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Showing posts sorted by date for query Shapiro. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

How the Krebs cycle disproves Darwinism (not!)

You know you're in for a treat when papers published in a (previously) reputable journal make frequent references to Dennis Noble and James Shapiro.

The purpose of this post is to demonstrate that you shouldn't let creationist amateurs publish anti-evolution rants in scientific journals.


I want to discuss two papers that were recently published in the journal Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. This used to be a very reputable journal but its reputation suffered a big blow in 2018 when it published a paper on panspermia. The current editor-in-chief at the time, Denis Noble, defended that article on the grounds that the origin of life is an unsolved problem and all points of view deserve to be covered in a scientific journal. Denis Noble is still on the editorial board along with Tom L. Blundell and Delphine Dean (see editorial board) and they now have to answer for publishing two creationist papers by Olen R. Brown and David A. Hullender.

Thursday, July 06, 2023

James Shapiro doesn't like junk DNA

Shapiro doubles down on his claim that junk DNA doesn't exist.

It's been a while since we've heard from James Shaprio. You might recall that James A. Shapiro is a biochemistry/microbiology professor at the University of Chicago and the author of a book promoting natural genetic engineering. I reviewed his book and didn't like it very much—Shapiro didn't like my review [James Shapiro Never Learns] [James Shapiro Responds to My Review of His Book].

Sunday, July 17, 2022

The Function Wars Part XIII: Ford Doolittle writes about transposons and levels of selection

It's theoretically possible that the presence of abundant transposon fragments in a genome could provide a clade with a selective advantage at the level of species sorting. Is this an important contribution to the junk DNA debate?

As I explained in Function Wars Part IX, we need to maintain a certain perspective in these debates over function. The big picture view is that 90% of the human genome qualifies as junk DNA by any reasonable criteria. There's lots of evidence to support that claim but in spite of the evidence it is not accepted by most scientists.

Most scientists think that junk DNA is almost an oxymoron since natural selection would have eliminated it by now. Many scientists think that most of our genome must be functional because it is transcribed and because it's full of transcription factor binding sites. My goal is to show that their lack of understanding of population genetics and basic biochemistry has led them astray. I am trying to correct misunderstandings and the false history of the field that have become prominent in the scientific literature.

For the most part, philosophers and their friends have a different goal. They are interested in epistemology and in defining exactly what you mean by 'function' and 'junk.' To some extent, this is nitpicking and it undermines my goal by lending support, however oblique, to opponents of junk DNA.1

As I've mentioned before, this is most obvious when it comes to the ENCODE publicity campaign of 2012 [see: Revising history and defending ENCODE]. The reason why the ENCODE researchers were wrong is that they didn't understand that many transcription factor binding sites are unimportant and they didn't understand that many transcripts could be accidental. These facts are explained in the best undergraduate textbooks and they were made clear to ENCODE researchers in 2007 when they published their preliminary results. They were wrong because they didn't understand basic biochemistry. [ENCODE 2007]

Some people are trying to excuse ENCODE on the grounds that they simply picked an inappropriate definition of function. In other words, ENCODE made an epistemology error not a stupid biochemistry mistake. Here's another example from a new paper by Ford Doolittle in Biology and Philosophy. He says,

However, almost all of these developments in evolutionary biology and philosophy passed molecular genetics and genomics by, so that publicizers of the ENCODE project’s results could claim in 2012 that 80.4% of the human genome is “functional” (Ecker et al 2012) without any well thought-out position on the meaning of ‘function’. The default assumption made by ENCODE investigators seemed to have been that detectable activities are almost always products of selection and that selection almost always serves the survival and reproductive interests of organisms. But what ENCODE interpreted as functionality was unclear—from a philosophical perspective. Charitably, ENCODE’s principle mistake could have been a too broad and level-ignorant reading of selected effect (SE) “function” (Garson 2021) rather than the conflation of SE and causal role (CR) definitions of “the F-word”, as it is often seen as being (Doolittle and Brunet 2017).

My position is that this is far too "charitable." ENCODE's mistake was not in using the wrong definition of function; their mistake was in assuming that all transcripts and all transcription factor binding sites were functional in any way. That was a stupid assumption and they should have known better. They should have learned from the criticism they got in 2007.

This is only a small part of Doolittle's paper but I wanted to get that off my chest before delving into the main points. I find it extremely annoying that there's so much ink and electrons being wasted on the function wars when the really important issues are a lack of understanding of population genetics and basic biochemistry. I fear that the function wars are contributing to the existing confusion rather than clarifying it.

Doolittle, F. (2022) All about levels: transposable elements as selfish DNAs and drivers of evolution. Biology & Philosophy 37: article number 24 [doi: 10.1007/s10539-022-09852-3]

The origin and prevalence of transposable elements (TEs) may best be understood as resulting from “selfish” evolutionary processes at the within-genome level, with relevant populations being all members of the same TE family or all potentially mobile DNAs in a species. But the maintenance of families of TEs as evolutionary drivers, if taken as a consequence of selection, might be better understood as a consequence of selection at the level of species or higher, with the relevant populations being species or ecosystems varying in their possession of TEs. In 2015, Brunet and Doolittle (Genome Biol Evol 7: 2445–2457) made the case for legitimizing (though not proving) claims for an evolutionary role for TEs by recasting such claims as being about species selection. Here I further develop this “how possibly” argument. I note that with a forgivingly broad construal of evolution by natural selection (ENS) we might come to appreciate many aspects of Life on earth as its products, and TEs as—possibly—contributors to the success of Life by selection at several levels of a biological hierarchy. Thinking broadly makes this proposition a testable (albeit extraordinarily difficult-to-test) Darwinian one.

The essence of Ford's argument builds on the idea that active transposable elements (TEs) are examples of selfish DNA that propagate in the genome. This is selection at the level of DNA. Other elements of the genome, such as genes, regulatory sequences, and origins of replication, are examples of selection at the level of the organism and individuals within a population. Ford points out that some transposon-related sequences might be co-opted to form functional regions of the genome that are under purifying selection at the level of organisms and populations. He then goes on to argue that species with large amounts of transposon-related sequences in their genomes might have an evolutionary advantage because they have more raw material to work with in evolving new functions. If this is true, then this would be an example of species level selection.

These points are summarized near the end of his paper.

Thus TE families, originating and establishing themselves abundantly within a species through selection at their own level may wind up as a few relics retained by purifying selection at the level of organisms. Moreover, if this contribution to the formation of useful relics facilitated the diversification of species or the persistence of clades, then we might also say that these TE families were once “drivers” of evolution at these higher levels, and that their possession was once an adaptation at each such higher level.

There are lots of details that we could get into later but I want to deal with the main speculation; namely, that species with lots of TE fragments in their genome might have an adaptive advantage over species that don't.

This is challenging topic because lots of people have expressed their opinions on many of the topics that Ford covers in his article. None of their opinions are identical and many of them are based on different assumptions about things like evolvability, teleology, the significance of the problem, how to define species sorting, and whether hierachy theory is important . Many of those people are very smart (as is Ford Doolittle) and it hurts my brain trying to figure out who is correct. I'll try and explain some of the issues and the controversies.

A solution in search of a problem?

