But seriously, if only cloning worked, we'd all still be pre-pre-historic
algae or lesser (need to refer brief history of everything, again)

- Vinit

PS: Shout out to my other top-posting buddies. WooT WooT


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Udhay Shankar N
Sent: Thursday, June 18, 2009 2:00 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [silk] Why do we have sex?

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20227121.600-has-the-mystery-of-sex-be
en-explained-at-last.html?full=true&print=true

Has the mystery of sex been explained at last?

    * 15 June 2009 by Nick Lane

SEX is the ultimate absurdity. Forget the hormonal rushes, the sweat
and the contorted posturing. Forget about the heartache, the flowers,
the bad poems and the costly divorce, just think about the biology.
It's nuts. Cloning makes far more sense.
Forget the sweat and contorted posturing, just think about the
biology. Sex is nuts. Cloning makes much more sense

A clone, after all, just quietly gets on with copying itself. And
since every clone can produce more clones, cloning produces far more
offspring. There is no need for males - a waste of space, as hard-line
feminists and evolutionists agree.

What's more, each clone has a combination of genes that has already
been found fit for purpose. Sex, by contrast, randomly mixes genes
into new and untested amalgams. And the horrors of sex don't end
there. There is the problem of finding a mate, and fighting off
rivals. Not to mention the risk of picking up horrible diseases like
AIDS and all sorts of selfish replicators that exploit sex to spread
themselves through the genome.
Queen of problems

All this made sex the "queen of evolutionary problems" in the 20th
century, taxing some of the finest minds in biology. The issue isn't
just explaining why almost all plants and animals engage in sex. It is
also explaining why the life forms that ruled the planet for billions
of years and remain by far the most abundant - the bacteria - manage
fine without it.

That suggests that the ubiquity of sex among complex organisms has
something to do with their ancient evolutionary history, not just the
more recent past. Could there be some deep connection between the
evolution of sex and the evolution of complex cells more than a
billion years ago?
Is there some deep connection between the evolution of sex and the
evolution of complex cells a billion or so years ago?

As you were probably taught at school, the seemingly obvious answer to
the question "Why bother with sex?" is that sex generates variation,
the raw material for natural selection. As environments change, sexual
species can therefore evolve and adapt faster.
Drive to extinction

In reality, though, most individuals live in an environment very
similar to that of preceding generations. And if some start
reproducing by cloning, the clones - being equally well adapted to the
environment - should rapidly drive the sexuals to extinction by dint
of producing far more offspring competing for the same resources.

Sure, sex should be an advantage in the long term, over thousands and
millions of years, but evolution doesn't work like that. It doesn't
plan ahead. And the environment rarely changes enough in the short
term, over years and decades, to favour sex.

Not so fast, argued the great evolutionary biologist Bill Hamilton.
The environment that really matters is on the inside, he said.
Parasites lynch us from within, and evolve so quickly that clones
can't cope.

By throwing up new mixtures of genes each generation, sex enables at
least a few individuals to escape the parasitic lynch mob. This is
known as the Red Queen hypothesis because, like Alice, we have to run
fast just to keep up with the ever-changing throng.
Why so much sex?

Unfortunately, it does not solve the problem. From the mid-1990s
onwards, it became clear that even parasites can't explain the
prevalence of sex. Parasites give sex a decisive advantage only when
parasite transmission is very high and their effects are dire.

Models developed by population geneticist Sally Otto of the University
of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, suggest that under most
circumstances a diverse population of clones, which accumulate
differences over time as a result of mutations, outperforms sexuals.
Most population geneticists agree. Parasites account for some sex some
of the time, but not for the ubiquity of sex in complex organisms.

Then there are the bacteria. If sex is such a big thing, then why
don't they bother with it? Yes, bacteria do swap some bits of DNA, but
"bacterial sex" doesn't begin to compare with the no-holds-barred
approach of complex cells, the eukaryotes.
The exceptions

To understand why eukaryotes resorted to full-on sex, it would help to
know when it happened. There are plenty of eukaryotes that multiply by
cloning rather than sex, but almost all turned celibate only very
recently.

