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03-24-2002, 12:23 PM | #201 | |||||||||
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I don't know when I'll be able to reply to you again, David. We seem to be going around in circles anyway, so TTFN. theyeti [ March 24, 2002: Message edited by: theyeti ]</p> |
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03-26-2002, 01:18 PM | #202 |
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Yeah, don't worry if you can't reply for a while. I'll still be around.
Though we sometimes seem to be going around in circles I think we are progressing along! lol. I've learnt a lot of stuff I didn't know before so you have been a help - thanks. I've just got a few more questions to ask though - since it is such a massive topic. But at the minute I'm waiting for some info from Morpho, I can't reply now but I will soon. |
03-29-2002, 12:57 PM | #203 | ||||||
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(Since the mutation is neutral I am assuming that it is neutral incontext with the environment the bacterium is in). True that many organisms wouldn't replicate every 20 minutes - but bacteria are some of the "simplest" creatures so I am assuming that they come at the bottom or very low in the evolutionary tree. Quote:
So if the most common way to increase "information" is through gene duplication and sometimes duplication of the intire chromosome then these duplications must never be neutral - since if they are they will put the bacterium to a great disadvantage - potentially causing it to be outcompeted. But if there is a benefically mutation in there that will cause it to outcompete it's fellow bacterium then it will excell. Quote:
So in that sense there is no such thing as a neutral mutation - it will either be benefical or harmful. If it is "neutral" it will increase the metabolic load and so be classed as harmful and that gene will be lost as the bacterium is outcompeted. If it is physicallyy harmful again it will outcompeted. However if it is benefical then it will be retained as the bacteria competes more sucessfully against its fellow bacteria. Quote:
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Those bacterium that take in a plasmid - say that plasmid contains the information for an emzyme that can digest that antibiotic. Surely the code for that enzyme would occupy the same gene loci as the code for another enzyme in the bacteria. - The same gene loci where the mutations on one enzyme turned it into another enzyme that happened to digest the antibiotic. Well, how exactly does the bacteria take up the new information. eg. Does it stop making the enzyme that it had been making and start making the enzyme that the plasmid codes for. Or does it make both of them - just starts making the new enzyme and carries on making the old one? Well I have to head on here again. Hope you can reply. |
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03-29-2002, 02:37 PM | #204 | ||||||||||
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I'm going to try to do this quickly before my supervisor catches me...
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Here is one of the better reviews on the subject: <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=116823 12&dopt=Abstract" target="_blank">Curr Opin Genet Dev 2001 Dec;11(6):673-80</a>, Evolution of novel genes. Here are a few brand new papers that I hadn't seen before: <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=118841 42&dopt=Abstract" target="_blank">J Mol Biol 2002 Mar 8;316(5):1041-50</a>, Gene duplication and gene conversion shape the evolution of archaeal chaperonins. <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=118618 87&dopt=Abstract" target="_blank">Mol Biol Evol 2002 Mar;19(3):278-88</a>, Reconstructing the duplication history of tandemly repeated genes. Cool stuff! But not as cool as this: <a href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=119043 80&dopt=Abstract" target="_blank">Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2002 Mar 19</a>, Origin of sphinx, a young chimeric RNA gene in Drosophila melanogaster. Quote:
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I don't know if you're trying to make a point here though. Quote:
Nevertheless, if we quit using antibiotics permanently, almost all antibiotic resistant genes would sooner or later go extinct. It would cost us many millions of lives, but what the hay. Of course, as soon as we started using them again, bacteria would again start evolving resistance. BTW, you may be interested in this recent article: <a href="http://www.iscid.org/ubbcgi/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=000028" target="_blank">Darwin's Time Machine: Scientists begin predicting evolution's next step.</a> The article is about predicting how bacteria will evolve resistance to new antibiotics. Ironically, it's posted at ISCID, the ID "academic" society started by Dembski. Quote:
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In other cases, an enzyme already present can be altered to to digest the antibiotic. Usually, this will lower its ability to perform its other function, and is thus harmful in the absence of antibiotics. However, if that gene duplicates, then one copy can do the original function while the other specializes in digesting the antibiotic. This is roughly the "subfunctionalization" model of gene duplication, and is thought to be a major force in the evolution of new genes. Well, that wasn't quick at all. I will probably be able to reply to sometime over the weekend, but not much after that. theyeti <edited to fix url> [ March 29, 2002: Message edited by: theyeti ]</p> |
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03-30-2002, 09:41 AM | #205 | |||
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When you talk about evolution and mention the word mutation - what sort of mutation are you mostly referring to? Are you referring to those that are caused by radioactive sources? Or those that arise during mitosis, meiosis etc? Like those that are used in Laboratory experiments - what do they use to induce the mutations? Also - from the quote above why couldn't the DNA sequences that allow the bacteria to hydrolyze cefepime already exist in nature? All it needs is this bacteria to come into contact with this drug and it has a competitive free environment. Quote:
Surely a simple but effective cure would be to stop trying to make more and more powerful antibiotics that the bacteria are resistant to, but to put those bacteria in competition with other less dangerous bacteria. Once this has been done, the antibiotic resistant bacteria will be out competed by the other bacteria and basically their levels will drop. Then a dose of antibiotic can be given to drop the levels of the less dangerous bacteria to a level that the body can cope with. Thus both bacteria are at levels that the body can now control. Surely that is better than providing an environment that a certain bacterium can colonise for lack of competition and so cause the patient to be worse off than when they came in. True that what I have described is probably over simplified - but from what has been said here shouldn't that work? The other point about the neutral mutations in bacteria. The only thing I was trying to work out was how you could say that the majority of mutations could be neutral, and some harmful and some benfical. Because from what I have already put up I have seen that the "neutral" catagory of mutations would actually still have to come under the harmful catagory. That was all - I was just trying to work out how you could say that the majority aren't harmful but neutral when actually the neutral mutations are essentially harmful to the bacteria. But maybe you were referring to larger more complex organisms when you said that. Thanks for the info about the plasmid - that was interesting to see how a bacterium can do all that. Quote:
One thing I am curious about - when u are talking about the laboratory evolution of bacteria - are they still essentially bacteria once they have evolved but just more specialised. Or are they actually completely different from the bacteria. ie. Is "macroevolution" observed or is there only a certain point that the bacteria can evolve to? Thanks also for the links - some interesting and new things for me there. |
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03-30-2002, 12:00 PM | #206 | ||||||||
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In nature, all of those things that you mention cause mutations. Copying errors during mitosis (or fission in bacteria) are one way. Unequal crossing-over during mieosis or other kinds of recombination are another way (these can often cause duplications, "shuffling", etc.). Various kinds of chemical muatagens, including occasional cellular byproducts, cause mutation too. And of course radiation, often UV but also higher frequencies, are a main cause of mutation. In fact, no matter how much you sheild an organism from mutagens, it will still have a low "background" rate of mutation like I mentioned before. This is largely because the DNA polymerases and other reproductive mechanisms are imperfect; quite remarkably good, but still imperfect. There are also other mechanisms that do "proof-reading" and such to lower the number of errors. However, when the bacterium is stressed, these mechanisms often don't work as well and the mutation rate increases. In the laboratory, researchers can use error prone polymerases or proof-reading deficient bacteria to increase mutation rates. They can also put the organisms under stress and see what happens then. Sorry I can't be of more help here, but I'm just not that familiar with this sort of thing. All in all though, what you ask is a factual question that can be answered with sufficient reseach (again, go for PubMed; avoid AiG). Quote:
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However, bacteria in laboratory evolution experiments have evolved quite a lot of morphological change. The sort of change that would be equivalent to reptiles evolving into birds, and thus would be considered "macroevolution" by most defintions. One article you should read is Science 284, June 15, 1999 p. 2108-10, "Test Tube Evolution Cathes Time in a Bottle". Here are a couple of choice quotes: Quote:
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What irritates me about the "macroevolution" demand is that it's a case of moving the goal posts without acknowleding what's being conceded. Cases with bacterial evolution in the lab and other cases of short-trem evolution out in nature are indicative of an ongoing process; if extrapolated over time, this process accounts for the incredible diversity of all of living things. Creationists often claim that evolution can't create "novelty" or "new information" or that it can't be observed. These examples clearly refute all of that. Then the creationist simply shifts the goal posts by demanding to see extreme morphological change in a relatively tiny span of time, something which is neither necessary to account for life's histroy nor is predicted by evolution. This is usually accompanied by a semantic shell game where the creationist says, "so what if we observed that evolution, either way the organism is still a (insert taxon here)". One can play that game ad infinitum, because one can always appeal to a higher taxonimc category to claim that sufficient change is not taking place. So what if birds evolved from dinosaurs, they're still vertebrates. Your theory of evolution is a stupid fairy tale unless you can show me something impressive. Futhermore, this claim betrays an ignorance of how evolution works; species diverge from common ancestors and thus always retain some ancestral characteristics. The point at which they are considered something "different" is completely arbitrary and not really a useful concept at all. The creationist instance of something "different" is a case of them projecting their useless "kinds" categorization onto evolution, where is simply doesn't fit. The whole point of lab evolution and other forms of short-term evolution is this: what we see going on is adaptive change, and that is the essence of evolution. Exactly how and why larger scale transformations occured over extremely long periods of time are an interesting issue, but they are irrelevant to the illustration of the process, which is at work right before our very eyes. theyeti [ March 30, 2002: Message edited by: theyeti ]</p> |
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04-17-2002, 12:22 PM | #207 |
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Thanks theyeti for that reply - sorry I haven't replied in ages again! I'm, trying to get my act together here!!
Yeah, I looked up those articles you gave - they are pretty interesting. So no evolution from bacteria to something else can be seen basically because it takes so long to achieve that kind of level. Yeah and I disagree with that quote you gave that the creationist said there. That fellow is wrong for the reasons you gave - it seems he is clutching at straws there - that's like saying that all mammals are the same cause they are all mammals. But anyway.. Yo, I have to go here. I will be back soon!!! Yo you know if Morpho is still around - he said he would get me some information but maybe he forgot. I dunno. |
04-17-2002, 12:27 PM | #208 |
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Damn, davidH - I did send the request down, but forgot to follow up. I'll get back to you. Sorry.
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