What's the reason for speculating that abundant bits of junk DNA might be selected because they will benefit the species at some time in the next ten million years or so? Is there a problem that this speculation explains?

The standard practice in science is to suggest hypotheses that account for an unexplained observation; for example, the idea of abundant junk DNA explained the C-value Paradox and the mutation load problem. Models are supposed to have explanatory power—they are supposed to explain something that we don't understand.

Ford thinks there's is a reason for retaining junk DNA. He writes,

Eukaryotes are but one of the many clades emerging from the prokaryotic divergence. Although such beliefs may be impossible to support empirically it is widely held that that was a special and evolutionarily important event....

Assuming this to be true (but see Booth and Doolittle 2015) we might ask if there are reasons for this differential evolutionary success, and are these reasons clade- level properties that have been selected for at this high level? Is one of them the possession of large and variable families of TEs?

You'll have to read his entire paper to see his full explanation but this is the important part. Ford, thinks that the diversity and success of eukaryotes requires an explanation because it can't be accounted for by standard evolutionary theory. I don't see the problem so I don't see the need for an explanation.

Of course there doesn't have to be a scientific problem that needs solving. This could just be a theoretical argument showing that excess DNA could lead to species level selection. That puts it more in the realm of philosophy and Ford does make the point in his paper that one of his goals is simply to defend multilevel selection theory (MLST) as a distinct possibility. The main proponents of this idea (Hierarchy Theory) are Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould and the theory is thoroughly covered in Gould's book The Structure of Evolutionary Theory. I was surprised to discover that this book isn't mentioned in the Doolittle paper.

I don't have a problem with Hierarchy Theory (or Multilevel Selection Theory, or group selection) as a theoretical possibility. The important question, as far as I'm concerned, is whether there's any evidence to support species selection. As Ford notes, "such beliefs may be impossible to support empirically" and that may be true; however, there's a danger in promoting ideas that have no empirical support because that opens a huge can of worms that less rigorous scientists are eager to exploit.

With respect to the role of transposon-related sequences, the important question, in my opinion, is: Would life look substantially less diverse or less complex if no transposon-related sequences had ever been exapted to form elements that are now under purifying selection? I suspect that the answer is no—life would be different but no less diverse or complex.

Species selection vs species sorting

Speculations about species-level evolution are usually discussed in the context of group selection and species selection or, more broadly, as the levels-of-selection debate. Those are the terms Doolittle uses and he is very much interested in explaining junk DNA as contributing to adaptation at the species level.

But if the insertion of [transcription factor binding sites] TFBSs helps species to innovate and thus diversify (speciate and/or forestall extinction) and is a consequence of TFBS-bearing TE carriage, then such carriage might be cast as an adaptation at the level of species and maintained at that level too, by the differential extinction of TE-deficient species (Linquist et al 2020; Brunet et al 2021).

I think it's unfortunate that we don't use the term 'species sorting' instead of 'species selection' because as soon as you restrict your discussion to selection, you are falling into the adaptationist trap. Elisabeth Vrba, backed by Niles Eldredge, preferred 'species sorting' partly in order to avoid this trap.

I am convinced, on the basis of Vrba's analysis, that we naturalists have been saying 'species selection' when we really should have been calling the phenomenon 'species sorting.' Species sorting is extremely common, and underlies a great deal of evolutionary patterns, as I shall make clear in this narrative. On the other hand, true species selection, in its properly more restricted sense, I now believe to be relatively rare. (Niles Eldredge, in Reinventing Darwin (1995) p. 137)

As I understand it, the difference between 'species sorting' and 'species selection' is that the former term does not commit you to an adaptationist explanation.2 Take the Galapagos finches as an example. There has been fairly rapid radiation of these species from a small initial population that reached the islands. This radiation was not due to any intrinsic propery of the finch genome that made finches more successful at speciation; it was just a lucky accident. Similary, the fact that there are many marsupial species in Australia is probably not because the marsupial genome is better suited to evolution; it's probably just a founder effect at the species level.

Gould still prefers 'species selection' but he recognizes the problem. He points out that whenever you view species as evolving entities within a larger 'population' of other species, you must consider species drift as a distinct possibility. And this means that you can get evolution via a species-level founder effect that has nothing to do with adapation.

Low population (number of species in a clade) provides the enabling criterion for important drift ... at the species level. The analogue of genetic drift—which I shall call 'species drift' must act both frequently and powerfully in macroevolution. Most clades do not contain large numbers of species. Therefore, trends may often originate for effectively random reasons. (Stephen J. Gould, in The Structure of Eolutionary Theory (2001) p. 736)

Let's speculate how this might relate to the current debate. It's possible that the apparent diversity and complexity of large multicellular eukaryotes is mostly due to the fact that they have small populations and long generation times. This means that there were plenty of opportunities for small isolated populations to evolve distinctive features. Thus, we have, for example, more than 1000 different species of bats because of species drift (not species selection). What this means is that the evolution of new species is due to the same reason (small populations) as the evolution of junk DNA. One phenomenon (junk DNA) didn't cause the other (speciation); instead, both phenomena have the same cause.

Michael Lynch has written about this several times, but the important, and mind-hurting, paper is Lynch (2007) where he says,

Under this view, the reductions in Ng that likely accompanied both the origin of eukaryotes and the emergence of the animal and land-plant lineages may have played pivotal roles in the origin of modular gene architectures on which further develomental complexity was built.

Lynch's point is that we should not rule out nonadaptive processes (species drift) in the evolution of complexity, modularity, and evolvability.

If we used species sorting instead of species selection, it would encourage a more pluralsitic perspective and a wider variety of speculations. I don't mean to imply that this issue is ignored by Ford Doolittle, only that it doesn't get the attention it deserves.

Evolvability and teleology

Ford is invoking evolvability as the solution to the evolved complexity and diversity of multicellular eukaryotes. This is not a new idea: it is promoted by James Shapiro, by Mark Kirschner and John Gerhart, and by Günter Wagner, among others. (None of them are referenced in the Doolittle paper.)

The idea here is that clades with lots of TEs should be more successful than those with less junk DNA. It would be nice to have some data the address this question. For example, is the success of the bat clade due to more transposons than other mammals? Probably not, since bats have smaller genomes than other mammals. What about birds? There are lots of bird species but birds seem to have smaller genomes than some of their reptilian ancestors.

There are dozens of Drosophila species and they all have smaller genome sizes than many other flies. In this case, it looks like the small genome had an advantage in evolvability but that's not the prediction.

The concept of evolvability is so attractive that even a staunch gene-centric adaptationist like Richard Dawkins is willing to consider it (Dawkins, 1988). Gould devotes many pages (of course) to the subject in his big Structure book. Both Dawkins and Gould recognize that they are possibly running afoul of teleology in the sense of arguing that species have foresight. Here's how Dawkins puts it ...

It is all too easy for this kind of argument to be used loosely and unrespectably. Sydney Brenner justly ridiculed the idea of foresight in evolution, specifically the notion that a molecule, useless to a lineage of organisms in it own geological era, might nevertheless be retained in the gene pool because of its possible usefulness in some future era: "It might come in handy in the Cretaceous!" I hope I shall not be taken as saying anything like that. We certainly should have no truck with suggestions that individual animals might forego their selfish advantage because of posssible long-term benefits to their species. Evolution has no foresight. But with hindsight, those evolutionary changes in embryology that look as though they were planned with foresight are the ones that dominate successful forms of life.