There was thought to be one exception, however, in the form of
Giardia, a single-celled parasite with a nasty effect on people.
Giardia is very distantly related to animals and fungi, and some think
it resembles the very first eukaryotes. Having never been caught in
flagrante, it was taken to be asexual: a living fossil from the time
before sex.

However, in the past few years, this idea has been overturned. There
is now unequivocal evidence of sexual recombination in Giardia - which
suggests sex got off to a very early start. "Sex most definitely
evolved in the last common ancestor of eukaryotes," says
phylogeneticist Joel Dacks at the University of Alberta in Edmonton,
Canada. "That much one can say with extreme confidence."
Missing something

There is no shortage of clever ideas about what came between bacteria
and full-blown eukaryotic sex. But sex would not have evolved unless
each intermediate step offered an advantage. And if each step is an
advantage, then why don't we see any bacteria indulging? They just
don't look interested.

"All these theories of sex seem to be missing something," says
biochemist Bill Martin at the University of Düsseldorf, Germany. And
he thinks he knows what it is: mitochondria.

Mitochondria are the powerhouses of eukaryotic cells, generating
almost all the energy we use. A few eukaryotes, though, like Giardia,
appeared to have none and this was long taken to be another primitive
trait.
Final bastion

Then a few years ago, Giardia were found to have a form of
mitochondria after all. The same story has been repeated for a host of
primitive eukaryotes once believed to be mitochondria-free, all of
which in fact have structures derived from mitochondria, or at least a
few genes that betray mitochondrial ancestry.

Last year the final bastion fell. An obscure single-celled flagellate
with a name like a character from an Asterix book - Trimastix - also
turned out to have mitochondrial genes. As phylogeneticist Andrew
Roger at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada, puts it: "We can now
say definitively that all known living eukaryotic lineages descend
from a common ancestor that had mitochondria."

So the last common ancestor of all eukaryotes had both sex and
mitochondria. We also know that the acquisition of mitochondria had
profound effects on the host genome. "The ancestors of the
mitochondria were once free-living bacteria," Martin says. "When they
got inside cells, if any died they would have bombarded the host cell
chromosome with bacterial DNA."
Stunted genome

Back then, the mitochondria didn't have stunted genomes as they do
today, but normal bacterial chromosomes with several thousand genes.
Martin has shown that, of the eukaryotic genes whose ancestry can be
traced, 75 per cent or more came from bacteria rather than the host
cell.

This bombardment has dwindled to a trickle today, but occasionally
still makes itself felt by disrupting genes in the nucleus, causing
genetic diseases. In the human lineage, there have been hundreds of
separate, independent transfers of mitochondrial genes to the nucleus
just in the past 50 million years or so.
Parasitic genes

What's more, in the early days of the eukaryotic cell, the
mitochondria didn't bombard their host with genes alone. Eukaryotes
are odd in that their genes are in pieces, rather than continuous. A
typical gene has a mixture of coding regions, which stipulate the
sequence of proteins, and non-coding regions known as introns. Today,
introns are commonly found in the same places in the same genes, even
in eukaryotes as distantly related as algae and humans.

In other words, a good many introns, too, must have been present in
the last common ancestor of all living eukaryotes. Introns retain
certain similarities with each other but also, intriguingly, with a
type of parasitic jumping gene. Strikingly, as geneticist Steve
Zimmerly at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, and others
have shown, these jumping genes are found in the bacterial ancestors
of mitochondria, as well as in other bacteria.

So introns probably came from bacteria via the mitochondria. Even
doubters give credence to the idea. Dacks, for example, hedges his
bets. "I am not entirely convinced that introns necessarily came from
mitochondria, given that bacteria pass around their genes a lot today,
although they certainly could have."
Running amuck

What if they did? The jumping introns would have proliferated for a
while, wreaking havoc, but ultimately decaying as they accumulated
mutations into the inert, fixed introns we see today. "It looks as if
there was a turbulent phase of genome evolution in the wake of
mitochondrial origin," says Martin. "Introns invaded the host cell
chromosomes and ran amok. They spread into hundreds, perhaps
thousands, of positions that have been conserved to the present."

