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IV. Ecosmomics: Independent, UniVersal, Complex Network Systems and a Genetic Code-Script Source

B. Our Own HumanVerse (Epi) Genomic Heredity

Shapiro, James. Genome System Architecture and Natural Genetic Engineering. Landweber, Laura and Eric Winfree, eds. Evolution as Computation. Berlin: Springer, 2002. In a contribution to the total rethinking of the nature of gene and genome, the old Mendelian version is supplanted by malleable information processing systems capable of nonrandom change guided by dynamic cellular networks. Once again an evolutionary trajectory with a sense of direction is implied.

Collectively, these discoveries set the stage for thinking of genomes as hierarchically integrated systems capable of biologically controlled change rather than as collections of autonomous genetic units subject to individual evolution by random variation. (3)

Shapiro, James A. Mobile DNA and Evolution in the 21st Century. Mobile DNA. 1/4, 2010. As he has pioneered for many years, the University of Chicago geneticist reports with new veracity, backed by over 200 references, upon a whole scale reconception of genomic phenomena in complementary terms of its dynamic, network, and communicative propensities. Which then informs and portends a 21st century synthesis, a true “universal gestation,” akin to and fulfilling Charles Darwin’s actual 19th century conviction.

Mobile DNA is an online, peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes articles providing novel insights into DNA rearrangements, ranging from transposition and other types of recombination mechanisms to patterns and processes of mobile element and host genome evolution.

Abstract. Scientific history has had a profound effect on the theories of evolution. At the beginning of the 21st century, molecular cell biology has revealed a dense structure of information-processing networks that use the genome as an interactive read-write memory system rather than an organism blueprint. Genome sequencing has documented the importance of mobile DNA activities and major genome restructuring events at key junctures in evolution: exon shuffling, changes in cis-regulatory sites, horizontal transfer, cell fusions and whole genome doublings. The natural genetic engineering functions that mediate genome restructuring are activated by multiple stimuli, in particular by events similar to those found in the DNA record: microbial infection and interspecific hybridization leading to the formation of allotetraploids. These molecular genetic discoveries, plus a consideration of how mobile DNA rearrangements increase the efficiency of generating functional genomic novelties, make it possible to formulate a 21st century view of interactive evolutionary processes. (1)

Molecular cell biology has uncovered sophisticated networks in all organisms. They acquire information about external and internal conditions, transmit and process that information inside the cell, compute the appropriate biochemical or biomechanical response, and activate the molecules needed to execute that response. These information-processing networks are central to the systems biology perspective of the new century. Altogether, we have a radically different conceptual perspective on living organisms than our predecessors. As a result, we need to ask how this new perspective affects our 21st century understanding of the evolutionary process. (2)

This 21st century scenario assumes a major role for the kind of cellular sensitivities and genomic responses emphasized by McClintock in her 1984 Nobel Prize address (Science 226/792, 1984). Such a cognitive component is absent from conventional evolutionary theory because 19th and 20th century evolutionists were not sufficiently knowledgeable about cellular response and control networks. This 21st century view of evolution establishes a reasonable connection between ecological changes, cell and organism responses, widespread genome restructuring, and the rapid emergence of adaptive inventions. (10)

Shea, Nicholas. Inherited Representations are Read in Development. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. Online June, 2012. In a series of articles over recent years, the Oxford University philosopher of biology has proposed that our understandings of genomic activity, broadly conceived, could benefit by viewing this as semantic representations. In regard, an affinity to cognitive memories is drawn upon as they “represent” or contain one’s corpus of lived and learned experience. (Quote 1) A companion paper might be “Developmental Systems Theory Formulated as a Claim about Inherited Representations” in Philosophy of Science (76/1, 2011) where epigenetic and environmental influences are factored in via the DST school. (Quote 2)

Recent theoretical work has identified a tightly constrained sense in which genes carry representational content. Representational properties of the genome are founded in the transmission of DNA over phylogenetic time and its role in natural selection. However, genetic representation is not just relevant to questions of selection and evolution. This article goes beyond existing treatments and argues for the heterodox view that information generated by a process of selection over phylogenetic time can be read in ontogenetic time, in the course of individual development. Recent results in evolutionary biology, drawn both from modelling work, and from experimental and observational data, support a role for genetic representation in explaining individual ontogeny: both genetic representations and environmental information are read by the mechanisms of development, in an individual, so as to lead to adaptive phenotypes. Furthermore, in some cases there appears to have been selection between individuals that rely to different degrees on the two sources of information. Thus, the theory of representation in inheritance systems like the genome is much more than just a coherent reconstruction of information talk in biology. Genetic representation is a property with considerable explanatory utility. (Abstract 1)