I interpret this to mean that we should not be fooled by hindsight into looking for causes when what we are seeing is historical contingency. If you have not already read Wonderful Life by Stephen Jay Gould then I highly recommend that you get a copy and read it now in order to understand the role of contingency in the evolution of animals. You should also brush up on the more recent contributions to the tape-of-life debate in order to put this discussion about evolvability into the proper context [Replaying life's tape].

Ford also recognizes the teleological problem and even quotes Sydney Brenner! Here's how Ford explains the relationship between transposon-related sequences and species selection.

As I argue here, organisms took on the burden of TEs not because TE accumulation, TE activity or TE diversity are selected-for traits within any species, serving some current or future need, but because lower-level (intragenomic) selection creates and proliferates TEs as selfish elements. But also, and just possibly, species in which this has happened speciate more often or last longer and (even more speculatively still) ecosystems including such species are better at surviving through time, and especially through the periodic mass extinctions to which this planet has been subjected (Brunet and Doolittle 2015). ‘More speculatively still’ because the adaptations at higher levels invoked are almost impossible to prove empirically. So what I present are again only ‘how possibly’, not ‘how actually’ arguments (Resnick 1991).

This is diving deeply into the domain of abstract thought that's not well-connected to scientific facts. As I mentioned above, I tend to look on these speculations as solutions looking for a problem. I would like to see more evidence that the properties of genomes endow certain species with more power to diversify than species with different genomic properties. Nevertheless, the idea of evolvability is not going away so let's see if Ford's view is reasonable.

As usual, Stephen Jay Gould has thought about this deeply and come up with some useful ideas. His argument is complicated but I'll try and explain it in simple terms. I'm relying mostly on the section called "Resolving the paradox of Evolvability and Defining the Exaptive Pool" in The Structure of Evolutionary Theory pages 1270-1295.

Gould argues that in Hierarchy Theory, the properties at each level of evolution must be restricted to that level. Thus, you can't have evolution at the level of DNA impinging on evolution at the level of the organism. For example, you can't have selection between transposons within a genome affecting evolution at the level of organisms and population. Similarly, selection at the level of organisms can't directly affect species sorting.

What this means in terms of genomes full of transposon-related sequences is the following. Evolution at the level of species involves sorting (or selection) between different species or clades. Each of these species have different properties that may or may not make them more prone to speciations but those properties are equivalent to mutations, or variation, at the level of organisms. Some species may have lots of transposon sequences in their genome and some may have less and this difference arises just by chance as do mutations. There is no foresight in generating mutations and there is no foresight in having different sized genomes.

During species sorting, the differences may confer some selective advantage so species with, say, more junk DNA are more likely to speciate but the differences arose by chance in the same sense that mutations arise by chance (i.e. with no foresight). For example, in Lenski's long-term evolution experiment, certain neutral mutations became fixed by chance so that new mutations arising in this background became adaptive [Contingency, selection, and the long-term evolution experiment]. Scientists and philosophers aren't concerned about whether those neutral mutations might have arisen specifically in order to potentiate future evolution.

Similarly, it is inappropriate to say that transposons, or pervasive transcription, or splicing errors, arose BECAUSE they encouraged evolution at the species level. Instead, as Dawkins said, those features just look with hindsight as though they were planned. They are fortuitous accidents of evolution.

Gould also makes the point, again, that we could just as easily be looking at species drift as species selection and we have to be careful not to resort to adaptive just-so stories in the absence of evidence for selection.

Here's how Gould describes his view of evolvability using the term "spandrel" to describe potentiating accidents.

Thus, Darwinians have always argued that mutational raw material must be generated by a process other than organismal selection, and must be "random" (in the crucal sense of undirected towards adaptive states) with respect to realized pathways of evolutionary change. Traits that confer evolvability upon species-individuals, but arise by selection upon organisms, provide a precise analog at the species level to the classical role of mutation at the organismal level. Because these traits of species evolvability arise by a different process (organismal selection), unrelated to the selective needs of species, they may emerge as the species level as "random" raw material, potentially utilizable as traits for species selection.

The phenotypic effects of mutation are, in exactly the same manner, spandrels at the organismal level—that is, nonadaptive and automatic manifestations at a higher level of different kinds of causes acting directly at a lower level. The exaptation of a small and beneficial subset of these spandrels virtually defines the process of natural selection. Why else do we so commonly refer to the theory of natural selection as as interplay of "chance" (for the spandrels of raw material in mutational variation) and "necessity" (for the locally predictable directions of selection towards adaptation). Similarly, species selection operates by exapting emergent spandrels from causal processes acting upon organisms.

This is a difficult concept to gasp so I urge interested readers to study the relevant chapter in Gould's book. The essence of his argument is that species sorting can only be understood at the level of species as individuals and the properties of species as the random variation upon which species sorting operates.

Michael Lynch is also skeptical about evolvability but for slightly different reasons (Lynch, 2007). Lynch is characteristically blunt about how he views anyone who disagrees with him. (I have been on the losing side of one of those disagreement and I still have the scars to prove it.)

Four of the major buzzwords in biology today are complexity, modularity, evolvability, and robustness, and it is often claimed that ill-defined mechanisms not previously appreciated by evolutionary biologists must be invoked to explain the existence of emergent properties that putatively enhance the long-term success of extant taxas. This stance is not very different from the intelligent-design philosophy of invoking unknown mechanisms to explain biodiversity.

This is harsh and somewhat unfair since nobody would accuse Ford Doolittle of ulterior motives. Lynch's point is that evolvability must be subjected to the same rigorous standards that he applies to population genetics. He questions the idea that "the ability to evolve itself is actively promoted by directional selection" and raises four objections.

  1. Evolvability doesn't meet the stringent conditions that a good hypothesis demands.
  2. It's not clear that the ability to evolve is necessarily advantageous.
  3. There's no evidence that differences between species are anything other than normal variation.
  4. "... comparative genomics provides no support for the idea that genome architectural changes have been promoted in multicellular lineages so as to enhance their ability to evolve.

Why transposon-related sequences?

One of the problems that occurred to me was why there was so much emphasis on transposon sequences. Don't the same arguments apply to pseudogenes, random duplications, and, especially, genome doublings? They do, but the paper appears to be part of a series that arose out of a 2018 meeting on Evolutionary Roles of Transposable Elements: The Science and Philosophy organized by Stefan Linquist and Ford Doolittle. That's why there's a focus on transposons. I assume that Ford could make the same case for other properties of large genomes such as pervasive transcription, spurious transcription binding sites, and splicing errors even if they had nothing to do with transposons.

Is this an attempt to justify junk?

I argue that genomes are sloppy and junk DNA accumulates just because it can. There's no ulterior motive in having a large genome full of junk and it's far more likely to be slightly deleterious than neutral. I believe that all the evidence points in that direction.

