in , , , ,

DNA Recipes, Bar Codes, and Design

Mitochondria structure computer model: ID 165312954 © Futurer | Dreamstime.com

[Originally published as Study Demonstrates that Most Animal Species Came Into Existence at the Same Time?]

In a comment on a previous article, a reader informed me of a study that I had not seen. It was published in the journal Human Evolution and its results are consistent with the idea that 90% of all animal species came into being at roughly the same time. This is certainly not what the hypothesis of evolution would predict, so some creationists as well as some intelligent design advocates have presented the study as evidence against evolution. In my reply to the comment, I expressed skepticism, even though I would love for the conclusions of the study to be correct. Now that I have read the study itself, I am even more skeptical.

The authors of the study analyzed the DNA of many different species of animals. However, they did not look at the DNA found in the nucleus of the cell. That DNA, called nuclear DNA, is responsible for most of an organism’s genetically-defined traits. They looked at mitochondrial DNA, which is the small amount of DNA that is found in the mitochondrion, the structure that produces most of the energy that the cell ends up using. To give you an idea of how different mitochondrial DNA is from nuclear DNA, the nuclear DNA of a human being is over 3 billion base pairs long, while human mitochondrial DNA is just over 16,000 base pairs long. You don’t need to know what “base pairs” are to see that there is only a tiny, tiny amount of mitochondrial DNA in a human cell compared to nuclear DNA.

Advertisement Below:

Now even though there isn’t a lot of mitochondrial DNA, some sections of it seem to be very characteristic of the species of animal from which the cell comes. For example, a 2016 study analyzed a section of mitochondrial DNA (called the COX1 gene) among different species of birds. It showed that the COX1 gene alone was enough to separate 94% of the birds into species. Similar studies indicate that the COX1 gene can separate other species of animals, so the sequence of the COX1 gene is often referred to as the DNA barcode of the animal. This is what the authors of the study I am discussing focused on.

Sample barcode labelThe authors analyzed the “DNA barcodes” of many different animal species, looking for a specific kind of mutation: one that doesn’t actually change the product of the gene.

Remember, a gene is a “recipe” that codes for a particular protein. The COX1 gene used in the DNA barcode is the recipe for a protein lovingly called “mitochondrially encoded cytochrome c oxidase I.”

A protein is a string of amino acids linked together, and the DNA “recipe” is just a list of those amino acids and the order in which they need to be strung together. Well, the genetic code has more than one way of indicating an amino acid, and sometimes, a mutation will change part of the DNA, but the resulting change will indicate the same amino acid. This is called a synonymous substitution, because the mutation doesn’t change the recipe for the protein. It just changes the way that recipe reads.

Consider, for example, a recipe for a cake

It might call for two teaspoons of vanilla extract. Suppose you copy that recipe so you can give it to a friend, but instead of writing “two teaspoons of vanilla extract,” you write “2 tsp. vanilla extract.” You have essentially made two synonymous substitutions, substituting a number for the word “two” and an abbreviation for the word “teaspoon.”

A synonymous substitution mutation in DNA is similar. The product of the recipe doesn’t change, but the way the recipe reads changes. As a result, even after the mutation happens, the protein produced by DNA remains the same.

The authors assume that synonymous substitution mutations can happen freely, because they don’t change the proteins being produced and therefore should have no effect on the organism. Because of that, synonymous substitution mutations should not be “weeded out” by natural selection, so the more synonymous substitution mutations, the longer those mutations have been accumulating.

Advertisement Below:

When they compared the number of these mutations among many different animals, they found that 90% of them had the same level of mutations, indicating that they had been experiencing mutations for the same length of time. This is consistent with the idea that 90% of the animals came into being at the same time.

Now, of course, the authors don’t argue for that idea!

It would invalidate the evolutionary hypothesis, and I am sure they don’t want to be considered heretics! As a result, they try to explain around their conclusion by suggesting that there are mechanisms which tend to reduce the genetic diversity among individuals in a species. Because of these mechanisms, most species had uniformity in their mitochondrial DNA at roughly the same time and have just been collecting mutations since then.

As I have said, I am skeptical of their conclusion.

That’s because of their assumption that synonymous substitution mutations don’t affect the organism and are thus not subject to natural selection. They produce some arguments to support that assumption, but they discount the most important argument against their assumption:

the fact that we know synonymous substitutions change the rate at which a gene is turned into a protein.

Since the mitochondrion is the “powerhouse” of the cell, it would make sense to me that its function is highly dependent on the rate at which its genes can be turned into proteins. As a result, I find it highly unlikely that the organism is unaffected by synonymous substitution mutations.

Now while I disagree with the more “sensational” conclusion of their study, they do make one statement that I think is quite important:

Advertisement Below:

The tight clustering of barcodes within species and unfilled sequence space among them are key facts of animal life that evolutionary theory must explain.

In other words, they are saying that there is a lot of discontinuity in mitochondrial DNA of animals. You have a sequence that defines one species, a sequence that defines another species, and nothing in between. If you hope to come up with any kind of plausible mechanism for evolution, you will need to explain that kind of discontinuity.

Dr. Jay Wile

Written by Jay Wile

As a scientist, it is hard for me to fathom anyone who has scientific training and does not believe in God. Indeed, it was science that brought me not only to a belief in God, but also to faith in Christianity. I have an earned Ph.D. from the University of Rochester in nuclear chemistry and a B.S. in chemistry from the same institution. blog.drwile.com

Advertisement Below:

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Loading…

0
Advertisement Below:
Advertisement Below:
Muskrat in leaf litter, photo credit: William Wise

Free to Make a Choice, an Analogy from a Muskrat

Apples on a tree, photo credit: Rachel Hamburg

Ideas about science Shape History