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Michigan State University: origin of a new species?

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  • Michigan State University: origin of a new species?

    http://scienceblogs.com/loom/2008/06..._evolution.php




    One of the most important experiments in evolution is going on right now in a laboratory in Michigan State University. A dozen flasks full of E. coli are sloshing around on a gently rocking table. The bacteria in those flasks has been evolving since 1988--for over 44,000 generations. And because they've been so carefully observed all that time, they've revealed some important lessons about how evolution works.

    The experiment was launched by MSU biologist Richard Lenski. I wrote about Lenski's work last year in the New York Times, and in more detail my new book Microcosm. Lenski started off with a single microbe. It divided a few times into identical clones, from which Lenski started 12 colonies. He kept each of these 12 lines in its own flask. Each day he and his colleagues provided the bacteria with a little glucose, which was gobbled up by the afternoon. The next morning, the scientists took a small sample from each flask and put it in a new one with fresh glucose. And on and on and on, for 20 years and running.

    Based on what scientists already knew about evolution, Lenski expected that the bacteria would experience natural selection in their new environment. In each generation, some of the microbes would mutate. Most of the mutations would be harmful, killing the bacteria or making them grow more slowly. Others would be beneficial allowing them to breed faster in their new environment. They would gradually dominate the population, only to be replaced when a new mutation arose to produce an even fitter sort of microbe.

    Lenski used a simple but elegant method to find out if this would happen. He froze some of the original bacteria in each line, and then froze bacteria every 500 generations. Whenever he was so inclined, he could go back into this fossil record and thaw out some bacteria, bringing them back to life. By putting the newest bacteria in his lines in a flask along with their ancestors, for example, he could compare how well the bacteria had adapted to the environment he had created.

    Over the generations, in fits and starts, the bacteria did indeed evolve into faster breeders. The bacteria in the flasks today breed 75% faster on average than their original ancestor. Lenski and his colleagues have pinpointed some of the genes that have evolved along the way; in some cases, for example, the same gene has changed in almost every line, but it has mutated in a different spot in each case. Lenski and his colleagues have also shown how natural selection has demanded trade-offs from the bacteria; while they grow faster on a meager diet of glucose, they've gotten worse at feeding on some other kinds of sugars.

    Last year Lenski was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. This week he is publishing an inaugural paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences with his student Zachary Blount and postdoc Christina Borland. Lenski told me about the discovery behind the paper when I first met him a few years ago. He was clearly excited, but he wasn't ready to go public. There were still a lot of tests to run to understand exactly what had happened to the bacteria.

    Now they're sure. Out of the blue, their bacteria had abandoned Lenski's their glucose-only diet and had evolved a new way to eat.

    After 33,127 generations Lenski and his students noticed something strange in one of the colonies. The flask started to turn cloudy. This happens sometimes when contaminating bacteria slip into a flask and start feeding on a compound in the broth known as citrate. Citrate is made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen; it's essentially the same as the citric acid that makes lemons tart. Our own cells produce citrate in the long chain of chemical reactions that lets us draw energy from food. Many species of bacteria can eat citrate, but in an oxygen-rich environment like Lenski's lab, E. coli can't. The problem is that the bacteria can't pull the molecule in through their membranes. In fact, their failure has long been one of the defining hallmarks of E. coli as a species.

    If citrate-eating bacteria invade the flasks, however, they can feast on the abundant citrate, and their exploding population turns the flask cloudy. This has only happened rarely in Lenski's experiment, and when it does, he and his colleagues throw out the flask and start the line again from its most recently frozen ancestors.

    But in one remarkable case, however, they discovered that a flask had turned cloudy without any contamination. It was E. coli chowing down on the citrate. The researchers found that when they put the bacteria in pure citrate, the microbes could thrive on it as their sole source of carbon.
    In nature, there have been a few reports of E. coli that can feed on citrate. But these oddballs all acquired a ring of DNA called a plasmid from some other species of bacteria. Lenski selected a strain of E. coli for his experiments that doesn't have any plasmids, there were no other bacteria in the experiment, and the evolved bacteria remain plasmid-free. So the only explanation was that this one line of E. coli had evolved the ability to eat citrate on its own.