This is not a popular view. Most scientists want to believe that all that of excess DNA is there for a reason. If it doesn't have a direct functional role then, at the very least, it's preserved in the present because it allows for future evolution. The arguments promoted by Ford Doolittle in this article, and by others in related articles, tend to support those faulty views about the importance of junk DNA even though that wasn't the intent. Doolittle's case is much more sophisticated than the naive views of junk DNA opponents but, nevertheless, you can be sure that this paper will be referenced frequently by those opponents.

Normal evolution is hard enough but multilevel selection is even harder, especially for molecular biologists who would never think of reading The Structure of Evolutionary Theory, or any other book on evolution. That's why we have to be really careful to distinguish between effects that are adaptations for species sorting and effects that are fortuitous and irrelevant for higher level sorting.

Function Wars
(My personal view of the meaning of function is described at the end of Part V.)

1. The same issues about function come up in the debate over alternative splicing [Alternative splicing and evolution].

2. See Vrba and Gould (1986) for a detailed discussion of species sorting and species seletion and how it pertains to the hierarchical perspective.

Dawkins, R. (1988) The Evolution of Evolvability. Artifical Life, The proceedings of an Interdisciplinary Workshp on The Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems held September 1987 in Los Alamos, New Mexico. C. G. Langton, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company: 201-220.

Lynch, M. (2007) The frailty of adaptive hypotheses for the origins of organismal complexity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104:8597-8604. [doi: 10.1073/pnas.0702207104

Vrba, E.S. and Gould, S.J. (1986) The hierarchical expansion of sorting and selection: sorting and selection cannot be equated. Paleobiology 12:217-228. [doi: 10.1017/S0094837300013671]

Tuesday, April 05, 2022

Two different views of the history of molecular biology

How can different molecular biologists have such opposite views of the history of their field?

I'm posting links to two papers without comment. One of them is from my friend and colleague Alex Palazzo and the other is from James Shapiro who is not my friend or colleague. Both papers have been published in reputable peer-review journals.

Monday, May 03, 2021

More illusions/delusions of James Shapiro and Denis Noble

It was just a few weeks ago that I discussed short articles by Denis Noble and James Shapiro that were published in the journal Biosemiotics [The illusions of Denis Noble] [The illusions of James Shapiro].

Several readers questioned whether Biosemiotics is a real science journal and they were right: it's a kooky journal and that's why it publishes papers by kooks. However, we now have a new paper by Shapiro and Noble that's about to appear in a legitimate scientific journal; albeit, one that has seen better days. This would normally raise red flags concerning peer review but we're long past the time when we can count on peer review to weed out the kooks.

Here's the paper. I'm not going to discuss all the main points because they were covered in my previous posts. I'll just concentrate on the most ridiculous part in order to illustrate the (lack of) quality of this paper.1

Shapiro, J. and Noble, D. (2021) What prevents mainstream evolutionists teaching the whole truth about how genomes evolve? Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. [doi: 10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2021.04.004]

The common belief that the neo-Darwinian Modern Synthesis (MS) was buttressed by the discoveries of molecular biology is incorrect. On the contrary those discoveries have undermined the MS. This article discusses the many processes revealed by molecular studies and genome sequencing that contribute to evolution but nonetheless lie beyond the strict confines of the MS formulated in the 1940s. The core assumptions of the MS that molecular studies have discredited include the idea that DNA is intrinsically a faithful self-replicator, the one-way transfer of heritable information from nucleic acids to other cell molecules, the myth of “selfish DNA,” and the existence of an impenetrable Weismann Barrier separating somatic and germ line cells. Processes fundamental to modern evolutionary theory include symbiogenesis, biosphere interactions between distant taxa (including viruses), horizontal DNA transfers, natural genetic engineering, organismal stress responses that activate intrinsic genome change operators, and macroevolution by genome restructuring (distinct from the gradual accumulation of local microevolutionary changes in the MS). These 21st Century concepts treat the evolving genome as a highly formatted and integrated Read-Write (RW) database rather than a Read-Only Memory (ROM) collection of independent gene units that change by random copying errors. Most of the discoverers of these macroevolutionary processes have been ignored in mainstream textbooks and popularizations of evolutionary biology, as we document in some detail. Ironically, we show that the active view of evolution that emerges from genomics and molecular biology is much closer to the 19th century ideas of both Darwin and Lamarck. The capacity of cells to activate evolutionary genome change under stress can account for some of the most negative clinical results in oncology, especially the sudden appearance of treatment-resistant and more aggressive tumors following therapies intended to eradicate all cancer cells. Knowing that extreme stress can be a trigger for punctuated macroevolutionary change suggests that less lethal therapies may result in longer survival times.

The section on "selfish DNA" is the one that seems to have the highest number of misleading and false statements per paragraph.

1.4. The end of “selfish” or “junk” DNA

A major shortcoming of the MS is that it was based on a “gene-centric” view, which assumed that the genome is basically a collection of “genes” that are the protein-coding units of heredity and heritable variation. As we saw in the quotation from Goldschmidt's 1940 book, this view failed to take the evolutionary importance of chromosome structure into account (Goldschmidt, 1940). It also blinded evolutionary biologists to the importance of McClintock's mid- 20th Century discovery of mobile “controlling elements” (McClintock, 1987). Both the ideas of genetic transposition and control of gene expression by these non-coding mobile elements did not fit within the narrow confines of the MS concepts of genome function and variation. A further empirical assault on the limited MS conceptual framework came in the late 1960s when Britten and Kohne discovered that a significant fraction of genomic DNA from complex eukaryotes consists of highly repetitive sequences rather than the unique coding sequences expected to make up the hereditary material (Britten and Kohne, 1968).

  • The title is ridiculous since no respectable scientist ever equated selfish DNA with junk DNA [Selfish genes and transposons].

  • The Modern Synthesis (MS) was not based on a "gene-centric" view.
  • For the past 50 years, no respectable scientist, and no knowledgeable expert in molecular evolution, has restricted the definition of "gene" to just protein-coding genes.
  • For the past 50 years, no expert in molecular evolution has ever thought that the genome is just a collection of protein-coding genes.
  • For the past 50 years, experts in molecular biology have known about transposons and have considered the view that some of them might be "controlling elements." They have concluded that most transposon-related sequences are just fragments of defective transposons with no biological function.
  • Nobody cares whether mobile genetic elements fit within the narrow confines of the Modern Synthesis as described by Huxley and other in the 1940s because no exeprt in molecular evolution has believed in that view of evolution since the late 1960s.
  • The Britten and Kohne paper established that the genomes of most multicellular eukaryotes contain large amounts of repetivie DNA. This was an attempt to resolve the C-value paradox. Britten and Kohne didn't like the idea that this could be junk DNA so they offered some speculation about function. However, futher data established that most of this repetitive DNA is, indeed, junk and Britten and Kohn's speculations have been discredited. Britten and Kohn were attempting to interpret their result within the context of the adaptationist views that characterized the the Modern Synthesis back then. The correct interpretation of their results came with the overthrow of the Modern Synthesis and the adoption of a new view of evolutionary theory that focused on Neutral Theory, Nearly-Neural Theory, and the importance of random geneitc drift. Shaprio and Noble missed that revolution so they continue to attack an old-fashioned strawman version of evolutionay theory.

