Archive September 2009

Where did you get that preposterous hypothesis David Winter Sep 29

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ResearchBlogging.org

From time to time you find yourself disagreeing with something you read in a scientific paper. Perhaps you don’t think the authors have applied a method correctly or ,more often, you don’t think that the results they present are enough to justify the claims made in the their discussion or their university PR department’s breathless press release. You don’t often end up wondering if the third most prestigious journal in the world might have an April Fool’s day issue. But what else is one to think when confronted with an opening paragraph like this one from a recent paper [1]:

I reject the Darwinian assumption that larvae and their adults evolved from a single common ancestor. Rather I posit that, in animals that metamorphose, the basic types of larvae originated as adults of different lineages, i.e., larvae were transferred when, through hybridization, their genomes were acquired by distantly related animals.

Got that? The author thinks that animals with distinctly different larval forms (caterpillars and butterflies, tadpoles and frogs, veligers and marine snails…) don’t descend from a single ancestor that had a simple life history and later developed a two-stage strategy. Rather, Donald Williamson thinks that metamorphosing organisms are chimeras – hybrids between two distinct lineages in which the two parental genomes have reached a compromise such that one parent gets to run what we call the larval form and the other oversees the adult.

This is certainly not a mainstream idea, but the paper I’m talking about was published in the Proceedings on the National Academy of Science (PNAS), one of the most prestigious scientific journals that there is, Williamson must have some good data to support his idea right? Well, no. Williamson’s entire case appears is that he finds it really really hard to imagine metamorphosis evolving in gradual steps and, besides, some larval forms look quite a lot some other organisms. Williamson does distinguish himself from other pedlars of what Richard Dawkins has named the “argument from personal incredulity” by at least providing a specific hypothesis to test: modern insects with ‘caterpillar’ larvae (butterflies, beetles, ants, wasps, bees, files…) descend from an ‘accidental’ mating between a flying insect and an onychophran (no illustration of this process is provided).



Peripatoides novaezealandiae, a wide spread New Zealand endemic onychophoran and young, photo © Te Ara

Onychophorans (which we usually call ‘peripatus‘ in New Zealand) are part of that admittedly large list of creatures that can be called “David’s favourite animals” so before we hang Williamson’s preposterous hypothesis out to dry I’m going to have to subject you to a little bit of cheer-leading. This is not the first time that onychophorans have been the subject of woolly evolutionary thinking. Since they are likely related to some of the most spectacular cambrian fossils people have called them “living fossils” and you’ll even sometimes hear it proposed they represent a *shudder* “missing link” between arthropods (insects, crustaceans, spiders…) and annelids (earthworms and their kin). Which is all a great shame because it diverts attention from the fact the onychophorans are nocturnal hunters which crawl through the leaf litter on hydro-statically inflated legs in pursuit of small invertebrates which they immobilise with a sticky glue they spray from their mouths in order to let them inject digestive enzymes into their stricken prey and suck the resulting soup from its lifeless body. That’s the sort of thing people ought to know about it.

What about Williamson’s “larval transfer” idea? Is this a case, like Wegner and continental drift or Bretz on ice ages, in which science needs some outré thinking to get itself out of a rut that is holding it back? Hardly.

Insect metamorphisms isn’t that hard a problem

An adult cicada emerging from its last nymphal molt © Te Ara

.

Just how complete metamorphosis of the sort you see in butterflies evolved is a genuinely difficult and, as such, interesting question. But it’s one that Williamson clearly hasn’t bothered to read about. If he had he would’ve found a lovely review from Deniz Ereyilmaz2 who traces the history of the problem and makes a case that larvae are effectively free living embryos (an idea that was articulated by Harvey (of the circulatory system) and later used by Darwin in the 6th edition of The Origin to reply to contemporary criticism that his theory couldn’t explain metamorphosis). Specifically, the idea is that the holometabolous insects (the ones that undergo complete metamorphosis) evolved from direct developing insects like cicadas and grasshoppers. In these insects the final stage of embryonic development is called a pronymph, in most species the pronymph molts into a mini-adult (called a nymph) before it hatches but a few species actually hatch as pronymphs. Ereyilmaz and the few entomologists that have tackled this question in recent years think holometabolous insects descend from species in which the pronymph hatched and then became able to feed. From there the development of the pronymph stage was extended while nymphal development (which usually proceeds as small changes accrued in each of several molts) was progressively squeezed into one step, which we now call pupation (like a caterpillar’s cocoon).

