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Author Topic:   Examples of new information
dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


Message 1 of 31 (656312)
03-16-2012 12:30 PM


I would like some examples of how the process of natural selection and mutations created new information. This must not occur by playing around with gene switching.
Preferably this should occur by mutating a protein to gain a new function.
Examples must be specific in exactly what gene was mutated, what the gene does, and what it did.

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dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


Message 3 of 31 (656314)
03-16-2012 7:30 PM
Reply to: Message 2 by Admin
03-16-2012 2:17 PM


I am not too stingy with the definition of information.
I am specifically looking for a novel adaptation that performs a new task through natural selection and mutations. These mutations could for example change the DNA coding for an enzyme, in order for the enzyme to perform another useful function.
One can also show mutational adaptations conforming to information theory.
This link shows some mathematics behind information theory.
info-theory.nb

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dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


Message 5 of 31 (656316)
03-16-2012 9:19 PM
Reply to: Message 4 by Admin
03-16-2012 8:46 PM


I have no clue, which is why I gave the first definition: Performing some new function not involved with gene switching. That should be a lot easier.

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dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


Message 7 of 31 (656318)
03-16-2012 10:51 PM
Reply to: Message 5 by dan4reason
03-16-2012 9:19 PM


How do you know that this came about by mutation instead of gene switching or from plasmids?

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dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


Message 9 of 31 (656320)
03-17-2012 4:20 PM
Reply to: Message 8 by Admin
03-17-2012 7:46 AM


My issue with the example is that I want to make sure that adaptation actually came about by natural selection and mutations, not something else.
I not necessarily looking for mutations that make new proteins, I am looking for mutations that make proteins with new functions.
I can leave out the information part, and just ask for the above.

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dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


(1)
Message 21 of 31 (656409)
03-18-2012 2:45 PM
Reply to: Message 12 by Dr Adequate
03-17-2012 5:13 PM


quote:
In many experiments, we can check this very easily. We can see that gene switching is not a possibility by looking at the actual DNA sequence and finding the mutation; and we can check that it is not a result of lateral gene transfer (of plasmids or anything else) by using a clonal line --- that is, you do the experiment starting with just one bacterium, yeast cell, or whatever.
That seems reasonable, however we need to be sure that the mutation is actually in a gene that codes a protein.
quote:
In the case of the nylon-eating bacteria which Percy mentioned, the first condition holds but not the second, since this development occurred in nature and not in the laboratory. (However, one might in lieu of it consider the fact that prior to the invention of nylon, a nylon-eating bacterium would have starved to death, so common sense suggests that the development of the gene must involve a novel mutation.)
How do you know that the enzyme that nylon eating bacterium used to break down nylon wasn't formerly used for something else?
quote:
However, there are plenty of experiments where both conditions apply --- we can identify the mutation, and we can be certain that the founder of the population didn't have it. One example would be Lenski's experiment, which you may have read about.
I could not find any info on the specific mutation that allowed these bacteria to digest citrate. How do you know it was not a mutation to a gene controller?
quote:
Afterthought added by edit: another way we can rule out gene switching is if we can watch the process of change and know that it didn't happen immediately. If it was a pre-programmed response to environmental factors, then it would take place on introduction to the organism into the new environment, whereas if the change is a result of genuine evolution this will hardly ever be the case. So it is not always necessary to look at the gene directly.
That seems reasonable but it doesn't rule out gene switching.
quote:
For example, when we watch the evolution of multicellularity in chlorella, not only does it not happen instantly, but we can observe several steps in the process as the first crude mutation is progressively refined to the optimal form. If this change was pre-programmed, then we'd see every organism in the experiment switch to the optimal form within the first generation, would we not? If it looks like evolution and quacks like evolution, it's probably evolution.
You mention how a crude mutation is modified to produce multicellular. This example seems like the silver bullet I am looking for. What type of genes were these mutations happening in?
I am currently exploring the evolution of decreased risk of stroke and heart disease in some people. I will try to explore your examples further but I will admit genetics is not my thing.
Apolipoprotein AI Mutations and Information
Thanks for the examples!
Edited by Admin, : Fix quote.

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dan4reason
Junior Member (Idle past 4164 days)
Posts: 25
Joined: 01-03-2010


Message 26 of 31 (656882)
03-22-2012 7:31 PM
Reply to: Message 13 by Coragyps
03-17-2012 6:24 PM


Currently being edited.
Edited by dan4reason, : No reason given.

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