Before continuing, it's important to realize that by the early 1970s selectionist thinking had been abandoned by the experts in genome evolution. By 1978 Gould and Lewontin tried, unsccessfully, to convince all other biologists to abandon the old selectionist way of thinking [The Spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian Paradigm]. James Shapiro and Denis Noble are among those other biologists who didn't get the message.

In order to apply selectionist thinking to explain the presence of so much non-coding DNA, evolutionary biologists called this unexpected portion of the genome “junk DNA” (Ohno, 1972) or “selfish DNA” (Orgel and Crick, 1980). Richard Dawkins used an extreme view of these “selfish genes” to erect a whole philosophy of strictly passive evolutionary gradualism (Dawkins, 1976). Today we know that the human genome contains at least 30X as much repetitive non-coding DNA as protein-coding sequences (Lander et al., 2001). Repetitive DNA provides formatting signals for transcription, epigenetic modification and chromosome mechanics and also is the most variable component in the evolutionary diversification of complex genomes (Symonová and Howell, 2018; Subirana et al., 2015; Matsubara et al., 2016; CioffiMde et al., 2015; Chalopin et al., 2015; Shao et al., 2019; Böhne et al., 2008; Li et al., 2016; Oliver et al., 2013). A 2013 plot of organismal complexity against protein-coding and non-coding DNA showed that coding DNA peaked at approximately ∼3 × 107 bp, while the non-coding DNA increased linearly with growing complexity up to ∼2–3 x 1010 bp (Liu et al., 2013). In other words, non-coding DNA tracked organismal complexity better than the protein-coding genes. The “encyclopedia of DNA elements” (ENCODE) project, which largely abandoned the term “gene,” revealed that the large majority of the so-called junk DNA is actively transcribed in a regulated manner, indicating that it is functional (Consortium, 2012; Pennisi, 2012).

  • It is completely, totally, ridiculous to say that the idea of junk DNA was due to selectionist thinking. The first statement in this paragraph is powerful evidence that Shaprio and Noble don't know what they are talking about. The concept of junk DNA is a rejection of selectionist thinking.
  • The use of "noncoding DNA" is what's called a "tell."
  • Again, equating junk DNA with selfish DNA is stupid. If all the excess DNA were selfish then it isn't junk because it has a function.
  • Richard Dawkins' view on evolution is closer to the old-fashioned adaptationist view that was abandoned by the experts by the time he wrote The Selfish Gene. Dawkins book is not really about "genes," however, as is clear to anyone who has read it. He's talking about any piece of DNA that confers a fitness advantage. The Dawkins strawman is a favorite target of the Third Way types but it's just a strawman.
  • No significant proportion of repetitive DNA has a function in spite of the references quoted above.
  • There is no significant correlation between organismal compexity and noncoding DNA. Lots of very similar species, such as onions, have very different genome sizes.
  • No knowledgeable scientist since the 1980s thinks there should be a significant correlation between the number of genes and organismal complexity. We know that most of the phenotypic differences between multicellular species are due to changes in the timing and amount of expression of a standard set of genes. This is the main discovery of evolutionary-developmental biology (evo-devo), another revolution that Shapiro and Nobel missed. They should educate themselves by reading Sean B. Carroll's books.
  • The ENCODE researchers did lots of silly things but they did NOT abandon the term "gene."
  • The idea that most of our genome is functional because of ENCODE is laughable in 2021. The fact that Shapiro and Noble would bring this up is another "tell" and the fact that they would reference Elizabeth Pennisi is even more revealing. These guys are incapable of thinking critically.

Shaprio and Noble then describe a few examples of repetitive DNA sequences that have a known function and they point out that a number of noncoding genes have been indentified. They imply that these functional sequences make up a signifcant fraction of the genome thus calling the concept of junk DNA into question. They close the section with,

Clearly, none of the eminent scientists who wrote about junk or selfish DNA could possibly have imagined the wide range of cellular functionalities that we know today are executed by ncRNA molecules. The idea that a genome was just a collection of protein coding sequences has proved completely inadequate.

  • I don't know about you, dear reader, but I'll match those "eminent scientists" against Shapiro and Noble any day. I'd love to see them try to defend their views in a public debate against some of the leading proponents of junk DNA. I know where my money would be.

Let me close by quoting the last chapter of this paper. I don't intend to comment on it except to say that it gives new meaning to the word "irony."

The campaign to sustain the Modern Synthesis causes real harm in a number of different ways. Among doctors treating bacterial infections, ignorance of real-world evolutionary processes has led to a situation in which the available antibiotics have lost their effectiveness against many life-threatening conditions (CDC et al., 2019). Among the general public, the inability to comprehend the potential all living organisms possess for transferring and reorganizing genomic configurations makes them unprepared to form sound judgements about how society should utilize its growing arsenal of biotechnology tools acquired from our microbial neighbors, like CRISPR (Doudna, 2020). Among oncologists, MS thinking prevents the practitioners treating cancer patients from recognizing the dangers of overtreating tolerable tumors in ways that may provoke a macroevolutionary transition to a far more lethal and untreatable disease (Heng, 2019). Finally, in the battle against obscurantism and anti-evolution prejudice, insistence on an outdated set of assertions about how life can change itself leaves the defenders of rigorous scientific inquiry without satisfactory responses to critics. Clearly, the time has come for the mainstream evolution community to recognize and join the scientific reality of the 21st Century.

Finally, one of the most important properties of kooks is that they find each other and they tend to hang out together, either physically or virtually. I'm not sure why this happens since they often espouse mutually exclusive views. I'm guessing that we can explain it in two different ways: (1) they are all outsiders fighting against a common enemy; namely, real science, and (2) they lack critical thinking skills so they don't see the flaws in each other's arguments.


1. In case you didn't recognize the quality from the title.

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

The illusions of James Shapiro

James A. Shapiro is a professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Chicago (Chicago, USA). He made signficant contributions to our understanding if the function and structure of transposons but in later years he has become a vocal opponent of evolution culminating in his 2011 book Evolution: A View from the 21st Century. He is one of the founding members of The Third Way of Evolution.

I wrote a critical review of Evolution: A View from the 21st Century for the National Center for Science Education (NCSE) Reports but the issue is no longer visible on the web. Shapiro didn't like my review so NCSE published his rebutal and that's also unavailable. You can see my response at: James Shapiro Responds to My Review of His Book.

Monday, April 19, 2021

The illusions of Denis Noble

Denis Noble was a Professor of Physiology at Oxford University in the United Kingdom until he retired. He had a distinguished career as a physiologist making significant contributions to our undestanding of the heart and its relationship to the whole organism.

In recent years, Noble has dabbled in philosophy and evolution. He has become a vocal opponent modern evolution (sensu Noble) and the way science is currently conducted. Some of his criticisms have made it onto two popular books: The Music of Life and Dance to the Tune of Life. He is one of the leading proponents of the "Extended Evolutionary Synthesis" (EES) and he is one of the founders of The Third Way of Evolution, a wishy-washy and scientifically inaccurate way of attacking a strawman version of evolution and providing a safe haven for religious scientists.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

The Extended Evolutionary Synthesis - papers from the Royal Society meeting

I went to London last November to attend the Royal Society meeting on New trends in evolutionary biology: biological, philosophical and social science perspectives [New Trends in Evolutionary Biology: The Program].

