Evolution of increased complexity in a molecular machine : Nature : Nature Publishing Group
january 2012 by Vaguery
"Many cellular processes are carried out by molecular ‘machines’—assemblies of multiple differentiated proteins that physically interact to execute biological functions1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Despite much speculation, strong evidence of the mechanisms by which these assemblies evolved is lacking. Here we use ancestral gene resurrection9, 10, 11 and manipulative genetic experiments to determine how the complexity of an essential molecular machine—the hexameric transmembrane ring of the eukaryotic V-ATPase proton pump—increased hundreds of millions of years ago. We show that the ring of Fungi, which is composed of three paralogous proteins, evolved from a more ancient two-paralogue complex because of a gene duplication that was followed by loss in each daughter copy of specific interfaces by which it interacts with other ring proteins. These losses were complementary, so both copies became obligate components with restricted spatial roles in the complex. Reintroducing a single historical mutation from each paralogue lineage into the resurrected ancestral proteins is sufficient to recapitulate their asymmetric degeneration and trigger the requirement for the more elaborate three-component ring. Our experiments show that increased complexity in an essential molecular machine evolved because of simple, high-probability evolutionary processes, without the apparent evolution of novel functions. They point to a plausible mechanism for the evolution of complexity in other multi-paralogue protein complexes."
via:cshalizi
evolution
structural-biology
parsimony
dangers-of-premature-optimization
lesson-for-genetic-programming
january 2012 by Vaguery
[1110.5376] A Quantitative Test of Population Genetics Using Spatio-Genetic Patterns in Bacterial Colonies
november 2011 by Vaguery
"It is widely accepted that population genetics theory is the cornerstone of evolutionary analyses. Empirical tests of the theory, however, are challenging because of the complex relationships between space, dispersal, and evolution. Critically, we lack quantitative validation of the spatial models of population genetics. Here we combine analytics, on and off-lattice simulations, and experiments with bacteria to perform quantitative tests of the theory. We study two bacterial species, the gut microbe Escherichia coli and the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and show that spatio-genetic patterns in colony biofilms of both species are accurately described by an extension of the one-dimensional stepping-stone model. We use one empirical measure, genetic diversity at the colony periphery, to parameterize our models and show that we can then accurately predict another key variable: the degree of short-range cell migration along an edge. Moreover, the model allows us to estimate other key parameters including effective population size (density) at the expansion frontier. While our experimental system is a simplification of natural microbial community, we argue it is a proof of principle that the spatial models of population genetics can quantitatively capture organismal evolution."
bacterial-genetics
evolution
microbiology
experiment
cute
november 2011 by Vaguery
[1005.2108] Relationships Among Phylogenetic Networks
may 2010 by Vaguery
"The underlying reality of a succession of interbreeding populations is a vastly complicated network N. Since Darwin, species trees have been used as a simplified description of the relationships which summarize the overly complicated network N. Recent evidence of hybridization and lateral gene transfer, however, suggest that there are situations where trees are inadequate. Consequently it is important to determine properties that characterize networks closely related to N and possibly more complicated than trees but lacking the full complexity of N."
lateral-gene-transfer
evolution
phylogenetics
parsimony-but-not-so-much
graph-theory
may 2010 by Vaguery
Evolution and Economics as Different Paradigms XI: Market Fundamentalism : Evolution for Everyone
april 2010 by Vaguery
"At the end of the day, the most pressing problems of modern life require an accurate description of the real world so that the inevitable tradeoffs can be managed for the common good. Fundamentalism interferes with this enterprise and needs to be recognized for what it is. Fortunately, we can go beyond epithets and prove that a given belief system counts as fundamentalist by calling attention to the absence of tradeoffs. Market fundamentalism can be as plain as the nose on your face when you know what to look for."
evolution
cultural-norms
fundamentalism
philosophy
social-norms
policy
cultural-assumptions
pragmatism
april 2010 by Vaguery
Vampire Moth Discovered -- Evolution at Work
october 2008 by Vaguery
"We see a progression from nectar feeding and licking or lapping at fruit juices to different kinds of piercing behaviors of fruits and then finally culminating in this skin piercing and blood-feeding," she said.
diversity
zoology
entomology
evolution
vampirism
october 2008 by Vaguery
Biocurious: A bad comparison
january 2007 by Vaguery
Someday I'll have to publish that paper. Maybe my Erdös number will improve from all the cites....
public
science
evolution
outreach
global-warming
physics
biology
january 2007 by Vaguery
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