    Blount took on the job of figuring out what happened. He first tried to figure out when it happened. He went back through the ancestral stocks to see if they included any citrate-eaters. For the first 31,000 generations, he could find none. Then, in generation 31,500, they made up 0.5% of the population. Their population rose to 19% in the next 1000 generations, but then they nearly vanished at generation 33,000. But in the next 120 generations or so, the citrate-eaters went berserk, coming to dominate the population.

    This rise and fall and rise suggests that the evolution of citrate-eating was not a one-mutation affair. The first mutation (or mutations) allowed the bacteria to eat citrate, but they were outcompeted by some glucose-eating mutants that still had the upper hand. Only after they mutated further did their citrate-eating become a recipe for success.
    The scientists wondered if other lines of E. coli carried some of these invisible populations of weak citrate-eaters. They didn't. This was quite remarkable. As I said earlier, Lenski's research has shown that in many ways, evolution is repeatable. The 12 lines tend to evolve in the same direction. (They even tend to get plump, for reasons yet to be understood.) Often these parallel changes are the result of changes to the same genes. And yet when it comes to citrate-eating, evolution seems to have produced a fluke.

    To gauge the flukiness of the citrate-eaters, Blount and Lenski replayed evolution. They grew new populations from 12 time points in the 33,000-generations of pre-citrate-eating bacteria. They let the bacteria evolve for thousands of generations, monitoring them for any signs of citrate-eating. They then transferred the bacteria to Petri dishes with nothing but citrate to eat. All told, they tested 40 trillion cells. Here's a movie of what that looks like...


    Out of that staggering hoard of bacteria, only a handful of citrate-eating mutants arose. None of the original ancestors or early predecessors gave rise to citrate-eaters; only later stages in the line could--mostly from 27,000 generations or beyond. Still, even among these later E. coli, the odds of evolving into a citrate-eater was staggeringly low, on the order of one-in-a-trillion.

    Now the scientists must determine the precise genetic steps these bacteria took to evolve from glucose-eaters to citrate-eaters. In order to eat a particular molecule, E. coli needs a special channel in its membranes through which to draw it. It's possible, for example, that a channel dedicated to some other molecule mutated into a form that could also take in citrate. Later mutations could have fine-tuned it so that it could suck in citrate quickly.

    If E. coli is defined as a species that can't eat citrate, does that mean that Lenski's team has witnessed the origin of a new species? The question is actually murkier than it seems, because the traditional concept of species doesn't fit bacteria very comfortably. (For the details, check out my new article on Scientific American, "What is a Species?") In nature, E. coli swaps lots of genes with other species. In just the past 15 years or so, for example, one disease-causing strain of E. coli acquired hundreds of genes not found in closely related E. coli strains. (See my recent article in Slate.) Another hallmark of E. coli is its ability to break down lactose, the sugar in milk. But several strains have lost the ability to break it down. (In fact, these strains were originally given a different name--Shigella--until scientists realized that they were just weird strains of E. coli.)
    Nevertheless, Lenski and his colleagues have witnessed a significant change. And their new paper makes clear that just because the odds of such a significant change are incredibly rare doesn't mean that it can't happen. Natural selection, in fact, ensures that sometimes it does. And, finally, it demonstrates that after twenty years, Lenski's invisible dynasty still has some surprises in store.

    Source: Z.D. Blount, C.Z. Borland, and R.E. Lenski, "HI istorical Contigency and the Evolution of a Key Innovation in an Experimental Population of Escherichia coli." PNAS in press (http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0803151105) [Link will go live at some point this week]
    thks, infidel.

  • #2
    Re: Michigan State University: origin of a new species?

    Natural Selection? EVOLUTION??? No way!!!

    Are they sure there was no pasta in the area at the time?

    http://www.venganza.org/


    Originally posted by Sapiens View Post

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    • #3
      Michigan State University: origin of a new species?

      Originally posted by Spartacus View Post
      Natural Selection? EVOLUTION??? No way!!! Are they sure there was no pasta in the area at the time?
      Evolution is rank hearsay propagated by vile apostates. Any thinking person knows this for a fact. It's just a plain fact. Here, read this devastating expose' of the myth of evolution, and you'll quickly realise just how much disinformation these evolutionists and proponents of "scientific rationalism" are trying to turn our children's heads with. Darwin was an apostate, pure and simple, and we might as well throw in Wittgenstein, Camus, Bertrand Russell, and that vile apostate free thinker Copernicus, just for good measure.