The meeting was a huge disappointment [Kevin Laland's new view of evolution]. It was dominated by talks that were so abstract and obtuse that it was difficult to mount any serious discussion. The one thing that was crystal clear is that almost all of the speakers had an old-fashioned view of the current status of evolutionary theory. Thus, they were for the most part arguing against a strawman version of evolutionary theory.

The Royal Society has now published the papers that were presented at the meeting [Theme issue ‘New trends in evolutionary biology: biological, philosophical and social science perspectives’ organized by Denis Noble, Nancy Cartwright, Patrick Bateson, John Dupré and Kevin Laland]. I'll list the Table of Contents below.

Most of these papers are locked behind a paywall and that's a good thing because you won't be tempted to read them. The overall quality is atrocious—the Royal Society should be embarrassed to publish them.1 The only good thing about the meeting was that I got to meet a few friends and acquaintances who were supporters of evolution. There was also a sizable contingent of Intelligent Design Creationists at the meeting and I enjoyed talking to them as well2 [see Intelligent Design Creationists reveal their top story of 2016].

Tuesday, June 06, 2017

Stephen Meyer "predicts" there's no junk DNA

Here's an interview with Stephen Meyer on the Evolution 2.0 website: Stephen Meyer Debates Perry Marshall – Intelligent Design vs. Evolution 2.0. I'm posting some remarks by Stephen Meyer in order to preserve them for posterity. Meyer should know by now that the evidence for junk DNA is very solid and the ENCODE declarations are wrong. The fact that he persists in spreading false information about the ID "prediction" is revealing.

Sunday, October 02, 2016

Extending evolutionary theory? - Denis Noble

I will be attending the Royal Society Meeting on New trends in evolutionary biology: biological, philosophical and social science perspectives. I'll post each of the abstracts and ask for your help in deciding what question to pose to the speakers. Here's the abstract for Denis Noble's talk on Evolution viewed from medicine and physiology.

Medicine and physiology are multi-level disciplines. So is physics. From physics we learn that ordered properties at high levels co-exist with randomness at lower levels. Molecules in organisms must obey the same principles. Stochasticity at low levels does not therefore exclude order at higher levels. Organisms enlist stochasticity in their development of functional behaviour, through restraints exerted by higher over lower levels. The physics of organisms must therefore interact with their genomes to produce the phenotype1,2. Reverse engineering from physiological models is then required to understand genotype-phenotype relations3. There is no privileged level of causality4, nor privileged level of selection5. Evolution involves interaction between several processes at multiple levels, as Charles Darwin also believed5,6. Without understanding these interactions, gene-centred approaches will continue to produce disappointing results in healthcare7,8, including trans-generational disease risks.
I have heard Denis Noble speak and I've read some of his papers [Physiologists fall for the Third Way; A physiologist thinks about evolution]. Denis Noble is a physiologist who worked on hearts and circulation in complex mammals (humans). He's very annoyed at biochemists and molecular biologists for getting so much attention (and money) over the past few decades. He has constructed in his mind a false image of evolution. He thinks it's entirely adaptationist and gene-centric and that's what he rails against. He doesn't like Richard Dawkins. He's a prominent member of The Third Way.

You can see for yourself by watching a video of a talk he gave a few years ago.


I agree completely with Jerry Coyne's analysis of this talk [Famous physiologist embarrasses himself by claiming that the modern theory of evolution is in tatters]. Jerry says ....
I’m writing this post in a bit of anger, as Noble’s attacks on the modern synthesis are both poorly informed and clearly motivated by his ambition to make physiology a central part of evolutionary biology. Although he’s an FRS and famous, he wants more: he wants his field to be central to evolution. But such misguided hubris is not the way science is supposed to be done. And physiology is already important in evolutionary biology. It’s the reason why we look at the effects of a gene substitution, for example, not as a simple one-gene-produces-one-trait issue, but as a the gene’s overall effect on reproductive output through its effects ramifying through the complexities of development. Noble says that evolutionists are guilty of this “one-gene-one-trait” error, but he’s just wrong: I don’t know a single person in my field who holds this simplistic view.

None of the arguments that Noble makes are new: they’re virtual tropes among those people, like James Shapiro and Lynn Margulis, who embarked, at the end of their careers, on a misguided crusade to topple the modern theory of evolution.

However famous Noble may be in physiology, he’s a blundering tyro when it comes to evolutionary biology. He might try discussing his ideas with other evolutionists and listening to their responses. He obviously hasn’t done that, and yet travels the world trading on his expertise in physiology to show that the edifice of modern evolutionary biology is rotten. And he writes papers to that effect, including the dreadful piece referenced below.

But what’s really rotten is Noble’s knowledge of the field and his claim that virtually every assumption of neo-Darwinian evolution is wrong. In fact, his arguments are so rotten that they stink like old herring.

They’re not even wrong.
I'm not going to ask any questions after this talk. I'll report back on how many people seem to agree with him.


Saturday, October 01, 2016

Extending evolutionary theory? - James Shapiro

I will be attending the Royal Society Meeting on New trends in evolutionary biology: biological, philosophical and social science perspectives. I'll post each of the abstracts and ask for your help in deciding what question to pose to the speakers. Here's the abstract for James Shapiro's talk on Biological action in Read-Write genome evolution.

Many of the most important evolutionary variations that generated phenotypic adaptations and originated novel taxa resulted from complex cellular activities affecting genome content and expression. These activities included: (i) the symbiogenetic cell merger that produced the mitochondrion-bearing ancestor of all extant eukaryotes; (ii) symbiogenetic cell mergers that produced chloroplast-bearing ancestors of photosynthetic eukaryotes; and (iii) interspecific hybridisations and genome doublings that have generated adaptive radiations and new species of higher plants and animals. Adaptive variations have also arisen by horizontal DNA transfers (frequently involving infectious agents), by natural genetic engineering of coding sequence DNA in protein evolution (e.g. exon shuffling), and by mobile DNA rewiring of transcriptional regulatory networks, such as those essential to viviparous reproduction in mammals. In the most highly evolved multicellular organisms, we now know that biological complexity scales with ‘non-coding’ DNA content rather than with protein-coding capacity in the genome. Coincidentally, we have come to recognise that ‘non-coding’ RNAs rich in repetitive mobile DNA sequences function as key regulators of complex adaptive phenotypes, such as stem cell pluripotency. The intersections of cell activities and Read-Write genome modifications provide a rich molecular and biological foundation for understanding how ecological disruptions can stimulate productive, often abrupt, evolutionary transformations.
I have dozens of questions for Jim Shapiro but here are two possibilities.
Most of the events you describe are one-off events in the history of life. They are mostly accidents. They were unpredictable. How does the occurrence of unique events such as endosymbiosis or genome doubling fit into evolutionary theory as opposed to just historical facts in the history of life.

OR

Michael Lynch and others say that the amount of junk DNA in a genome correlates with the population size of the species. This view is perfectly consistent with modern population genetics. There is plenty of evidence that 90% of our genome is junk. You seem to be implying that this extra DNA is not junk but serves some adaptive purpose. What evidence do you have that supports this claim and why do you disagree with Michael Lynch?