There is some nice genetic evidence that something like that process has happened. One of the genes required to start the metamorphosis process is called broad, mutants that can’t produce functional broad protein fail to pupate. Insects like cicadas and grasshopers that don’t undergo complete metamorphosis also have copies of broad but in these insects broad is expressed at each nymphal molt – consistent with the idea pupation in holometabolic insects corresponds to nymphal molt in direct developing insects.

The evolution of complete metamorphosis remains an interesting question (if you are want to learn more Christopher Taylor has deeper look at it than I’ve given here) but the sort of path laid out above – the gradual addition of multiple, relatively small changes to the existing insect life cycle is surely orders of magnitude more likely than two genomes being thrown together and, somehow, deciding to regulate two complete separate developmental programmes as well as the entirely new process of breaking down the first genomes animal before development of the second one can begin?

Complete metamorphosis doesn’t use two sets of genes

Williamson also asks ‘genomocists’ to search for distinct genomes within the DNA sequence of holometabolous insects. We don’t need a complete genome to know that the same genes are being used in the development of adults and larvae. People have been studying the genetic basis of development in Drosophila (which my taxonomic pedantry won’t allow me to call fruit-flies) for at least 20 years – all Williamson needed to do to check his hypothesis against the evidence was open an undergraduate textbook. Had he done that he would have seen, in one tirivial example, that the that patterning of the adult wing in Drosphila requires the genes hedgehog and wingless (geneticists usually name genes after what loss of function mutants look like ) both of which are also vital to defining the polarity of the segments formed in embryonic development. We’ve also know since at 1997 [3] than oncychophorans and insects inherited their hox genes, (the genes that lay out the basic body plan in animals) from a common ancestor that lived before the two groups split up – and the holometabolic insects we’ve looked at only have one set of hox genes.

So why is this in PNAS?

OK, so Williamson has his answer to the problem of metamorphosis and no evidence is about to sway him from it. But he’s not asking for his nonsense to be taught in public schools or anything – he’s just a harmless crank. The question is why was his idea afforded space in one of the most prominent scientific journals instead of being expressed in the standard media for cranks – self published pamphlets or a huge single page website made with Mircrosoft FrontPage and featuring five different colours of text interspersed with clip-art and presented on a yellow background. Well, until very recently there where two ways to be published in PNAS, you could submit an article to the editorial office in the normal way or you could have a member of the National Academy of Sciences ‘communicate’ your article – which still required peer review but the whole process, including picking the reviewers, was overseen by the communicating member. In this case the communicating member was Lyn Margulis who richly deserves to be a member of the academy for providing the evidence then championing the very unorthodox idea that mitochondria (of which I’ve spoken before) descend from free living bacteria that long ago formalised a symbiotic union they’d fallen into with an ancestor of us Eukaryotes. That very strange idea has now been accepted by pretty much everyone that has an opinion on the matter but since that triumph Margulis has fallen into what Jerry Coyne( world famous geneticist, new atheist and cat blogger) calls Big Idea Syndrome. A lot of people who discover some interesting and important wrinkle in a prevailing theory get it into their minds that their discovery is actually driving force behind an entire field of study. In Margulis’s case this syndrome manifests itself in an unwavering belief that all the interesting questions in biology can be answered with symbiosis and “acquired genomes” while modern evolutionary biology and its fascination with competition as a driver of change is “a minor twentieth-century religious sect within the sprawling religious persuasion of Anglo-Saxon Biology.”

PNAS is ending the peculiar institution that saw Williamson’s paper published, probably in part because papers appearing in the journal are treated with a degree of scepticism by at least some readers. I actually think that’s a shame, the communicated papers had the potential to give a platform for important ideas that might otherwise be too unorthodox to appear in widely read journals – Margulis’ original paper was rejected 7 times before the Journal of Theoretical Biology published it. It’s a great pity a person whose work makes one of the best cases for the need for original thinking in science has has helped to highlight what happens when such creativity isn’t met with a more critical mindset.