      A veritable rogues gallery of apostates ... :rolleyes:

      DARWIN.jpg
      ____ Charles Darwin

      WITTGENSTEIN.jpg
      ______Ludwig Wittgenstein

      CAMUS.jpg
      ________Albert Camus

      RUSSELL.jpg
      __ Bertrand Russell

      COPERNICUS.jpg
      _____ Copernicus

      ________________

      Distributed by Way of Life Literature’s Fundamental Baptist Information Service.

      "Our goal in this particular aspect of our ministry is to provide information to assist preachers in the protection of the churches in this apostate hour".

      EVOLUTIONARY MAN-APE MYTHS

      December 16, 2004 - The following is an excerpt from The Amazing Story of Creation from Science and the Bible by Dr. Duane T. Gish (2002, Institute for Creation Research):

      THE PILTDOWN HOAX

      In 1912, Charles Dawson, a lawyer and amateur fossil hunter, discovered a few fragments of a jawbone and pieces of a skull in a gravel pit near Piltdown, England. The jawbone appeared to be quite ape-like, but the teeth and the skull appeared to be quite human-like. Dawson and the English scientists with whom he consulted were certain that all of these fossil bones were from a single individual--a creature combining human-like and ape-like features. it is amazing g how many supposed human-like characteristics they thought they could see in the ape-like jaw and how many ape-like characteristics they imagined they were seeing in the human skull. They declared that these fossils were from a creature intermediate between ape and man that existed 500,000 years ago. This creature was given the official name of Eoanthropus dawsoni (Eoanthropus means “Dawn-man”) and he became known as the famous Piltdown Man. Although some scientists did not believe that all these bones came from the same individual, most scientists declared that Piltdown Man was a genuine subhuman ancestor of man. For nearly 50 years, Piltdown Man stood as one of our ancestors, and about 500 books and pamphlets were written about Piltdown Man.

      But in 1950, Piltdown Man got “buried” again! In that year, it was shown that Piltdown Man was a hoax--a fake! Someone had taken the jawbone of an ape and the skull of a modern human, treated them with chemicals to make them look old, filed the teeth with a file to make them look human-like instead of ape-like, planted the “fossil” bones in the gravel pit, and fooled the world’s greatest experts! Why did it take the experts almost 50 years to detect the fraud? Why didn’t they see the scratch marks on the teeth made by the file when they first looked at the teeth? Why didn’t they notice, right away, that the brown stain on these bones was only in a thin, outer layer? Why were they able to “see” human characteristics in the ape’s jaw, and why did they “see” ape-like characteristics in the human skull? All of this happened because evolutionists believed so strongly in evolution that they saw the things they expected to find, and failed to see thing they did not want to see.

      NEBRASKA MAN (another vile hoax)

      In 1922, a single tooth was discovered in western Nebraska. The tooth was shown to one of America’s foremost fossil experts, Dr. Henry Fairfield Osborn, professor at Columbia University. Dr. Osborn and other American experts were very excited by the appearance of this tooth. They declared that they could see, in that tooth, certain characteristics intermediate between ape and man. In fact, they weren’t quite sure whether it was from an ape-like man or a man-like ape. He was given the official name of Hesperopithecus, became popularly known as Nebraska Man, and was presented as evidence that man had evolved from apes. In 1922, the Illustrated London News published a picture of Nebraska Man, his wife, and the tools they were using--all based upon the discovery of one single tooth!

      A few years after the discovery of the tooth, some additional bones of the creature were discovered and Nebraska Man turned out to be neither an ape-like man nor a man-like ape. He turned out to be a pig! That’s right--Nebraska Man was nothing more than a pig’s tooth!

      NEANDERTHAL MAN (biggest hoax!)

