Darwin's Theory of Universal Common Ancestry Confirmed

by leavingwt 11 Replies latest social current

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    First Large-Scale Formal Quantitative Test Confirms Darwin's Theory of Universal Common Ancestry

    ScienceDaily (May 17, 2010) — More than 150 years ago, Darwin proposed the theory of universal common ancestry (UCA), linking all forms of life by a shared genetic heritage from single-celled microorganisms to humans. Until now, the theory that makes ladybugs, oak trees, champagne yeast and humans distant relatives has remained beyond the scope of a formal test. Now, a Brandeis biochemist reports in Nature the results of the first large scale, quantitative test of the famous theory that underpins modern evolutionary biology.

    The results of the study confirm that Darwin had it right all along. In his 1859 book, On the Origin of Species, the British naturalist proposed that, "all the organic beings which have ever lived on this earth have descended from some one primordial form." Over the last century and a half, qualitative evidence for this theory has steadily grown, in the numerous, surprising transitional forms found in the fossil record, for example, and in the identification of sweeping fundamental biological similarities at the molecular level.

    Still, rumblings among some evolutionary biologists have recently emerged questioning whether the evolutionary relationships among living organisms are best described by a single "family tree" or rather by multiple, interconnected trees -- a "web of life." Recent molecular evidence indicates that primordial life may have undergone rampant horizontal gene transfer, which occurs frequently today when single-celled organisms swap genes using mechanisms other than usual organismal reproduction. In that case, some scientists argue, early evolutionary relationships were web-like, making it possible that life sprang up independently from many ancestors.

    According to biochemist Douglas Theobald, it doesn't really matter. "Let's say life originated independently multiple times, which UCA allows is possible," said Theobald. "If so, the theory holds that a bottleneck occurred in evolution, with descendants of only one of the independent origins surviving until the present. Alternatively, separate populations could have merged, by exchanging enough genes over time to become a single species that eventually was ancestral to us all. Either way, all of life would still be genetically related."

    Harnessing powerful computational tools and applying Bayesian statistics, Theobald found that the evidence overwhelmingly supports UCA, regardless of horizontal gene transfer or multiple origins of life. Theobald said UCA is millions of times more probable than any theory of multiple independent ancestries.

    "There have been major advances in biology over the last decade, with our ability to test Darwin's theory in a way never before possible," said Theobald. "The number of genetic sequences of individual organisms doubles every three years, and our computational power is much stronger now than it was even a few years ago."

    While other scientists have previously examined common ancestry more narrowly, for example, among only vertebrates, Theobald is the first to formally test Darwin's theory across all three domains of life. The three domains include diverse life forms such as the Eukarya (organisms, including humans, yeast, and plants, whose cells have a DNA-containing nucleus) as well as Bacteria and Archaea (two distinct groups of unicellular microorganisms whose DNA floats around in the cell instead of in a nucleus).

    Theobald studied a set of 23 universally conserved, essential proteins found in all known organisms. He chose to study four representative organisms from each of the three domains of life. For example, he researched the genetic links found among these proteins in archaeal microorganisms that produce marsh gas and methane in cows and the human gut; in fruit flies, humans, round worms, and baker's yeast; and in bacteria like E. coli and the pathogen that causes tuberculosis.

    Theobald's study rests on several simple assumptions about how the diversity of modern proteins arose. First, he assumed that genetic copies of a protein can be multiplied during reproduction, such as when one parent gives a copy of one of their genes to several of their children. Second, he assumed that a process of replication and mutation over the eons may modify these proteins from their ancestral versions. These two factors, then, should have created the differences in the modern versions of these proteins we see throughout life today. Lastly, he assumed that genetic changes in one species don't affect mutations in another species -- for example, genetic mutations in kangaroos don't affect those in humans.

    What Theobald did not assume, however, was how far back these processes go in linking organisms genealogically. It is clear, say, that these processes are able to link the shared proteins found in all humans to each other genetically. But do the processes in these assumptions link humans to other animals? Do these processes link animals to other eukaryotes? Do these processes link eukaryotes to the other domains of life, bacteria and archaea? The answer to each of these questions turns out to be a resounding yes.

    Just what did this universal common ancestor look like and where did it live? Theobald's study doesn't answer this question. Nevertheless, he speculated, "to us, it would most likely look like some sort of froth, perhaps living at the edge of the ocean, or deep in the ocean on a geothermal vent. At the molecular level, I'm sure it would have looked as complex and beautiful as modern life."

