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Old 03-16-2002, 09:39 PM   #21
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DNAunion: I have read in one source (though I don't know what it was) that a tubulin-like protein was detected in a prokaryote, and that although there was no true cytoskeleton, there were some "fibers" of some sort in the cytoplasm. … So, does anyone know if is it now fully accepted that there are "ancestral tubulins", shall we say, in prokaryotes? And if so, does anyone have any recent references?
Quote:
Nic: Look up 'ftsZ' and 'tubulin' on the web or pubmed, you'll get lots of stuff. It's as close to consensus as things get AFAICT
DNAunion: Thanks. I looked up ftsZ and got a lot of good stuff.

“Tubulin from Ftsz”; “actin from MreB”

Quote:
”It was thought until recently that bacteria lack the actin or tubulin filament networks that organize eukaryotic cytoplasm. However, we show here that the bacterial MreB protein assembles into filaments with a subunit repeat similar to that of F-actin-the physiological polymer of eukaryotic actin. By elucidating the MreB crystal structure we demonstrate that MreB and actin are very similar in three dimensions. Moreover, the crystals contain protofilaments, allowing visualization of actin-like strands at atomic resolution. The structure of the MreB protofilament is in remarkably good agreement with the model for F-actin, showing that the proteins assemble in identical orientations. The actin-like properties of MreB explain the finding that MreB forms large fibrous spirals under the cell membrane of rod-shaped cells, where they are involved in cell-shape determination. Thus, prokaryotes are now known to possess homologues both of tubulin, namely FtsZ, and of actin.” (van den Ent F, Amos LA, Lowe J, Prokaryotic origin of the actin cytoskeleton, Nature 2001 Sep 6;413(6851):39-44)
DNAunion: More interesting, ftsZ (the probably precursor to eukaryotic tubulin) is not confined only to prokaryotes. It is also found in eukaryotes: well, in eukaryotic organelles (chloroplasts and mitochondria).

Quote:
”Of all the proteins involved in prokaryotic cell division FtsZ is one of the earliest acting and most widely distributed, being found in all but a few species. We discuss several recent discoveries of FtsZ in eukaryotic cells and the protein's role in the division of chloroplasts and mitochondria, organelles that are of bacterial origin.” (Gilson PR, Beech PL, Cell division protein FtsZ: running rings around bacteria, chloroplasts and mitochondria, Res Microbiol 2001 Jan-Feb;152(1):3-10)
DNAunion: The ftsZ genes are found in the nuclear genome, not in the genomes of the organelles. After transcription and translation, the proteins then are targeted to the organelles.

Quote:
”Among the events that accompanied the evolution of chloroplasts from their endosymbiotic ancestors was the host cell recruitment of the prokaryotic cell division protein FtsZ to function in chloroplast division. FtsZ, a structural homologue of tubulin, mediates cell division in bacteria by assembling into a ring at the midcell division site. In higher plants, two nuclear-encoded forms of FtsZ, FtsZ1 and FtsZ2, play essential and functionally distinct roles in chloroplast division…”( Vitha S, McAndrew RS, Osteryoung KW, FtsZ ring formation at the chloroplast division site in plants, J Cell Biol 2001 Apr 2;153(1):111-20)
DNAunion: Ftsz in plant chloroplasts may form a cytoskeleton

Quote:
”It has been a long-standing dogma in life sciences that only eukaryotic organisms possess a cytoskeleton. Recently, this belief was questioned by the finding that the bacterial cell division protein FtsZ resembles tubulin in sequence and structure and, thus, may be the progenitor of this major eukaryotic cytoskeletal element. Here, we report two nuclear-encoded plant ftsZ genes which are highly conserved in coding sequence and intron structure. Both their encoded proteins are imported into plastids and there, like in bacteria, they act on the division process in a dose-dependent manner. Whereas in bacteria FtsZ only transiently polymerizes to a ring-like structure, in chloroplasts we identified persistent, highly organized filamentous scaffolds that are most likely involved in the maintenance of plastid integrity and in plastid division. As these networks resemble the eukaryotic cytoskeleton in form and function, we suggest the term "plastoskeleton" for this newly described subcellular structure.” (Kiessling J, Kruse S, Rensing SA, Harter K, Decker EL, Reski R, Visualization of a cytoskeleton-like FtsZ network in chloroplasts, J Cell Biol 2000 Nov 13;151(4):945-50)

DNAunion: Interesting stuff, many thanks. Best I can remember, my college biology texts – as well as the book by John Maynard Smith – stated that prokaryotes have no cytoskeleon or components of cytoskeletons. This is in line with the “long-standing dogma” mentioned in one of the quote above.