Monday, July 04, 2016

Paradigm shifting at the Royal Society meeting in November

Suzan Mazur has been making a name for herself by promoting the overthrow of modern evolutionary theory. She began with a lot of hype about the Alternberg 16 back in 2008 and continued with a series of interviews of prominent evolutionary biologists.

Now she's focused on the upcoming meeting in November as another attempt to shift paradigms [see New Trends in Evolutionary Biology: The Program]. She's not entirely wrong. Many of the people involved in those meeting see themselves as paradigm shifters.

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

New Trends in Evolutionary Biology: The Program

I'm going to London next November to attend The Royal Society conference on New trends in evolutionary biology: biological, philosophical and social science perspectives. This is where all the scientists who want to change evolution will be gathering to spout their claims.

Developments in evolutionary biology and adjacent fields have produced calls for revision of the standard theory of evolution, although the issues involved remain hotly contested. This meeting will present these developments and arguments in a form that will encourage cross-disciplinary discussion and, in particular, involve the humanities and social sciences in order to provide further analytical perspectives and explore the social and philosophical implications.
The program has been published. Here's the list of speakers ...

Gerd B. Müller
The extended evolutionary synthesis

Douglas Futuyma
The evolutionary synthesis today: extend or amend?

Sonia Sultan
Re-conceiving the genotype: developmental plasticity

Russell Lande

Evolution of phenotypic plasticity

Tobias Uller
Heredity and evolutionary theory

John Dupré
The ontology of evolutionary process

Paul Brakefield

Can the way development works bias the path taken by evolution?

Kevin Laland
Niche construction

James Shapiro
Biological action in read-write genome evolution

Paul Griffiths
Genetics/epigenetics in development/evolution

Eva Jablonka
Epigenetic inheritance

Greg Hurst
Symbionts in evolution

Denis Noble
Evolution viewed from medicine and physiology

Andy Gardner
Anthropomorphism in evolutionary biology

Sir Patrick Bateson
The active role of the organism in evolution

Karola Stotz

Developmental niche construction

Tim Lewens
A science of human nature

Agustín Fuentes
Human niche, human behaviour, human nature

Andrew Whiten
The second inheritance system: the extension of biology through culture

Susan Antón
Human evolution, niche construction and plasticity

Melinda Zeder
Domestication as a model system for evolutionary biology

I didn't know that Paul Griffiths and Karola Stotz were going. It's a bit surprising that they would associate with some of these views. I'm glad that Douglas Futuyma will be there to represent the voice of reason. He seems to be one of the few speakers who understands modern evolutionary theory.

There are still a few spots available, according to the organizers. Sign up quickly.

The meeting is at Carlton House Terrace, which is just a few blocks from Trafalger Square and a short walk down The Mall to Buckingham Palace where the Corgis live.


Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Selfish genes and transposons

Back in 1980, the idea that large fractions of animal and plant genomes could be junk was quite controversial. Although the idea was consistent with the latest developments in population genetics, most scientists were unaware of these developments. They were looking for adaptive ways of explaining all the excess DNA in these genomes.

Some scientists were experts in modern evolutionary theory but still wanted to explain "junk DNA." Doolittle & Sapienza, and Orgel & Crick, published back-to-back papers in the April 17, 1980 issue of Nature. They explained junk DNA by claiming that most of it was due to the presence of "selfish" transposons that were being selected and preserved because they benefited their own replication and transmission to future generations. They have no effect on the fitness of the organism they inhabit. This is natural selection at a different level.

This prompted some responses in later editions of the journal and then responses to the responses.

Here's the complete series ...

Friday, August 07, 2015

Here's why you can ignore Günther Witzany

Günther Witzany is one of those people who think the Modern Synthesis needs to be overthrown but he missed the real revolution that took place in the late 1960s. He's part of The Third Way crowd that includes Denis Noble and Jim Shapiro [see Physiologists fall for the Third Way and The Third Fourth Way].

Susan Mazur interviews him for the Huffington Post [Günther Witzany: Modern Synthesis "Must Be Replaced," Communication Key to Evolution]. Recall that Susan Mazur is fixated on the Altenburg 16 and their attempts to radically revise evolutionary theory without understanding anything about Neutral Theory and random genetic drift. Günther Witzany is a philosopher. He was not one of the Altenberg 16 but he clearly wants to be part of the outer circle. It's not clear why anyone should consider him an expert on evolutionary biology.

Susan Mazur did us a great favor when she asked him if he would like to make a final point. His answer shows us why we can ignore him.
The older concepts we have now for a half century cannot sufficiently explain the complex tendency of the genetic code. They can't explain the functions of mobile genetic elements and the endogenous retroviruses and non-coding RNAs. Also, the central dogma of molecular biology has been falsified -- that is, the way is always from DNA to RNA to proteins to anything else, or the other "dogmas," e.g., replication errors drive evolutionary genetic variation, that one gene codes for one protein and that non-coding DNA is junk. All these concepts that dominated science for half a century are falsified now. ...
Thank-you Susan. Keep up the good work. Fools need to be exposed.


Saturday, June 06, 2015

Who's an authority on evolutionary theory?

There's an interesting discussion going on at Uncommon Descent. Barry Arrington is wondering who to believe when it comes to evolutionary theory and many of the ID regulars have chimed in [Authority in evolutionary theory]. Clearly, this is an important issue for them because they don't want to be accused of not understanding evolution. They want to protect their version of Darwinism.

They seemed to have reached a consensus. They say you can't be an authority on evolutionary theory unless you have published a scientific paper on the subject in the last decade or so. What this means is that they can dismiss the views of many evolution supporters because we don't meet the minimum qualification.1 Our view on what is, and isn't, proper evolutionary theory are just personal opinions so they don't count.

Unfortunately for them, this also eliminates Barry Arrington, Vincent Torley, Denyse O'Leary, Casey Luskin, Stephen Meyer, Jonathan Wells, Jonathan McLatchie, Michael Behe, Salvador Cordova, Jonathan Bartlet, Michael Egnor, Cornelius Hunter, Gordon Elliot Mullings, Ann Gauger and just about everyone else in the Intelligent Design Creationist camp. If they stick to their guns, it means that nothing posted on the ID blogs is anything more than a personal opinion by someone who is not an authority on evolutionary theory.

So, who are they going to believe now? My first thought is that this can only be good for the evolution side since people who publish scientific articles on evolutionary theory are not ID supporters. It means that the Intelligent Design Creationists are obligated to trust many prominent evolution biologists as authorities while dismissing most of their own crowd.

I don't think that's what they have in mind. What they have in mind is that people like Jim Shapiro and other critics of modern evolutionary theory are the real authorities because they have published in the scientific literature. I suppose it's part of a strategy to maintain the illusion that "Darwinism" is deeply flawed.

The one good thing that will come out of this discussion, I'm sure, is that the number of posts and comments on their blogs will be greatly reduced since the general consensus is that none of them are authorities on the subject of evolution. Lot's of people are going to have to shut up because they haven't published anything on evolutionary theory.2

Strange, but I will miss Barry Arrington and Denyse O'Leary's attacks on evolutionary theory. They will now be criticized by their own people as non-authorities whenever they post.


