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Changing
Environment Organizes Genetic Structure
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Study finds
biological complexity arises from self-organizing structure of
genes
What
is the fundamental creative force behind life on Earth? It's a
question that has vexed mankind for millennia, and thanks to
theory and almost a year's worth of number-crunching on a
supercomputer, Rice University physicist and bioengineer Michael
Deem thinks he has the answer: A changing environment may
organize the structure of genetic information itself.
Deem's
research is slated to appear next month in Physical Review
Letters.
"Our results suggest that the beautiful,
intricate and interrelated structures observed in nature may be
the generic result of evolution in a changing environment,"
Deem said. "The existence of such structure need not
necessarily rest on intelligent design or the anthropic
principle."
The information that allows all living
things to survive and reproduce is encoded in genes. Rice's
theory probed the structure of this genetic information, looking
for patterns that were created over time.
The study by
Deem and postdoctoral fellow Jun Sun found the structure of
genetic information becomes increasingly modular when two
conditions are taken as givens: horizontal gene transfer (HGT)
and a changing environment. Like modular furniture that can be
rearranged in different functional patterns, modular genes are
standardized components that lend themselves to flexible
rearrangement, and this genetic modularity arises spontaneously
because of the selective pressure of a changing environment and
the existence of horizontal gene transfer.
Genes are
typically transferred vertically. People, plants and animals pass
genes vertically, from generation to generation, through sexual
reproduction. Bacteria transfer genes vertically via conjugation.
HGT allows genes, pieces of genes and collections of genes to
move between species, even in cases where vertical transfer is
physically impossible.
Though scientists have known about
HGT for years, it was thought to be rare and infrequent until
sophisticated tools opened the genetic history of many species in
the 1990s. Today, HGT is widely accepted as the primary reason
for antibiotic drug resistance, and Deem said HGT played a
significant role in human development as well. "Our acquired
immune system is a product of horizontal gene transfer and is
organized in a modular fashion," he said.
Deem's
study found that an organism's fitness -- the likelihood that it
and its descendants will survive in a rapidly changing
environment -- increases as the modularity of its genetic code
increases. Another finding was that the faster the environment
changes, the more modular genetic information becomes.
Because
modularity begets complexity, the more modular genetic
information becomes, the more complex the web of life becomes.
For example, human beings are far more complex than
singled-celled yeast, yet they have only about four times as many
genes. The complex nature of multicellular plants and animals
derives not only from the genes themselves, but also from the
complex regulatory networks that control the production and
interaction of the products of genes -- proteins -- to fulfill
multiple roles. This regulatory network is another example of
modular organization.
"Modularity and hierarchy are
prevalent in biology, from the way atoms are arranged in
molecules, molecules into amino acids and amino acids into
secondary structures, domains and proteins," Deem said.
"This hierarchy continues with multiprotein complexes,
protein regulation pathways, cells, organs, individuals, species
and ecosystems. Our research suggests that modularity and
hierarchy are prevalent because genetic information
self-organizes into increasingly more modular forms. A changing
environment and the biochemistry of horizontal gene transfer
appear to be part of the source for this fundamental creativity
of life."
The research was supported by the Defense
Advanced Research Project Agency.
Source:
Rice University

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