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There's a recent one that's beginning to become more frequent in various populations that results in needing fewer hours of sleep every night. People with this mutation need only 6 hours of sleep to feel rested, and thus far, no negative side effects of this mutation have been identified.Well, apart from MYH16 allowing for smaller jaw muscles and a larger cranium.
And SRGAP2C causing more dendrites to connect brain neurons making the brain more dense.
And ARHGAP11B causing our neocortex to grow more dense and our brains to develop folds.
I guess apart from these and several other examples the "brain related genes do not respond well to changes".![]()
Actually, one of the groups of genes that experience the most mutations in the human genome are related to brain growth and development.The cranial capacity Sarah, brain related genes do not respond well to changes.
Brain related genes aren't highly conserved; I feel like we have had this discussion before. HOX genes, genes that signal structures to develop in certain spots, are highly conserved and thus present in very similar forms even in organisms not closely related, such as between fruit flies and humans. But, as for brain genes in general, in humans, they are some of the most frequently mutating genes. The overall super high mutation rate in our species could be to blame for our high rate of miscarriage.If it's unlikely that legs, arms and teeth being so different argues strongly against common ancestry then what about something as conserved as brain related genes.
No, it's the change of alleles in population over time, mutations are irrelevant.
Extinction is what we would expect to see if all evolution is, is the accumulation of genetic mutations.
An effect without a cause isn't science, it's supposition.
With more than 100 members, CERV 1/PTERV1 is one of the most abundant families of endogenous retroviruses in the chimpanzee genome. (Genome Biol. 2006).
They can be found in African great apes but not in humans.
we actually do. first: i gave at least one example of such a case with the herv-k . secondly: i also gave about 20 potential cases that cant be ignore.
also remember that chimp and human are about 2% different. so even their own orthologous ervs arent realy orthologous but in a similar spots in the genome.
another interesting point is that : "PTERV1 does not share high sequence identity to any known retrovirus". as we can expect if retroviruses evolved from the host and not the opposite.
They weren't ignored. They were actually looked at, and the authors were unable to find a single unambiguous orthologous PtERV insertion shared between ape species.
Please back up this claim.
Why would we expect this?
as i said: they arent sure. so they can be indeed orthologous.
they are also in a similar spots on the genome. so their distribution isnt random at all.
it's just a fact that chimp is at least 2% different from human. so even their suppose orthologous ervs arent realy orthologous.
because it's support the possibility the retroviruses evolved from parts of the human genome and not the opposite.
They aren't found at similar spots. Being within 200,000 base pairs is not "similar".
Also, no one has ever claimed that the distribution of retroviral insertion is completely random. All they have ever claimed is that bias is low enough that it can't explain why 99.9% of human ERVs are found at the same location in the chimp genome.
Why would being 2% different prevent those ERVs from being at orthologous positions? You still haven't explained that.
realy? 100,000 bases (and not 200,000 as you said) from about 3 bilion is about less then 1\30000 of the genome. so their positions are almost identical if we look at the entire genome.
i also gave sternberg example of the rat vs mouse insertions. they look almost identical. but they arent the result of shared insertions.
so we can get many shared insertions without a common deascent.
because the difference? even if you had only one base difference before or after an erv on the genome, then they arent in identical positions compare to the chimp genome. simple.
so or so, the claim about ervs as evidence for a common descent is false.
BAC clones can vary from 100 to 300 thousand, or even larger. That isn't a similar position in the genome. It certainly isn't orthologous.
How many insertions did they look at, and how many insertions are there in those genomes?
"Are you telling me that because of that one substitution mutation that those ERVs are not at orthologous positions? Seriously?"-
You haven't shown that any of it is false.
so where is your limit between orthologous and non- orthologous? 100 bases away? 1000? 10,000?
according to sternberg article a lots of them:
no. i actually refer to insertions and deletions. in those cases any erv isnt a true orthologous.
sfs claimed that if i am right then we should find shared insertions in a 2 random species. and we indeed found such cases.
Orthologous means the base that was inherited from the common ancestor. That's 1 base.
Of those transposon insertions, how many do not produce the predicted phylogeny?
Orthologous does not mean 100% identity, so I don't see how your criticism matters. Orthology allows for evolution of those sequences since common ancestry. An orthologous gene shared by humans and chimps can differ by 2%, and it is still orthologous.
That is not the case. The distribution of ERVs in species produces the predicted phylogenetic signal. We would absolutely predict that evolutionary mechanisms would produce a few exceptions to the predicted pattern due to incomplete lineage sorting, homoplasies, and low numbers of species in a phylogeny. However, these few exceptions should be swamped by the phylogenetic signal, and they are.
im talking about the position on the genome. if the erv is on another chromosom you will still consider it as an orthologous sequence?
as far as i aware about every one of them, because they are different kind of sine sequences.
not realy. first: how many ervs are shared between chimp and human but not gorila?
secondly: that was sfs prediction. and i showed that this prediction doesnt hold water.
also remember that i gave an example of several shared insertions and even the paper conclude that it was difficult to conclude the correct phylogeny. so the claim about "phylogenetic signal" doesnt hold water too.
References?
I would suspect very few ERVs would be specific to the chimp/human lineage since there was very little time between those divergence times.
You didn't show this. We have shown that you are wrong about this claim.
If you find 5 insertions that violate the predicted pattern and 200,000 insertions that produce the predicted pattern then the phylogenetic signal is there. It holds water.
from sternberg article:
https://evolutionnews.org/2010/03/beginning_to_decipher_the_sine/
"We have two genomes that went their separate ways 22 million years ago. We have two lineages that have been subjected to different historical events. Yet, when we compare the chromosome locations of mouse B1s/B2s/B4s with those of rat IDs, they look almost the same. Where the ID SINEs rise in density, so do the B1s/B2s/B4s SINEs; where the ID SINE levels decrease, so also do the B1s/B2s/B4s SINE levels. Independent mutational events have generated equivalent genomic patterns. How can we causally account for this striking pattern?
In the paper written by Francis Collins and his colleagues, under the heading Co-localization of SINEs in rat and mouse1, we read:
“The cause of the unusual distribution patterns of SINEs…is apparently a conserved feature, independent of the primary sequence of the SINE…”"
it's very weird that human have about 100 unique ervs when he shared only about few with chimp since their suppose common descent. so we realy need to belieive that in about few my he get about several shared ervs with chimp, and then after few more my he get about 100 new ervs.
so if for instance we found that chimp and gorila shared about several ervs that doesnt exist in human- this case falsified the claim about hierarchical tree. so where is your strong signal in this case?
Almost is not the same as orthologous.
None of those insertions have been shown to be at orthologous positions in the chimp/bonobo and gorilla genomes.
but even orthologous position isnt identical. so there is no big difference.
again- wrong :
A HERV-K provirus in chimpanzees, bonobos and gorillas, but not humans. - PubMed - NCBI
"We identified a human endogenous retrovirus K (HERV-K) provirus that is present at the orthologous position in the gorilla and chimpanzee genomes, but not in the human genome"
It is identical.
Yes, we do find a handful of exceptions due to incomplete lineage sorting out of the hundreds of thousands that conform to the expected phylogeney. Again, the evidence is the phylogenetic signal that stands above the noise created by homoplasy and incomplete lineage sorting.
if so human and chimp arent share even one orthologous (because their position on the genome isnt identical).
and again- it doesnt prove any common descent. since their insertions and fixations arent random at all. you also cant explain how some creatures survived before they infected by the retrovirus.