[1] Williamson, D. (2009). Caterpillars evolved from onychophorans by hybridogenesis Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0908357106
[2] Erezyilmaz, D. (2006). Imperfect eggs and oviform nymphs: a history of ideas about the origins of insect metamorphosis Integrative and Comparative Biology, 46 (6), 795-807 DOI: 10.1093/icb/icl033
[3]Grenier, J., Garber, T., Warren, R., Whitington, P., & Carroll, S. (1997). Evolution of the entire arthropod Hox gene set predated the origin and radiation of the onychophoran/arthropod clade Current Biology, 7 (8), 547-553 DOI: 10.1016/S0960-9822(06)00253-3

I TOLD you you’re all mutants David Winter Sep 07

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ResearchBlogging.org


Recently I tried to make this case that a mutation in my mitochondrial DNA
didn’t make me so very different than the rest of you
:

Our typical conception of mutation is drawn from the tragic effects of those
relatively rare mutations, induced in our bodies or passed on through germ
cells, that lead to diseases (or, in movies to super powers). In fact, we
are, each of us, mutants. DNA replication is not perfect, we are born with about
6 or 7 new mutations…

Well, a paper published last week[1] proved my general point while proving me wrong
on the detail by a factor of 20 or so. A team of British and Chinese
researchers that work with a family that has a unique Y-chromosome linked
hearing disorder sequenced the entire sequence of the Y-chromosome from two
men and found four mutations. Scaling up from the Y-chromosome to the whole
genome then dividing by the combined 13 generations that separate the two men
they arrived a mutation rate of 3 x 10-8 changes per nucleotide per
generation. That would give us between one and two hundred new mutations.

This finding isn’t actually a revelation. We had an idea of the rate of
mutation in the human genome before we even knew what a gene was made of. JBS
Haldane
, one of the founders of evolutionary genetics and perhaps the only
person to have enjoyed the First World War, used his theory of mutation
selection balance
to estimate new haemophilia causing mutations occur about
once in every 105 generations.[2] When you consider that the gene
responsible for Haemophilia A
contains about 7 x 103 nucleotides
and changes to many of those won’t cause Haemophilia Haldane’s estimate looks
pretty good.

In fact, the Cool New Stuff in this paper isn’t really the number that
they’ve produced – that number is similar Haldane’s esimate and to the
measurble error rate of the enzymes that replicate our DNA and to the
rate inferred by comparing our genome to that of the cimpanzee *. What’s really neat is the fact they directly measured the rate by resequencing the whole Y-chromosome – that’s more than 10 million bases to sequence, 35 at a time, and put together to check for mutations. The sort of project that would only have been possible as part dedicated genome sequencing projects a couple of years ago. With only two people and four mutations the estimate has
wide error bars but it does pave the way to more accurate estimates for
particular areas of the genome (including those underlying for diseases) and
particular lineages of organisms (which is important for us evolutionary
biologists)

I can’t revel in my earlier post being confirmed in the broad sense without
apologising for misleading you in the details. I was just flat out wrong when I
claimed we all have 6 or 7 new mutations – I used a number that I had in my
head and didn’t bother to look it up. You can see where my number came from
once you consider that only about 4% of the genome is functional DNA – 150
mutations in your genome will lead to about 6 mutations in functional regions.
Still, the original is (about to be) modified and I am suitably shamed.

* As Larry Moran points out taken together these studies tell us something
about the way evolution works. If the observed rate of mutation in DNA
replication is not wildly different than the inferred rate of mutation in a
pedigree or between closely related species most mutations aren’t being
selected against – more evidence for the importance of neutral theory in
molecular evolution. back to the story ^


[1] Xue, Y., Wang, Q., Long, Q., Ng, B., Swerdlow, H., Burton, J., Skuce, C., Taylor, R., Abdellah, Z., & Zhao, Y. (2009). Human Y Chromosome Base-Substitution Mutation Rate Measured by Direct Sequencing in a Deep-Rooting Pedigree Current Biology DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.07.032

[2]J. B. S. Haldane (1935). The rate of spontaneous mutation of a human gene Journal Of Genetics DOI: 10.1007/BF02717892