Quote:
”It has been a long-standing dogma in life sciences that only eukaryotic organisms possess a cytoskeleton.”
Quote:
”It was thought until recently that bacteria lack the actin or tubulin filament networks that organize eukaryotic cytoplasm.
DNAunion: That “dogma” had me puzzled as it appeared that many things had to “pop into existence” when the first eukaryote arose. But now, I see that there are plausible precursors.


But I still didn't see any references to anyone actually finding fibers in the cytoplasm of prokaryotes. I am not talking about something like the transient Z ring, but some sort of stable, branching network of cytoskeletal fibers. Does anyone know of any such material?

[ March 16, 2002: Message edited by: DNAunion ]</p>
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Old 03-17-2002, 12:51 AM   #22
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I'm only an amateur evolutionary biologist, but I disagree on Cavalier-Smith on the late origin of archaebacteria and eukaryotes. It requires some superfast "quantum evolution", which I find far from convincing, and C-S's dismissal of molecular-evolution rate inferences seems to me to be (pardon the pun) a bit cavalier.

It will be interesting to see how his views are received, however; there could well be some partial truth in them.
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Old 03-17-2002, 02:26 AM   #23
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Here's a paper that suggests that eukaryotes are very old:

<a href="http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/1/4" target="_blank">http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/1/4</a>

Here's the scenario that this site proposes:

&gt; 4 Gya (billion years ago): divergence between eubacteria and archaebacteria.

~ 4 Gya: divergence between eukaryote ancestor and rest of archaebacteria (or perhaps somewhere deep in the tree of the known ones).

Oxygen levels low; Banded Iron Formations possibly produced by photosynthetic bacteria that performed Fe++ -&gt; Fe+++ to get electrons instead of extracting them from water and releasing O2.

~ 2.7 Gya: eubacterium symbiosis? Evidence of big gene transfers from certain eubacteria.

~ 2.5 Gya: divergence of cyanobacteria from other eubacteria.

2.4 Gya: super ice age like the late Precambrian one; the Earth got snowed over. Possibly because of reduction in greenhouse gases: methane (from reaction with oxygen) and carbon dioxide (from greater consumption by less-iron-dependent cyanobacteria).

~2.2 Gya: Giardia diverges from most of the rest of the eukaryotes

~1.8 Gya: Endosymbiosis: acquisition of mitochondrion ancestor: alpha-proteobacterium that is much like Rickettsia; most eukaryotes have descendants of this single ancestor, though some appear to have lost their mitochondria.

This would account for why fossil microoganisms start getting distinctly larger at around 1.5 Gya. That may be when eukaryotic algae emerged as a result of acquiring cyanobacteria to make chloroplasts and other plastids (they come in several colors); this enabled further proliferation.

I find that more convincing than Cavalier-Smith's scenario, because that avoids any truly unusual sort of evolution.

Cytochrome C, for example, indicates an animal-plant-fungus divergence something like twice as long ago as the insect-vertebrate divergence (about 600 mya), and that protein has a strongly-conserved function that would not be affected by the dramatic evolution that C-S requires not much before the I-V divergence.

