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Monday, July 9, 2007 | Science : Evolution and Biology | print version Print | Comments

Document Neutral evolution has helped shape our genome

by PHYSORG

Reposted from:
http://www.physorg.com/news103206868.html

Johns Hopkins researchers have added to the growing mound of evidence that many of the genetic bits and pieces that drive evolutionary changes do not confer any advantages or disadvantages to humans or other animals.

"For a long time, the basic belief of evolution was that all random genetic changes that manage to stick around have some selective advantage," says Nicholas Katsanis, Ph.D., Associate Professor at Hopkins' Institute of Genetic Medicine. "But our work adds to the case that frequently, we are what we are largely due to random changes that are completely neutral."

"I am not at all discounting the role of natural selection, the persistence of genetic changes that confer some advantage," Katsanis adds, "because it has been instrumental. What this study does is to reinforce and highlight the equal, and in some cases greater, importance of neutral genetic drift."

Describing their contributions to genetic drift online in PLoS Genetics, Katsanis says the Hopkins experiments demonstrate that one of the major architectural markers of the human genome, DNA repeat elements that make up over 40 percent of our genome, rose to prominence without offering any benefits to the organism it inhabits. Repeat elements are fragments of DNA containing the same repetitive sequence of chemical base pairs several hundred times.

Katsanis and his team first stumbled onto one type of repeat element while looking at genes associated with Bardet Biedl syndrome, a rare disorder of substantial interest to the lab. While hunting for new genes, they found portions of DNA that had been copied from the mitochondria, the energy-making apparatus of human cells that has its own small genome. These mitochondrial sequences are known as numts.

When they expanded their study across the whole human genome, they found more than 1200 such pieces of mitochondrial DNA of various lengths embedded into chromosomes. While chimps have a comparable number, mice and rats only have around 600 numts. Since they increase in frequency as species advance, it suggested there was some evolutionary purpose to keeping them around.

Strikingly, however, none of these numts contained the blueprint (an actual gene) to make a protein that does anything, nor did they seem to control the function of any nearby genes. "At best, it seems numts are a neutral part of our genome," says Katsanis. "If anything, they may be mildly negative since long repeat sequences can be unstable or get inserted inside genes and disrupt them."

The researchers believe they have uncovered a possible reason why these potentially damaging but mostly neutral bits of DNA accumulate over time by comparing the sequences of human numts with those in different animals. How closely the different species' sequences match can provide an estimate of when that particular sequence got inserted into the ancestor of the human genome.

Their calculations revealed that most numts became embedded in our genome over a 10-million-year period centered roughly 54 million years ago – right around the time when the first primates emerged. "When new species emerge, their numbers and therefore their genetic differences are very small," Katsanis notes. "This creates a genetic bottleneck during which any changes in the genome will either get eliminated quickly or spread to the whole population quickly."

Katsanis proposes that numts, being "neutral," were generally at low levels in ancient mammals, but during the primate emergence 54 million years ago, they accumulated and spread through the small early primate populations precisely because they were not detrimental enough to be eliminated. Then, as these populations expanded, numts reached stable but higher frequencies.

Source: Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

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1. Comment #55059 by BMMcArdle on July 9, 2007 at 11:02 pm

"If anything, they may be mildly negative since long repeat sequences can be unstable or get inserted inside genes and disrupt them."
Does this mean that numts might play a part in genetic mutation?

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2. Comment #55160 by konquererz on July 10, 2007 at 6:21 am

 avatarI have heard the idea before that it would be entirely possible to pass on and sustain an un-beneficial change if the mutation were not detrimental enough to cause the animal to die off. Thus, neutral or slightly negative changes could actually hang around for long periods of time or even become part of the dna structure permanently. These studies appear to show that very idea. But I'm sure creationists are going to a have a field day with this one. "See, its not exactly like you thought!" I personally think its a create break through in science and evolutionary discovery.

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3. Comment #55162 by BillySands on July 10, 2007 at 6:45 am

 avatarOn one level, an example of bad design. On another level, it is good for the mitochondrial DNA. This is only inherited from the mother, so a fathers' mitochondrial DNA is at a dead end. At least some of this DNA can now be transmitted by the father. Since it does nothing, yet gets transmitted at the expence of host energy resources, would "parasitic DNA" be a better term.



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4. Comment #55196 by wagnerpe on July 10, 2007 at 8:30 am

I think it's a pretty cool idea, but not well substantiated by evidence as far as I can tell. I'm hesitant to jump to the conclusion that these sequences are necessarily "neutral."

Something I was thinking of while reading, which wasn't mentioned in this article, is the idea that a larger genome means more mutations. So, with the addition of these "numt" sequences there is more of an opportunity for genetic variation among the offspring, thus propagating the evolutionary trend at a faster rate. It could also be that these are the genetic remnants of obsolete proteins that were silenced long ago because of inutility. It could have been a simple mutation, such as one in the start codon, that may have conferred a minor but significant genetic advantage.

I'm wondering if this is bad research or just bad journalism, but it definitely left me skeptical and wanting more.

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5. Comment #55241 by MemeOrandum on July 10, 2007 at 10:19 am

Numts...
From what's written here, they seem to jump to conclusions when postulating that these have been incorporated into the primate genome from mitochondria. I do not understand how they could be different from the other 600 numts found in non-primates' genomes.

I wonder... if numts are more susceptible to "crossing-over"? If so, they could be instrumental in ensuring that a particular combination of alleles in one gene-cluster are inherited together.

MemeO

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6. Comment #55720 by c-strong on July 12, 2007 at 4:12 am

Johns Hopkins researchers have added to the growing mound of evidence that many of the genetic bits and pieces that drive evolutionary changes do not confer any advantages or disadvantages to humans or other animals.


Correct me if I'm wrong, but this is an oxymoron. Genetic material that "drives" evolutionary change must confer an advantage or disadvantage by definition. In fact, it seems to me that the whole article is trying to talk up a fairly uninteresting finding. The key point is here:

Strikingly, however, none of these numts contained the blueprint (an actual gene) to make a protein that does anything, nor did they seem to control the function of any nearby genes.


So they don't actually do anything. They're just junk DNA. Everyone knows that the human, and every other, genome has lots of junk DNA. The interesting thing, I suppose, is that the numts are higher in primates than rodents (LOL at the notion that species "advance"!) but the researchers give a reasonable explanation for this.

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