I'm going to address a recent article by Casey Luskin on Evolution News (sic) and a podcast on a Current Topics in Science podcast produce by Christ Jesus Ministries. But first, some background.
A recent paper in Nature looked at a region on chromosome 21 where mutations associated with autoimmune and inflammatory disease were clustered. This region did not contain any known genes and is referred to in the paper as a "gene desert." The authors reasoned that it probably contained one or more regulatory sites and, as expected, they were able to identify an enhancer element that helps control expression of a nearby gene called ETS2 (Stankey et al., 2024).
The results were promoted in a BBC article: The 'gene deserts' unravelling the mysteries of disease. The subtitle of the article tells you where this is going, "Mutations in these regions of so-called "junk" DNA are increasingly being linked to a range of diseases, from Crohn's to cancer." The article implies that since only 2% of the human genome codes for proteins the remaining 98% "has no obvious meaning or purpose." The caption to one of the figures says, "Gene deserts are regions of so-called genetic "junk" that do not code for proteins – but they may play an important role in disease." Thus, according to the BBC, the discovery of a regulatory sequence conflicts with the idea of junk DNA.
There's no mention of junk DNA in the original Nature article and none of the comments by the senior author (James Lee) in the BBC article suggest that he is confused about junk DNA.
An article published in Nature Communications looked at expression of human endogenous retrovirus elements (HERV's) in human brain. The authors found that expression of two HERV sequences is associated with risk for schizophrenia but the authors noted that is wasn't clear how this expression played a role in psychiatric disorders (Duarte et al., 2024)
Although the term "junk DNA" was not mentioned in the original article, the press release from King's College, London makes the point that HERVS were assumed to be junk DNA. The implication is that this is one of the first publications to discover a possible function for this junk DNA. (Functional elements derived from HERVs have been known for three decades.)
Casey Luskin wrote about these studies yesterday in an article on the intelligent design website: Disease-Associated “Junk” DNA Is Evidence of Function and talks about it in the podcast that I link to below.
Presumably Luskin has been reading posts describing the historical origins of the junk DNA term for over a couple decades now. Given that he has displayed some reading comprehension with at least anti-evolutionary literature in the past, I don't conclude that he is necessarily stupid. So I'm going to go with 'he is lying'. Whether he is knowingly lying is a matter for psychologists to ponder. But it is clear that he will pee on your shoes and try to convince you it's just the rain.
ReplyDeleteHe doesn't care about accuracy, only about promulgating the party line, that a desert tribal war deity, Yahweh, created everything with magic.
ReplyDelete-César
Some things never change. You've asked the very same question 10 years ago coming to the very same conclusion
ReplyDeletehttps://sandwalk.blogspot.com/2014/01/casey-luskins-latest-take-on-junk-dna.html
Speaking of junk DNA... I find this paper very interesting. Although they don't mention the dreadfull words (but non-essential DNA is mentioned) I think the results are worth discussing under the light of junk DNA.
ReplyDeletehttps://academic.oup.com/aob/advance-article/doi/10.1093/aob/mcae107/7714554?login=false