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/05/100512131513.htm

  • bohm
    bohm

    yah, bayesian statistics FTW! ;-).

    To those who want to debunk the article, please pretty please read the darn thing first.

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    Most would agree with the commonality of nature, though to what degree and how that commonality is to be preceived, that is a different matter.

    We are all made of the "stuff of the universe".

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    PSac -- We all came from dust, right?

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Aha! So there is a god!

  • zoiks
    zoiks

    Neat-o

  • bohm
    bohm

    PS: well, you are not the first to think along those lines, in fact the author did just so and wrote the following:

    "Statistically significant

    sequence similarity can arise fromfactors other than common

    ancestry, such as convergent evolution due to selection, structural

    constraints on sequence identity, mutation bias, chance, or artefact

    manufacture19. For these reasons, a sceptic who rejects the common

    ancestry of all life might nevertheless accept that universally conserved

    proteins have similar sequences and are ‘homologous’ in the original

    pre-Darwinian sense of the term (homology here being similarity of

    structure due to ‘‘fidelity to archetype’’)23. Consequently, it would be

    advantageous to have a method that is able to objectively quantify the

    support from sequence data for common-ancestry versus competing

    multiple-ancestry hypotheses."

    The author is aware that just checking for UCA is not enough since homology will certainly be present for other reasons. He attempt to model this and test many (~10-20) models for the ancestry of the different trees of life. The neat (and novel) part (aside the data) is that he use 3 different model selection criteria to quantify this, ie. he ask: "Assuming we can have HGT etc, which assumption (UCA and others) provide the SIMPLEST description of the data (23 proteines from different lifeforms. So its essentially its 3 different kinds of 'occams razors' he employ.

    The thing to keep in mind is that the other hypothesis are still possible - he just show that they are much, much MUCH less economical. I have never seen this kind of certainty in 'real data', its much much more than you see in medical treatments etc. MUCH more.

    I really hope more would read this. This is by far the most definite evidence i have seen for UCA, and since it got puplished in nature and not some 3rd rate junk-journal means it does not have any trivial errors. The fact that he use some pretty fundamental statistical tools to back it up means that any debunking would have to show the error in his model, make one himself (and argue for it) and show it give a better AIC score, whatever.

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento
    PSac -- We all came from dust, right?

    Pretty much, or the primordial goo if you prefer.

  • mindmelda
    mindmelda

    Are there really people of a spiritual bent here that try to debunk evolution at this late date?

    It's pretty much a done deal since the Human Genome project of the 90s, sorry.

    I still can't figure out how evolution convinces people that there can't be superhuman entities, though. How exactly do those two subjects relate?

    I'd like for someone to address how it's not logically possible for there to be entities from this dimension or others, who are godlike to humans, meaning having innate abilities that far supercede our own, such as the ability to directly transmute or create matter from energy or such things?

    How exactly does evolution debunk that, or does it? I thought evolution merely addresses development of life on earth, not elsewhere or in other dimensions.

    So, when someone says AHA! evolution is true, suck on that, anyone who believes in God or gods, is that even relevant? I'm asking because I can't see how one precludes the other, but I'd love to hear why it would.

  • ziddina
    ziddina

    Uhm, MindMelda, I think that evolutionists tend to debunk the fundamentalist Christian viewpoint of how life arose... Some evolutionists take that farther [I do!...] and state that supreme beings - in the form of Middle Eastern volcano gods whose behavior is basically modeled upon that of the men who [created...] 'worshipped' them - cannot exist, because the great acts of 'creation' ascribed to them [YHWH, EL, Jehovah, Allah, Isis, Astar/Ishtar/Innanna, etc....] have now been proven - or at least, have an overwhelming amount of evidence - to have arisen by totally different means...

    I also suspect that MANY evolutionists and other scientists have felt irritation and extreme frustration at the behaviors of fundamentalist Christians [ and Islamists...], and there is a bit of "payback" involved... A vindication of the scientific method, as opposed to faith in a very recently-authored Middle Eastern set of "holy" books... [very unsophisticated way of stating it... Sorry....]

    Payback for the "monkey" trial, when Darwinism first began to be taught in public schools, and for the idiotic behavior of so many Creationists; their tendency to whip up local sentiment and unduly influence the attitudes of lower-ranking public officials. Payback for having to fight Creationists up into the highest courts of the land, just for the right to teach evolution in school.

    I know it may seem like that's the position "Creationism" is in nowadays, but believe me, educators have had an uphill battle to get to the point to be able to present Evolution openly in schools...

    My thoughts on it... Zid

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