. I've not read the original source but I imagine they already did this. Your username implies virology background, why would you think they would be smart enough to do the first step and not smart enough for the second? The second requires a more robust dataset but isn't really any hard
          • Because having a copy of a gene is only one possibility of compensation, in processes like innate immune response it is common to have more than one pathway of activation, and to a certain point the presence of one protein can compensate the lack of another even if they are not structurally similar. A blast search can't be used in that case to rule out the need of that specific gene in other people. I am simply saying that proving that some people can survive without some genes without really having studied

    • I believe they mean that they have identified people who are living without those genes.
    • What is this about marking people down as 'troll' or similar for expressing a slight note of doubt? This is petty, at best - either reply with something intelligent or ignore it.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        What is this about marking people down as 'troll' or similar for expressing a slight note of doubt? This is petty, at best - either reply with something intelligent or ignore it.

        We need a -1 "Didn't RTFA" mod.

        • We need a -1 "Didn't RTFA" mod.

          Or a more tolerant outlook. TFA may not always be all that interessant to read, and anyway, the point is, should we mod people down for being too lazy to RTFA, when we are too lazy to type in a proper comment?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Reminds me of taking out that missing variable in the source code that you figure isn't being used for anything, except there's no search function to find out what it impacts.

  • First of all, this is an amazing study. How surprising is that we can live without certain genes? Not that surprising. We have done numerous experiments where we have knocked out genes in mice and other organisms and they do just fine. There is no reason why it should be any different in humans. Keep in mind that these variations in the sequence are predicted to disable the gene, but not verified to do so. For example variants that introduce stop codons in the middle of a gene are typically predicted to di
  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Thursday March 26, 2015 @02:36AM (#49342645) Homepage Journal

    Don't delete anything, comment it out! You never know, you might need to put it back.

    https://www.gnu.org/fun/jokes/... [gnu.org]

  • Up next, the four limbs you can live without.

  • "Unused gene" may be the "CRC" code.
  • Gene Roddenberry....no
    Gene Simmons..........no
    Gene Wilder...............no
    Gene Siskel................yes
    Gene Hackman..........no


    this could take a while......
  • I'm dumping mine immediately. That'll tip the scale in my favor!
  • No, I am not saying "believe in God over evolution." I am just saying that looking at DNA without considering the possibility of intelligent design is myopic.

    At least some DNA studies should assume intelligent design.

    Start looking at DNA and everything that interacts with it as a programming language created by something intelligent.

    In a programming language, there is code and data. Code contains all the method and functions to do small amounts of work. Data is used or acted upon by the code. Data can be re

  • That sounds just like a new programmer faced with working on legacy code. The first thing they want to do is delete everything that they don't understand!

    If we didn't need it, it would not be there. There is no room in nature for wasted effort.

    They said the same thing about the appendix, for decades, but now we know it's not true. The appendix is necessary for propper digestion, look it up...

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