Developmental systems theory (DST) is often dismissed on the basis that the causal indispensability of nongenetic factors in evolution and development has long been appreciated. A reformulation makes a more substantive claim: that the special role played by genes is also played by some (but not all) nongenetic resources. That special role can be captured by Shea’s ‘inherited representation’. Formulating DST as the claim that there are nongenetic inherited representations turns it into a striking, empirically testable hypothesis. DST’s characteristic rejection of a gene versus environment dichotomy is preserved but without dissolving into an interactionist casual soup, as some have alleged. (Abstract 2)

Sherman, Rachel and Steven Salzberg. Pan-Genomics in the Human Genome Era. Nature Reviews Genetics. 21/243, 2020. Johns Hopkins University computational biologists describe an expansion of the multinational project to sequence all creaturely genomes so as to achieve an entire integrative pan-species genome database. Such an accomplishment just now possible can help preserve biodiversity and converse environments.

Since the early genome era, the scientific community has relied on a single “reference” genome for each species. As sequencing costs dropped, thousands of new genomes have been sequenced which led us to realize that a single reference genome is inadequate. By sampling a diverse set of individuals, one can begin to assemble a pan-genome: a collection of all the DNA sequences that occur in a species. Here we review efforts to create pan-genomes for an array of species from bacteria to humans, and consider computational methods that have been proposed to capture, interpret and compare pan-genome data. (Abstract excerpt)

Shou, Chong, et al. Measuring the Evolutionary Rewiring of Biological Networks. PLoS Computational Biology. January, 2011. As the Abstract details, a team of Yale University, University of Toronto, and Stanford University bioinformatic specialists including Mark Gerstein contribute another take on nature’s inherent penchant for genomes to employ dynamical organizations. In regard, could one say that by drawing on such mathematical propensities, a genome might know what it is doing?

We have accumulated a large amount of biological network data and expect even more to come. Soon, we anticipate being able to compare many different biological networks as we commonly do for molecular sequences. It has long been believed that many of these networks change, or “rewire”, at different rates. It is therefore important to develop a framework to quantify the differences between networks in a unified fashion. We developed such a formalism based on analogy to simple models of sequence evolution, and used it to conduct a systematic study of network rewiring on all the currently available biological networks. Using comparative genomics and proteomics data, we found a consistent ordering of the rewiring rates: transcription regulatory, phosphorylation regulatory, genetic interaction, miRNA regulatory, protein interaction, and metabolic pathway network, from fast to slow. This ordering was found in all comparisons we did of matched networks between organisms. (Abstract)

Skar, John. Introduction. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London A. 361/6, 2003. To a dedicated issue on “Self-organization: The Quest for the Origin and Evolution of Structure” with papers by a constellation of authors such as Lee Smolin and Ian Stewart.

These discoveries, along with others in genetics, will drive scientists to consider mutations as no longer necessarily random events but actively generated by the cell’s epigenetic network, and for evolution to be an integral part of the self-organization of living organisms. (1052)

Smith, Laura, et al. Unraveling the Epigenetic Code of Cancer for Therapy. Trends in Genetics. 23/9, 2007. As other citations herein note, a major revolution is underway in our understanding of the nature and activity of genetic processes. Not yet mainstream or fully worked through, it involves a salient shift from the 20th century emphasis on molecular DNA and RNA to this ancillary domain of how ‘genes’ transcribe and translate into the vast variety of proteins and cells. Cancer treatment is a frontier area because it has lately been realized that such cellular decay (also aging deficits) are due more to errors in transmission, rather than point to point genes. And all this seems to beg an analogy with written language where how words are grammatically used in sentences and paragraphs is just as important, probably more so.