However, that extrapolated A-P-F divergence time is about the right age for the proliferation seen in the fossil record about 1.5 Gya.
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Old 03-17-2002, 08:12 AM   #24
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Quote:
Originally posted by DNAunion:
<strong>

DNAunion: Yes, but I wasn't talking about mere gene duplications, but about additional chromosomes or sets of chromosomes.</strong>
Right, but that's exactly where whole genome duplication comes into play. While individual genes probably duplicate often enough to provide plenty of new material, the rare whole genome duplication doubles the number of genes immediately. There are also segmental duplications that add dozens of genes at a time. And of course whole or partial chromosome duplication certainly happens too. In fact, the problem with trying to infer whole genome duplication is that it can be easily confused with succesive rounds of chromosomal and segmental duplication (and the fact that after whole genome duplication, things will get rearranged over time). But when you have entire identical tandem arrays of genes showing up elsewhere, pseudogenes and retroviral inserts and all, it's pretty obvious that some sort of large scale duplication was at play.

Quote:
I don't doubt that it is possible for a human (or other organism) to have a gene get duplicated without its causing serious negative affects.

But in humans, all deviations from having the standard 2 copies of all autosomes (and about the same can be said for the sex chromosomes) are deleterious at best, fatal at the worst. There are no human chromosomes that are good to have an extra copy of, or to be short one copy of (aneuploidy): nor is it good to have an additional full haploid set of chromosomes, or to be short a full haploid set of chromosomes (euploidy).
I wouldn't be too hasty on that. I do know that segments of chromosomes can be translocated and still result in a functioning human being. The real problem is that their children might be missing part of a chromosome, and that is usually fatal. But this sort of thing shows that the arrangement of chromosomes can easily change during evolution, including the addition of small sections, even with us humans.

But humans shumumans. Lots of organisms are capable of surviving chromosome or genome duplications, even if we're not. One of the species of Rana, for example, has a triploidy male. Which reminds me that one of the "advantages" of whole genome duplication is that there are no triploidies -- everything doubles so that the genes remain in the same proportions. If we're going to consider the possibility of chromosome duplication in one of our deep ancestors, then what it does to us today is more or less irrelevant.

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Old 03-17-2002, 09:03 AM   #25
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DNAunion: Theyeti, are you intentionally missing my point and talking about something else? I keep talking about the addition of a WHOLE, COMPLETE chromosome, or the addition of a WHOLE, COMPLETE haploid set of chromosomes. And yet keep talking - mostly - about single gene duplications or other PARTIAL chromosome deviations (such as a translocation). Here's one example (anyone can look back and easily find others).

Quote:
DNAunion: I don't doubt that it is possible for a human (or other organism) to have a gene get duplicated without its causing serious negative affects.

But in humans, all deviations from having the standard 2 copies of all autosomes (and about the same can be said for the sex chromosomes) are deleterious at best, fatal at the worst. There are no human chromosomes that are good to have an extra copy of, or to be short one copy of (aneuploidy): nor is it good to have an additional full haploid set of chromosomes, or to be short a full haploid set of chromosomes (euploidy).
Quote:
Theyeti: I wouldn't be too hasty on that. I do know that segments of chromosomes can be translocated and still result in a functioning human being.
DNAunion: Yes, I know that too. But that does not deal with what I said.

Here, let me explain it a bit more.

MONOSOMY (having only one chromosome)
Quote:
"In humans, autosomal monosomy has not been reported past birth."
DNAunion: And the negative affects are not limited to just humans.

Quote:
"Although monosomy for the X chromosome occurs in humans, as we have seen in 45,X Turner syndrome, monosomy for any of the autosomes is not usually tolerated in humans or other animals." (p234)
Quote:
"In Drosophila, flies monosomic for the very small chromosome 4 - a condition referred to as Haplo-IV - survive, but they develop more slowly, exhibit a reduced body size, and have impaired viability. Monosomy for the larger chromosomes 2 and 3 is apparently lethal because such flies have never been recovered." (p234)
TRISOMY (having an three chromosomes)

Quote:
"In general, the effects of trisomy parallel those of monosomy. However, the addition of an extra chromosome produces somewhat more viable individuals in both animal and plant species than does the loss of a chromosome." (p235)
DNAunion: The text then goes into the diseased related to trisomy.

trisomy 21: Down Syndrome
trisomy 18: Edwards Syndrome
trisomy 15: Patau Syndrome

Quote:
"The reduced viability of individuals with recognized monosomic and trisomic conditions leads us to believe that many other aneuploid conditions may arise but that the affected fetuses do not survive to term. This observation has been confirmed by karyotypic analysis of spontaneously aborted fetuses.

