mark kennedy said:
My interest in the actual mechanisms that are used in nature that change the effective genome in a positive way.
But you are looking in the wrong place. The mechanism which causes the mutation is not what makes it beneficial. The type of mutation it is (substitution, insertion, etc.) is not what makes it beneficial. Even the change in the protein is not what makes it beneficial.
"Beneficial" applies to none of these things. "Beneficial" applies to the effect of environmental conditions on the survival of the the organisms, and their descendants due to the expression (or non-expression) of the protein in the morphology/physiology/behaviour of the organism.
You cannot determine the benefit of a mutation by looking at its causal mechanism. You have to look at its effect on the proportional survival of organisms which express it as compared to organisms which do not.
You are so focused on the minutiae of mutations themselves that you are blind to the environment that they operate in.
I still think the term mutation has become a misnomer because there must be mechanisms that create adaptive evolutionary changes.
You are right. And those mechanisms are not mutations, but the mechanisms which regulate the distribution of mutations in the gene pool. Mutation is a perfectly good word to describe changes in DNA sequences, since "change" is the meaning of "mutation". But adaptation is more than a matter of changing DNA.
What I am saying is that if you accept that 80% of the mutations that occur in the effective genome are deleterious that does not give you a lot of room speculate on an occasional benefical effect.
Sure it does. Look at what happens to the survival rate of organisms afflicted by deleterious mutations as compared to other organisms in the population. What is happening to the other organisms, and to their contribution to the gene pool?
That 1.6 mutations per sexual generation per genome replication gives me pause. High mutation rates would result in terrible disease and disorder and it is natural selection that is purging them from the genomes for that very reason.
Now why can't you connect this thought with the one above. Yes, natural selection is purging these disease causing mutations. Not from the genome, though. From the gene pool. Are you clear on the difference between "genome" and "gene pool"?
Now since diseased and deformed organisms have their contribution to the gene pool reduced by purging, whose genes are taking their place? What kind of genes are surviving?
Just tell me one thing, if that 1 effect in 625,000 is beneficial what are the other 624,999 going to effect.
Nothing. They will be purged, remember. How can they have an effect when they are purged?
The most common effect is nothing at all and they are purged through sexual reproduction as one of the mechanisms for removing them. That is why deleterious mutations don't threaten us with extinction,
If you understand this, why do you keep raising it as a problem for evolution?
In order for protein coding genes, regulatory gene, outliers...etc to be modified or altered in a beneficial way I expect it would have to be done in a simular fashion.
Right, except that instead of being purged they are preserved and fixed, so that future changes have to be added to what is already fixed in the genome.