Much of this picture has been obscured by the swirling controversies
that surround the origin of the eukaryotic cell. No topic is more
bitterly contested among biologists - except sex, of course.
Nonetheless, a coherent picture is slowly emerging of the early
eukaryotic cell. It had mitochondria. It had sex. And it suffered an
extraordinary bombardment of DNA from its troublesome guests. And that
makes a lot of sense in the light of new work on why we all have sex.

As the Red Queen hypothesis fell out of favour, researchers began to
cast around for other possibilities. Unexpectedly, the most promising
lead came from dusty old models of population genetics, raised from
their resting place in undergraduate textbooks.
Infinite populations

The old models fell from fashion because they never seemed to show any
advantage to sex when compared with cloning, but that was not the only
way in which they failed to match the real world. For reasons of
mathematical purity, they all assumed an infinite population size. In
an infinite population, anything that can happen will happen. Yet
real-life populations are never infinite, and even vast populations
are divided into partially isolated groups.

When Otto teamed up with Nick Barton, now at the Institute of Science
and Technology in Klosterneuberg, Austria, and considered finite
populations, they found, as you would expect, that there are some
circumstances in which sex helps individuals.

Imagine a new mutation arising in a gene. In clones, the genes are
effectively tied together like beads on a string. There is no
reshuffling as there is during sexual reproduction. This means the
fate of each gene in clonal species depends on the entire ensemble -
the whole genome - rather than on the merits of individual genes as in
sexuals. Most mutations that occur are detrimental, but not so bad
that they sink an otherwise good genome there and then. However, they
gradually sap genetic vigour, imperceptibly undermining fitness.
Wreaking havoc

When set against this second-rate background, beneficial mutations can
wreak havoc. One of two things can happen. Either the spread of the
mutation is retarded by the second-rate company it keeps, or it isn't.
In the first case, strong positive selection for the gene is
dissipated by weak selection against hundreds of others. Such
"selective interference" means that most beneficial mutations are
simply lost again.

If the new mutation does spread throughout a population, the scenario
is even worse. Because the gene can't be isolated from any others, it
can only spread at the expense of all other genomes in the population.
If 500 variants exist in a population, 499 of them will disappear. So
selective interference can portend a disastrous loss of genetic
diversity. Much the same thing has happened to the notoriously
degenerate male Y chromosome, now a stump of its former self.

Otto and Barton modelled the impact of a gene that promotes sex in
individuals that can have it both ways, reproducing either clonally or
sexually. They found that the sex gene frequently spreads through the
population, turning more and more individuals to sex.
Costs of sex

"Sex improves the efficiency of selection, allowing good genes to
recombine away from the junk residing in their genetic backgrounds,"
says Otto. "As the good genes spread, they then carry along the sex
genes, beating out the genes for cloning, and often overcoming the
costs of sex."

Exactly how often these circumstances apply is uncertain. "It's still
not clear that selective interference gives a strong enough individual
advantage to maintain high rates of sex and recombination," says
Barton. "There needs to be a lot of selection, which is plausible but
not definitely established as yet."

One possibility that certainly ropes in lots of selection is the
battle against parasites, so selective interference embraces the Red
Queen hypothesis rather pleasingly. Even more pleasing is its
relevance to early eukaryotic cells. According to Otto, sex is most
advantageous when there's a lot of variation in a population, when
mutation rates are high and selection pressures are great.
Killer combination

That combination is a killer for clones. They are particularly
vulnerable to high mutation rates, which undermine genetic vigour.
Heavy selection puts a premium on the genes that work, and means
beneficial mutations are more likely to be selected at the expense of
diversity. And diverse populations have the most to lose whenever
there's a selective sweep for a particular gene in this way.

The first eukaryotic cells faced all three problems in spades. As a
result of the early gene bombardment from mitochondria, the mutation
rate surely shot through the roof. Selection pressures must have been
heavy, too, with parasitic introns proliferating throughout the
genome. And with such rapid genome evolution, the population could be
nothing but diverse.

Sex was the only answer. Total sex. Recombination of genes across all
chromosomes. The big question now is not so much why sex evolved - but
how.


Nick Lane is an honorary reader at University College London. His
latest book is Life Ascending: The ten great inventions of evolution
(Profile Books)


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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