...

An extensive review of this subject by David H. Carr has also revealed that a significant percentage of abortuses are trisomic for one of the autosomal chromosome group. Trisomies of every human chromosome have been recovered." (p238)
DNAunion: I hope now that you can see the difference between what I am talking about, and about what you mostly talk about.

PS: All quotes from "Concepts of Genetics: Fifth Edition", William S. Klug & Michael R. Cummings, Prentice Hall, 1997


PPS: One more quote.

Quote:
"Aneuploidies usually result in prenatal death

Recognizable chromosome abnormalities are seen in less than 1% of all live births, but substantial evidence suggests that the rate at conception is much higher. At least 17% to 20% of pregnancies recognized at 8 weeks will end in spontaneous abortion (miscarriage). Approximatly half of these spontaneously aborted embryos have major chromosomal abnormalities, including autosomal trisomies (e.g., trisomy 21), triploidy and tetraploidy, and Turner syndrome (XO)." (Eldra Peral Solomon, Linda R. Berg, and Diana W. Martin, Biology: Fifth Edition, Suanders College Publishing, 1999, p327)
[ March 17, 2002: Message edited by: DNAunion ]</p>
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Old 03-17-2002, 09:36 AM   #26
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DNAunion: Many of my questions are still unanswered. So I'll ask them again.


1) What parts of eukaryotic cell division - as it currently occurs - can be eliminated without eliminating the function of cell division? Answering that question will help us strip away the "superfluous add-ons" to arrive at the simplest state of the system - its core - as it currently exists.


2)
Quote:
"... Evolution of ... [a] cytoskeleton, initially as means of consuming other bacteria..."
How was the cytoskeleton used to consume other bacteria?


3)
Quote:
"... the bacterial origin of replication has evolved into the centrosome, and the terminus into the centromere."
DNAunion: That is, the centrosome of eukaryotes may have evolved from the attachment site of the origin of replication to the cell wall in prokaryotes; and the centromere may have evolved from the other attachement site to the cell wall in prokaryotes - that of the terminus (the point where DNA replication is complete). That suggests to me that the same proteins - or similar ones - specific to the centromere region (the protine disc called the kinetochore, where attachment of spindle fibers actually occurs) and the centrosome should be found in prokaryotes (functioning to anchor the origin and the terminus to the cell wall). Anyone know if this is so?


4)
Quote:
"In this primitive eukaryotic cell, S and M phases might have been triggered by activation of a single cyclin-dependent kinase whose destruction along with that of other proteins would have triggered anaphase.
DNAunion: Aren't there multiple Cdk's that are highly conserved between organisms as distantly related as humans and yeasts? Anyone know of any findings the author might be basing his hunch on?


5)
Quote:
theyeti: Keeping in mind that things like the mitotic spindle may have evolved from preexisting tubulin.
DNAunion: If eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotes, and prokaryotes don't have tubulin or cytoskeletons, then where would the preexisting tubulin for the mitotic spindle have come from? Wouldn't the first eukaryotes have needed a mitotic spindle?

***************************
Well, concering #5, we did see that there are two possible precursors: ftsZ for tubulin and Mreb for actin. But something about the proposed ftsZ-&gt;tubulin and Mreb1-&gt;actin (prokaryotic protein evolving into eukarytoic protein) has me a bit puzzled.

Here are a some points from the quotes I present below.

ACTIN
1) Present in virtually all eukaryotic cells (animals, plants, algae, and fungi) and is the most abundant intracellular protein in eukayrotice cells.

2) Actin genes are the most highly conserved of the genes encoding cytoskeletal proteins, and in fact, are one of the most highly conserved genes in the cell, comparable to histones: about 99% identity between those in vertebrates; 90% identity between yeast and chicken; 80% identity between amebas and animals.


