So, Alu elements are mobile DNA modules that can exert diverse influences on genomes and the organisms harboring them. They can affect genome function in constructive ways, by altering gene expression or supporting chromosome structure. And they can be damaging, even deadly. There are more than a million of them in the human genome, and we don't know what each one does. But, as I explained in the first post in this series, we do know that they can play both helpful and harmful roles, in the same way that other kinds of parasites can be good, bad, or indifferent.
Alu elements and other genome-wide repeats are a big problem for intelligent design (ID) theorists of some stripes. Any ID proponent who claims that genomes are carefully-designed, well-optimized systems must deal with the reality of the enormous numbers of mobile elements in (for example) the human genome. Now, I can think of various ways such an ID theorist might discuss Alu elements. She could propose that all of their characteristics (including their mobility) are part of their design, such that they can bring new design features quickly into being; she could propose that their mobility is a "bug" rather than a "feature," and perhaps speculate on how things went wrong; she could postulate that the damage caused by their expression and their mobility is being misattributed to the genome when it is instead caused by some other external process. (Or she could say, "We're still working on that one.")
Showing posts with label Mobile genetic elements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mobile genetic elements. Show all posts
15 May 2011
28 April 2011
Alu need to know about parasitic DNA: Alu elements and blindness
A major publication in Nature last month (Kaneko et al., "DICER1 deficit induces Alu RNA toxicity in age-related macular degeneration," Nature 17 March 2011) now points to one likely cause of AMD, and in the process provides a chilling example of what can happen when the parasitic Alu elements in our genomes (see the previous post for an introduction) are left unrestrained.
23 April 2011
Alu need to know about parasitic DNA: Introduction to Alu elements
Defenders of intelligent design theory often dwell on the topic of "junk DNA," which has been molded into a masterpiece of folk science. The ID approach to "junk DNA" involves a fictional story about "Darwinism" discouraging its study, and a contorted and simplistic picture of a "debate" about whether "junk DNA" has "function." The fictional story is ubiquitous despite being repeatedly debunked. But the picture of an ongoing "debate" about "function" is harder to sort out. Like most propaganda, that picture contains enough truth to sound plausible. (Browse my "Junk DNA" posts, and work by Ryan Gregory and Larry Moran, for more information on errors and folk science associated with these topics.)
There is, in fact, some scientific disagreement about functions of various elements in genomes, but it's not the crude standoff that ID apologists depict, and it has very little to do with "Darwinism." The debate, if we must call it that, is about at least two matters: 1) the extent to which certain genomic elements contribute to normal function or development of organisms; and 2) the means by which we might determine this. The debate is not about whether non-coding DNA can have function, or even about whether some segments of non-coding DNA do have function. That debate was invented by anti-evolution propagandists.
There is, in fact, some scientific disagreement about functions of various elements in genomes, but it's not the crude standoff that ID apologists depict, and it has very little to do with "Darwinism." The debate, if we must call it that, is about at least two matters: 1) the extent to which certain genomic elements contribute to normal function or development of organisms; and 2) the means by which we might determine this. The debate is not about whether non-coding DNA can have function, or even about whether some segments of non-coding DNA do have function. That debate was invented by anti-evolution propagandists.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)