Loren Booda
- 3,115
- 4
Once a trait is established to its environment, might that indicate, by definition or process, that it is more likely resistant to further changes in that environment?
The discussion revolves around the relationship between gene adaptation, mutation rates, and the implications of genetic conservation in evolutionary biology. Participants explore whether better-adapted genes are less susceptible to mutations and how this affects their evolutionary fitness in changing environments.
Participants express multiple competing views regarding the relationship between gene adaptation and mutation rates. There is no consensus on whether better-adapted genes are less easily mutated or if conservation is due to selection against harmful mutations.
Discussions include various assumptions about the definitions of adaptation and mutation, as well as the implications of genetic conservation across species. The complexity of mutation mechanisms and their relationship to environmental changes remains unresolved.
Loren Booda said:Once a trait is established to its environment, might that indicate, by definition or process, that it is more likely resistant to further changes in that environment?
Loren Booda said:Once a trait is established to its environment, might that indicate, by definition or process, that it is more likely resistant to further changes in that environment?
iansmith said:The "adapted genes" still mutated and the same rate as the other genes; however, the mutated "adapted genes" may be selected out of the gene pool if it creates a disavantage for the carrier. Mutation occurs in functionnaly important and unimportant regions of a protein. The mutations in functionnaly important usually alter the function and the phenotype. Mutations in functionnal unimportant region usually do not cause a change in phenotype and function of a protein. This also dependents on the type of mutation.
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/M/Mutations.html
selfAdjoint said:It is a fact that some genes are "conserved" across a startlingly large range of species, implying a vast stretch of time. For example I have read we share something like 20% of our genes with some plants (oak trees were mentioned). This implies that some genes are so important that evolution has found a way to shield them from the more common mutations.
Loren Booda said:iansmith, NateTG and Crumbles - let me modify my original question by asking whether a vital variation among "typical" genes is around their mean likelihood to mutate (saying that a gene in general is more or less beneficially susceptible to radiation or chemicals).