TUBULINS
1) Found in all eukaryotic cells.

2) Tubulin genes are highly conserved. 70% identity between yeast and chicken. Alpha- and beta- subunits from any two different species will combine to form microtubules.


This paints a picture (although the painting may turn out to be an abstract). There seems to be a sharp divide between eukaryotes and prokaryotes in relation to these two cytoskeletal proteins. All eukaryotes have actin and tubulin genes – no prokaryotes do. Furthermore, the tubulin and especially the actin genes of eukaryotes - as distantly related as humans, chickens, yeast, and amebas - are highly conserved.

Why the dichotomy?

ACTIN
Quote:
”Microfilaments are polymers of the protein actin. Although actin is best known for its role in muscle contraction, it is present in virtually all eukaryotic cells, including those of plants, algae, and fungi. In fact, actin is the single most abundant protein in most cells, usually comprising more than 5% of the total cellular protein.



Actin varies little in amino acid sequence from species to species. In fact, actin genes are the most highly conserved of the genes encoding cytoskeletal proteins. For example, the actins from yeast and chicken are identical at more than 90% of their amino acids, whereas the tubulins from the two species show only about 70% identity. The minor differences in actin sequences between species do not appear to have much functional significance, because actin molecules from widely divergent species are indistinguishable when use for in vitro assays.” (Wayne m. Becker, Jane B. Reece, & Martin F. Poenie, The World of the Cell: Third Edition, Benjamin Cummings Publishing Co, 1996, p660 & 662)
Quote:
”Eukaryotic Cells Contain Abundant Amounts of Highly Conserved Actin

Actin is the most abundant intracellular protein in a eukaryotic cell. In muscle cells, for example, actin comprises 10 percent by weight of the total cell protein; even in nonmuscle cells, actin makes up 1 – 5 percent of the cellular protein. …

A moderate-sized protein consisting of approximately 375 residues, actin is encoded by a large, highly conserved gene family. Some single-celled eukaryotes like yeasts and amebas have a single actin gene, whereas many multicellular organisms contain multiple actin genes. … Sequencing of these actins has revealed that it is one of the most conserved proteins in a cell, comparable with histones, the structural protein of chromatin. Actin residues from amebas and from animals are identical at 80 percent of the positions. In vertebrates, the four [alpha]-actin isoforms present in various muscle cells and the [beta]- and [gamma]-actin isoforms present in nonmuscle cells differ at only four or five positions.” (Harvey Lodish, et. al., Molecular Cell Biology: Fourth Edition, W. H. Freeman & Co., 2000, p753)

TUBULIN

Quote:
”The building block of a microtubule is the tubulin subunit, a heterodimer of [alpha]- and [beta]-tubulin. Both of these 50,000-MW monomers are found in all eukaryotes, and their sequences are highly conserved. “ (Harvey Lodish, et. al., Molecular Cell Biology: Fourth Edition, W. H. Freeman & Co., 2000, p796)
Quote:
”When the tubulins of diverse species are compared, they are found to be remarkably similar in sequence and structure – though not as strikingly so as in the case of actin, as we will see later. In fact, all known [alpha]- and [beta]-tubulins will form MTs if mixed together in vitro, whether they come from different organisms or from different tissues within the same organism.” (Wayne m. Becker, Jane B. Reece, & Martin F. Poenie, The World of the Cell: Third Edition, Benjamin Cummings Publishing Co, 1996, p650)
Quote:
”Although a third tubuluin, [gamma]-tubulin, in not part of the tubulin subunint, it probably nucleartes the polymerization of subunits to form [alpha/beta]-microtubules. Encoded by separate genes, the three subunits exhibit an interesting, but not yet understood, homology with a 40,000-MW bacterial GTPase, called FtsZ. This bacterial protein has structural and functional similarities to tubulin, including the ability to polymerize and a role in cell division. Perhaps the protein carrying out these ancestral functions in bacteria was modified during evolution to fulfill the diverse roles of microtubules in eukaryotes.”(Harvey Lodish, et. al., Molecular Cell Biology: Fourth Edition, W. H. Freeman & Co., 2000, p796)
[ March 17, 2002: Message edited by: DNAunion ]</p>
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Old 03-17-2002, 09:46 AM   #27
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Quote:
Originally posted by DNAunion:
<strong>DNAunion: Theyeti, are you intentionally missing my point and talking about something else? I keep talking about the addition of a WHOLE, COMPLETE chromosome, or the addition of a WHOLE, COMPLETE haploid set of chromosomes. And yet keep talking - mostly - about single gene duplications or other PARTIAL chromosome deviations (such as a translocation). Here's one example (anyone can look back and easily find others).</strong>
So how is a whole genome duplication not a duplication of WHOLE, COMPLETE chromosomes? Whole genome duplication duplicates every chromsome at once, and it's a well known phemomenon. Does it happen often? No. But then again, to explain the number of genes that we see in modern metazoans, it's only had to have happened a handful of times over the last several hundred million years. Individual and segmental gene duplication take care of the rest.