It is now evident that an additional layer of information required for proper gene expression is encoded in the genomic sequence and exceeds the information of the four bases: adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine. This is achieved in the form of epigenetic modifications, which in their entirety represent the ‘epigenome’ (from the Greek prefix epi-, meaning ‘on’ or ‘over’). Epigenetic modifications are heritable and can be transmitted to daughter cells during cell divisions. Most importantly, they leave the option for reprogramming in the context of development and differentiation. (449)

Snyder, Michael and Mark Gerstein. Defining Genes in the Genomics Era. Science. 300/258, 2003. Now that genomes, the entire genetic coding system for a certain organism, are becoming sequenced and transcribed, a new concept of what a gene is results. Rather than particulate in kind, they are more like “a complete chromosomal segment responsible for making a functional product.” (258)

Snyder, Michale, et al. Perspectives on ENCODE. Nature. 583/693, 2020. 21 coauthors from the ENCODE Project Consortium including Mark Gerstein post a latest status report as this Encylopedia of DNA Elements proceeds apace to sequence whole genomes for an expanding array of species.

The Encylopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Project launched in 2003 with the long-term goal of developing a comprehensive map of functional elements in the human genome. These included genes, biochemical regions associated with gene regulation (for example, transcription factor binding sites, open chromatin, and histone marks) and transcript isoforms. The marks serve as sites for candidate cis-regulatory elements (cCREs) that may serve functional roles in regulating gene expression1. The project has been extended to model organisms, particularly the mouse. In the third phase of ENCODE, nearly a million and more than 300,000 cCRE annotations have been generated for human and mouse, respectively, and these have provided a valuable resource for the scientific community.

Stenseth, Nils, et al.. Gregor Johann Mendel and the Development of Modern Evolutionary Biology. PNAS. 119/30, 2022. A Gregor Johann Mendel and Modern Evolutionary Biology Special Feature herein to mark the 200th anniversary of his birth is introduced by NS, University of Oslo, Leif Andersson, Uppsala University and Hopi Hoekstra, Harvard University. Some other contents are Mendel and Darwin by Andrew Berry and Janet Browne, the “New Synthesis” by Nicholas Barton and Three Problems in the Genetics of Speciation by Selection by Dolph Schluter and Loren Rieseberg.

This year we celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of Gregor Johann Mendel, who discovered the missing component of Darwin’s evolutionary theory, the genetic mechanism of trait inheritance. The eight articles in this Special Feature collection cover various aspects of Mendel’s life, his work, and his contribution to science, with a special focus on his impact in evolutionary biology. In this introductory paper, we provide the context for the eight papers, as well as summarize how Mendel’s work has contributed to the development of modern evolutionary biology.

Stoltzfus, Arlin. Mutation Biased Adaptation in a Protein NK Model. Molecular Biology and Evolution. 23/10, 2006. A University of Maryland biologist argues that genetic change is not an accidental variant that passively awaits selection. Rather, new gene configurations act as an “immanent directional orienting factor” upon evolutionary pathways. See also Stoltzfus’ Mutationism and the Dual Causation of Evolutionary Change in Evolution and Development (8/3, 2006) and Google his name.

Thus, it is of interest to consider the possibility that biases or nonrandomness in the rate of origin of new variants by mutation (and more generally, by mutation and altered development) are a general cause of nonrandomness in evolution, a possibility that cuts across traditional scientific disputes over selection versus drift, the Modern Synthesis versus the Neutral Theory, and morphological versus molecular evolution. (1853)

Stotz, Karola. Experimental Philosophy of Biology. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science. 40/2, 2009. A University of Sydney philosopher contributes to the 21st century project to reinvent and redefine genetic phenomena beyond older particulate “genes” so as to include the equally present layers of interactive, relational networks

In this vision the ‘gene’ is relieved of its unrealistic and mystical status as the sole embodiment of life. Instead, genes become prosaic ways to classify the template capacity of certain parts of the genome, a capacity that must be interpreted through a process of gene expression to yield any determinate result. Because of this limited and very context-dependent capacity, the gene is also stripped of its place as the sole unit of inheritance. (237) Inheritance is not embodied in mystical preformations of the phenotype but in the reproduction of the necessary factors of development that will self-organize to reproduce a similar developmental life cycle. Life is not situated in genes but in the particular organization of biomolecules that enables the system to maintain itself by reconstituting its own components from the template capacity in the genome, constructing the environmental factors necessary for this to occur, and ultimately reproducing copies of itself. (237)

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