      In 1860, about the time that Darwin published his book on evolution, the first few fossil fragments of Neanderthal Man were found in the Neanderthal Valley, in Germany. Later, additional fossils of the Neanderthal people were found in other parts of Europe, in Asia, Africa, and Israel. In 1908, a nearly complete skeleton was found in France. The Neanderthal people manufactured tools and weapons, and they buried their dead just like modern-day people. furthermore, their brains were somewhat larger than those of modern-day humans. All of this indicated that they were fully human, Homo sapiens. They did, in some ways, however, appear to be rather primitive. their skulls were flatter than ours, some of them had rather heavy eyebrow ridges, and the skeleton in France appeared to be hunched over, as if Neanderthal Man did not walk completely upright like you and I. Based on these findings, the Neanderthal people were declared, by evolutionists, to be subhuman ancestors of man, and were given the official name of Homo neanderthalensis. Museum exhibits and pictures of the Neanderthal people portrayed them as sort of long-armed, knuckle-dragging, beetle-browed, stooped-shouldered, bow-legged subhumans.

      A famous anatomist, Dr. Rudolph Virchow, declared, many years ago, that the primitive features of the Neanderthal people were not due to the fact that these people were subhuman, but were due to diseases, or pathological conditions. He pointed out that the skeleton discovered in France was of an old man who couldn’t walk upright because he had a bad case of arthritis! Dr. Virchow declared, further, that all of these people suffered severely from rickets (a condition caused by the lack of Vitamin D) which causes bones to become soft and deformed. For many years, however, evolutionists paid no attention to what Dr. Virchow was saying, because they wanted Neanderthal Man to be a true subhuman ancestor of man.

      Eventually, however, other skeletons of Neanderthal people were found that were fully erect, and it was established, by medical research, that the skeleton found in France was, indeed, that of an arthritic old man. X-rays of the fossil bones and teeth showed, just as Dr. Virchow had declared, that all of the Neanderthal people had rickets. Scientists finally concluded that all of the so-called primitive features of the Neanderthal people were due to pathological conditions, or diseases. Museums have removed the old exhibits of Neanderthal people and have replaced them with new exhibits showing the Neanderthal people looking very human, and about 30 years ago, two scientists published an article about Neanderthal people in which they declared that if Neanderthal Man were given a shave, a haircut, and a bath, put into a business suit, and placed on the New York subway, no one would take a second look!

      RAMAPITHECUS (hoax!!)

      About 60 years ago, part of a fossilized jaw and a few teeth were discovered in India, of a creature given the name Ramapithecus. Some famous experts declared, however, that these fossils proved this creature was on its way to becoming man, and that he walked upright, like humans. In the past few years, however, enough of this creature has been found to show that he was an orangutan. The experts now admit that Ramaphithecus was not an ancestor of man at all.

      ORCE MAN (hoaaaaxxx!!)

      Just recently, a skull cap was found in Spain, and was declared by Spanish experts to be the skull cap of the oldest fossil man ever discovered in Europe. He was named Orce Man, for the village near where he was found. However, French experts were able to confirm that the skull cap was that of a six-month-old donkey!

      Piltdown Man was not our ancestor. He was a hoax constructed from the jawbone of an ape and a human skull. Nebraska Man was not our ancestor! He was fabricated from a pig’s tooth. Neanderthal Man was our ancestor! He was 100 percent man. Ramapithecus and Orce Man were not our ancestors! One was an orangutan, and one was a donkey! The supposed evolutionary family tree of man is barren of the fossil evidence necessary to give credence to their theories.

      Way of Life Literature - P.O. Box 610368, Port Huron, MI 48061
      Canada: Bethel Baptist Church, 4212 Campbell St. N., London, Ont. N6P 1A6
      Last edited by Contemptuous; June 04, 2008, 11:47 PM.

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      • #4
        Re: Michigan State University: origin of a new species?

        Rare snapshot of an early (cat eating) "diapered hominid", in the wild:

        large_BHD0004.jpg

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        • #5
          Re: Michigan State University: origin of a new species?

          Originally posted by Lukester View Post
          A veritable rogues gallery of apostates ... :rolleyes:
          One more...




          Galileo's support for the heliocentric theory got him into trouble with the Roman Catholic Church. In 1633 the Inquisition convicted him of heresy and forced him to recant (publicly withdraw) his support of Copernicus. They sentenced him to life imprisonment, but because of his advanced age allowed him serve his term under house arrest at his villa in Arcetri outside of Florence.

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