And whole or partial chromosomal duplication is known to occur too. Yes, most of the time it's probably bad for you, at least if you're human. But it does not follow that this is always the case, and the fact that we see such things as trisomy males in Rana shows us that it's deffinately not always the case. Are you claiming that they can't occur? If you're just claiming that they're rare, then I'm in complete agreement with you. It would be hard to explain the lack of genes otherwise.

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Old 03-17-2002, 09:51 AM   #28
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Theyeti: So how is a whole genome duplication not a duplication of WHOLE, COMPLETE chromosomes?
DNAunion: See, you are still doing it!

Show me where I said that whole genome duplications were NOT duplications of whole, complete chromosomes? You can't, because I didn't.

And I didn't "complain" about your talking about them either.

My complaint specifically addressed your repeatedly addressing mere gene duplications or PARTIAL chromosome aberrations, such as translocations. Those are not what I am talking about.

[ March 17, 2002: Message edited by: DNAunion ]</p>
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Old 03-17-2002, 10:01 AM   #29
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DNAunion: Theyeti, do you plan to stop playing games any time soon?

Quote:
Theyeti: And whole or partial chromosomal duplication is known to occur too. Yes, most of the time it's probably bad for you, at least if you're human. But it does not follow that this is always the case, and the fact that we see such things as trisomy males in Rana shows us that it's deffinately not always the case. Are you claiming that they can't occur?
DNAunion: Do I claim that what can't occur? You mentioned BOTH whole and partial chromosomal duplication. Let's look at them one at a time, shall we.

I never said or even implied that "partial chromosomal duplication" can't occur. Where did you get that from?

As far a "whole choromosomal duplication", I quoted my biology texts that said that trisomy does not have as drastic of effects as does monosomy; and it even said that trisomy of all human chromosomes have been recovered (whereas this is not so for monosomy). Besides that, I mentioned that the biology texts discussed diseases that result from trisomy (Down Syndrome, Patau Syndrome, and Edwards Sysndrome). So again, I never said or even implied that "whole chromosomal duplication" can't occur, and in fact, actually discussed them. Where did you get that from?

[ March 17, 2002: Message edited by: DNAunion ]</p>
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Old 03-17-2002, 10:06 AM   #30
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Quote:
Originally posted by DNAunion:
<strong>

DNAunion: See, you are still doing it!

Show me where I said that whole genome duplications were NOT duplications of whole, complete chromosomes? You can't, because I didn't.

</strong>
No, you asked for examples of how chromosomes could be replicated, and I provided whole genome duplication as an example. I also included the example of partial chromsome duplication, because I think it's an important thing to take into consideration -- since the real issue it gene duplication, at least as a means of generating redundancies that can lead to IC systems, etc., then all forms of gene duplication should be considered, IMO. This includes things like single duplication, and also things like whole genome duplication, and the whole wide range of things in between. It just doesn't do for you to accuse me of not answering your question because partial chromosomal duplication doesn't meet your criteria (and I don't know why it should matter), but I clearly mentioned the fact of whole genome duplications, which does meet that criteria.

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