1. I have never published a paper in the scientific literature on evolutionary theory.

2. No, I'm not holding my breath.

Monday, May 11, 2015

Genomics journal is about to embarrass itself with a special issue on junk DNA

The journal Genomics is a journal devoted to the study of genomes. It describes itself like this ...
Genomics is a forum for describing the development of genome-scale technologies and their application to all areas of biological investigation.

As a journal that has evolved with the field that carries its name, Genomics focuses on the development and application of cutting-edge methods, addressing fundamental questions with potential interest to a wide audience. Our aim is to publish the highest quality research and to provide authors with rapid, fair and accurate review and publication of manuscripts falling within our scope.
They claim that all submissiosn are subjected to rigorous peer review and only 25-30% of submissions are accepted for publication.

The composition of genomes is important so it's no surprise that the journal is interested in publishing articles that address the junk DNA debate. In fact, it is so interested that it is going to devote a special issue to the subject for publication in February 2016.

That's the good news. Now for the bad news ....
Special issue on the functionality of genomic DNAs

Guest Editors:

Prof. Shi Huang
State Key Laboratory of Medical Genetics
Central South University , China
huangshi@sklmg.edu.cn

Prof James Shapiro
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
University of Chicago
jsha@uchicago.edu

The field of genome evolution and population genetics has for the past half of a century assumed that genomic DNA can be divided into functional and non-functional (“junk”) regions. Experimental molecular science has found little evidence for this assumption. A majority of the noncoding parts of the human genome are transcribed, and numerous experimental researchers have now recognized an important functional role in the so called junk DNA regions, such as syn sites, lncRNA, psudogene transcripts, antisense transcripts, microRNA, and mobile elements. In fact, evidence for functional constraints on noncoding genome regions has long been recognized. New theoretical frameworks based on less arbitrary foundations have also appeared in recent years that can coherently account for the reality of far more functional DNAs, as well as all other major known facts of evolution and population genetics. Nonetheless, there still remains a large gap in opinions between bench scientists in experimental biology and those on the theory side in bioinformatics and population genetics. This special issue will aim to close that gap and provide a view of evidence from a perspective that all genome regions have (or can easily acquire) functionality.

The special issue on the functionality of genome will focus on the following tentative topics:
  1. Theoretical foundation for all genome regions to be functional. It will cover both the theory and all major features of genome evolution.
  2. Functional studies on junk DNA regions, including lncRNA sequences, viral DNAs and mobile elements
  3. Functionalities associated with genome spatial organization in the nucleus
  4. Isocores and compositional constraints on genomes
  5. Genetic basis of complex traits and diseases focusing on the collective effects of normal genetic variations
  6. Cancer genomics
  7. Roles of repetitive DNA elements in major evolutionary transitions
  8. Correlations of genome composition and organismal complexity
  9. Epigenetics
  10. Evo Devo and extended synthesis
Important dates:

First submission date: July 1, 2015
Deadline for paper submissions: October 1, 2015
Deadline for final revised version: December 1, 2015
Expected publication: February 2016
Some of you will recognize the names of the guest editors. Jim Shapiro is one of the poster boys of Intelligent Design Creationism because he attacks evolutionary theory. He's one of the founders of the "The Third Way."

You may be less familiar with Shi Huang. He is also part of the Third Way movement but we've recently learned a lot more about him because he posts comments under the name "gnomon." You can see some of his comments in this thread: Ford Doolittle talks about transposons, junk DNA, ENCODE, and how science should work. Shi Huang appears to have a great deal of difficulty expressing himself in a rational manner.

Those guest editors will publish papers that "... provide a view of evidence from a perspective that all genome regions have (or can easily acquire) functionality." In other words, skeptics need not apply.

The controversy is over the amount of junk DNA in genomes. There are two sides in this controversy. Many scientists think there is abundant and convincing evidence that most of our genome is junk. Other scientists think that most of our genome is functional. It looks like Genomics is only interested in hearing from the second group of scientists. That's why they appointed guest editors with an obvious bias. Those guest editors also happen to be skating very close to the edge of kookdom.

This is not how a credible science journal is supposed to behave.


Wednesday, April 01, 2015

Physiologists fall for the Third Way


I looked forward to this "conversation" because I was already familiar with Denis Noble and his strange views of evolution [A physiologist thinks about evolution]. Noble reiterated his view of modern evolutionary theory at the meeting. He thinks that modern evolutionary theory (The Modern Synthesis or Neo-Darwinism) is all about random mutation and natural selection. He thinks it is based on the views of Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene. Neither he nor Michael Joyner (an anaethesiologist at the Mayo Clinic) have learned about random genetic drift or Neutral Theory and neither of them have much knowledge of population genetics. In other words, they are pretty ignorant about evolution even though they feel entitled to attack it.

Sunday, January 04, 2015

A physiologist thinks about evolution

Denis Noble is a physiologist at Oxford University (now Professor Emeritus). He is famous for his work on the physiology of the heartbeat and he is touted as one of the founders of systems biology.

Denis Noble wrote a book on evolutionary theory called The Music of Life. It's featured on The Third Way, a website created by James Shapiro to promote his version of a paradigm shift in thinking about evolution. All the usual suspects are represented on that site.1

Here's how the book is described on that website ....
What is Life? Decades of research have resulted in the full mapping of the human genome - three billion pairs of code whose functions are only now being understood. The gene’s eye view of life, advocated by evolutionary biology, sees living bodies as mere vehicles for the replication of the genetic codes.

But for a physiologist, working with the living organism, the view is a very different one. Denis Noble is a world renowned physiologist, and sets out an alternative view to the question - one that becomes deeply significant in terms of the living, breathing organism. The genome is not life itself. Noble argues that far from genes building organisms, they should be seen as prisoners of the organism.

The view of life presented in this little, modern, post-genome project reflection on the nature of life, is that of the systems biologist: to understand what life is, we must view it at a variety of different levels, all interacting with each other in a complex web. It is that emergent web, full of feedback between levels, from the gene to the wider environment, that is life. It is a kind of music.

Including stories from Noble’s own research experience, his work on the heartbeat, musical metaphors, and elements of linguistics and Chinese culture, this very personal and at times deeply lyrical book sets out the systems biology view of life.
I haven't read this book and I don't intend to read it. Having listened to a lecture by Denis Noble (below) I don't think I'm going to learn anything more by buying the book.

I urge you to watch the lecture. It's the plenary lecture at the International Conference of Physiological Sciences in November, 2012. Denis Noble is the President of the International Union of Physiological Sciences. The lecture is only 30 minutes long but it gives you a good introduction to the way many scientists from outside the field of evolutionary biology are thinking about evolution (and the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology). It's not a very pretty picture.


If you want a brief summary of what's wrong with this lecture see Jerry Coyne's blog website post: Famous physiologist embarrasses himself by claiming that the modern theory of evolution is in tatters.


1. For more on James Shapiro see: The Third Fourth? Way
Evolution: a View from the 21st century
Reply to Laurence A Moran’s review of Evolution: A View from the 21st Century
James Shapiro Responds to My Review of His Book
James Shapiro Never Learns
James Shapiro Claims Credit for Predicting That Junk DNA Is Actually Part of a "highly sophisticated information storage organelle"
Revisiting the Central Dogma in the 21st Century.