this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2024
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Review of 2023 book: How Life Works: A User’s Guide to the New Biology Philip Ball. ISBN9781529095999

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[–] Donjuanme@lemmy.world 0 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

If a gene becomes disabled (a start triplicate pair gets changed to a nonsense triplicate), and it turns out that gene was no longer useful so there's no impact on survivability/reproduction, what happens to the rest of the pairs before the next start triplicate? That stop triplicate and everything before it is now useless. Except evolution doesn't understand useless, there's just as much chance of flipping that gene back on as there is of shortening all of that non readable DNA by just 1 codon length, DNA replicators are very good at not dropping codons. But not you have a gene that isn't being read (outside of replication) or transcribed, and it really isn't costing the individual any significant amount of extra resources to continue to produce that set of code in that strand, so it just hangs out.

There are dozens of other mechanisms to control the rate of protein synthesis, why would junk DNA be the controlling mechanism for it when there are epigenetics, gates, chemical limits, so many different ways rare limit down the path.

"It's there so it must have function" is spitting in the face of the theory of evolution. "It's still in the genetic code so it must've been selected for" is barely less offensive. Evolution does not select for efficiency, it's descent with modification, there is no pressure that says the genetic information must be as efficiently contained as possible. Example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_japonica

Also I'm not at all arguing that proteins are junk (also not saying they're peak efficiency, but "junk" in a 'read' section of DNA is clearly not 'junk'), I'm arguing there are sections of DNA, especially repeating sections outside of start stop sections, that are without purpose.

[–] stoneparchment@possumpat.io 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

This is a funny comment though, because "junk" DNA is involved with epigenetic regulation and cellular behavior.

"It's there so it must have function", "it's still in the genetic code so it must have been selected for" is the least nuanced take,

"It's there just randomly and therefore is junk", and "evolution does not select for efficiency" is an improvement,

But "it's there and it's doing something despite not having a bespoke, prescribed function" and "evolution is a cascade of emergent effects and random chance, none of our genome is non-functional even though it is random" is the most up to date take

You seem like a biologist, why not go read some of these papers? Like the one I linked by Dan Nichols? Most people don't have the background necessary to understand the language (no shade) but you seem to!

[–] whoelectroplateuntil@sh.itjust.works 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

You can second-guess the current state of the literature on junk dna all you want but unless you have a research budget it's a bit meaningless.

Also, I never said, and no scientist said, it was THE SINGLE AND ONLY mechanism influencing gene expression. Nobody also ever said the fact the "junk" is preserved was the CONCLUSIVE AND DEFINITIVE PROOF that it does something. Just that it's a good indicator.

You're not really responding to what the current hypotheses are.