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Scientists Discover Mechanism That Gives Shape to Life

First time accepted submitter mcswell writes "Daniël Noordermeer and Denis Duboule, two researchers at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne and the University of Geneva claim to have discovered how vertebrae get built in sequence in embryos (and by extension, how ribs, arms and so forth wind up in the right place). The story is that the DNA strands contain a linear series of HOX genes, and that the strands slowly unwind over a period of two days, successively exposing each HOX gene, thereby allowing it to be transcribed to form the segments of the vertebra. Snakes, it seems, have a defect that causes the system not to shut down; eventually it 'runs out of steam.' The same process is said to apply in many invertebrates, including worms (presumably segmented worms) and insects."

138 comments

  1. But what sequence gives shape to first posts? by Overzeetop · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Inquiring minds need to know how this stuff happens!

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    1. Re:But what sequence gives shape to first posts? by bar-agent · · Score: 0

      Have to say, that's the weirdest fucking chain mail I've ever read.

      You said it.

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
  2. What the HOX? by tedgyz · · Score: 1

    Now if only we can find the gene that causes ignorance.

    --
    "No matter where you go, there you are." -- Buckaroo Banzai
    1. Re:What the HOX? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 2

      Now if only we can find the gene that causes ignorance.

      I think that's related to the HOAX gene. :-)

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:What the HOX? by rtaylor · · Score: 1

      We are all ignorant. It would be challenging to find a single person who has all of the knowledge necessary to build a simple pencil (including extraction of raw materials; don't forget to include government applications to open the mine or take trees from the forest) let alone anything complicated.

      The question is, why do we express opinion on subject matter we are ignorant in.

      --
      Rod Taylor
    3. Re:What the HOX? by hallucinogen · · Score: 0

      I believe the conservative gene was identified a few years ago already..

    4. Re:What the HOX? by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      The question is, why do we express opinion on subject matter we are ignorant in.

      Our ignorance is so profound we are oftentimes ignorant of it itself.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    5. Re:What the HOX? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sequence 90% of Slashdot members and you will have your answer.

    6. Re:What the HOX? by PPH · · Score: 1

      The blond gene?

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    7. Re:What the HOX? by dimeglio · · Score: 1

      Hence the Italian proverb: Molto sa chi sa che non sa.

      -Much knows someone who knows he doesn't know.

      --
      Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the author.
  3. For the non-molecular biologist among us by GreatBunzinni · · Score: 5, Informative
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    1. Re:For the non-molecular biologist among us by Dyinobal · · Score: 1

      thanks that was very helpful I thought 'shape to life' was metaphor of some sort. Not literally 'shape to life'.

    2. Re:For the non-molecular biologist among us by Ixne · · Score: 1

      Hox genes are defined as having
      - a DNA sequence known as the homeobox

      My surprise at the fact that "homeobox" has not yet been appropriated to name some useless piece of merchandise knows no bounds.

  4. Precision like a Swiss watch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Does that not imply a Watchmaker? The necessity for such a system to function with that level of precision, and the fact that it does so often, should be an unavoidable indicator of Intelligent Design. Something this complex can't just "happen by accident".

    1. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by morgaen · · Score: 2

      A watchmaker made of tides and magnets?

    2. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Teun · · Score: 2
      It can also point to a system where from many divergences the slight failures land by the wayside and the successful evolve to sustainable species.

      I think I'll call it Evolution.

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    3. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Something this complex can't just "happen by accident"

      If there's an omnipotent, omniscient creator of the world, then nothing can "happen by accident." Ergo, in such a universe you would have no means to distinguish accident from non-accident.

    4. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Does anyone have any better trolls than this? Just staring at it is making me bored.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    5. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think about it : if you need a creator to explain the existence of the Universe, then you also need a creator to explain the existence of the creator. The ancient greek philosophers called it 'infinite regress'. I'm not saying there is or isn't any kind of 'divine creator', that would be a dogmatic statement, but the existence of a creator doesn't solve the problem of creation because who created the creator ? If you say the creator was always there, then you might as well say the Universe was always there...

    6. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A watchmaker is far more complex than a watch. Where did the watchmaker come from? If the watchmaker can exist without being created then complexity isn't an argument and the watch does not need to be created to exist either. If you argue that the watchmaker is simple but somehow capable of create something complex, then why object to the idea that a simple principle like evolution can create something complex?

    7. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you know how to program, try to implement a genetic algorithm. You'll be surprised how little is needed for it to actually work. Once you have done that the question is not how evolution could exist, but how it could not exist if a limited number of conditions is met. Hint: life meets those conditions.

    8. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      It didn't happen just by accident, it happened by an uncountable number of accidents all starting where the last one left off.

      --
      404: sig not found.
    9. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      A "god" can be omnipotent without being omniscient. For example, suppose you ran a powerful simulation on a Linux box(es) of a universe and it evolved intelligent life. You'd essentially become a "god" to that universe and be omnipotent. (We may be in such a simulation and couldn't tell the difference.)

      You could poke into the code and data and fuck with anything you wanted. You are omnipotent because every actual bit is under your control. However, you will not know all the details in the simulation, and are thus not omniscient.

      (I hope God makes backup tapes)

    10. Re:Precision like a Swiss watch... by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      It's turtles all the way down.

  5. Obligatory Far Side by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

    Well, this is the creationist version of how snakes get their shape anyway

  6. Hox genes are the basic sequence of embryogenesis by wombatmobile · · Score: 5, Insightful

    TFA is saying that organisms are built in slices, from the tip of the head down to the tip of the tail. These slices are activated in order, from first to last. It is the same in fruit flies, worms, whales, dogs, monkeys, deer and humans. The HOX genes control the basic sequence, like a player piano roll or a series of punch cards.

    The reason we get so many different organisms, like whales, fruit flies and elephants, is evolution.

  7. Procrastination gene by mrops · · Score: 2, Funny

    The gene that controls procrastination

  8. Proof reader? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...claim to have discovered how vertebrae get build in sequence in embryos..."

    I believe the correct word here should be built.

  9. Re: by taiwanjohn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, it merely affirms that all the other less precise mechanisms did not survive.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it. --AC
  10. OMG!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Snakes have a defect!!!
    Then, they ARE in league with the devil! Grandma was right all along!

    1. Re:OMG!!! by Virtual_Raider · · Score: 1

      Snakes have a defect!!! Then, they ARE in league with the devil! Grandma was right all along!

      Crap, Annon, you beat me to it. It's only a defect if what you wanted is not a snake, for them is a feature. Opinions may vary but I for one don't feel so defective because I don't have gills or feathers for instance...

      --
      +Raider of the lost BBS
  11. It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by enderwig · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A caveat as I write this critique, I have only read the linked article and the abstract of the original scientific article, not the full Science article.
    Also, I'm a Ph.D. in Developmental Biology from 2000.

    If unwinding the super-coiled DNA is considered the chronometer for embryonic segmentation, what makes the DNA unwind at such a specific time? I'm not sure how much new light is shed by this work. We've known for >20 years that transcription factors help "open" DNA for the transcription process. We've also known for >20 years that HOX genes in their clusters are the masters of structural differentiation. Put these two facts together and we can see it should be obvious that the HOX genes need to be "opened" sequentially.

      In the end, we are left with the still burning question of "What controls the HOX genes and their clusters?"

    1. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by mikael · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's like MIDI file format for music - there are actually instructions that specify specific time delays. Other instructions activate and deactivate notes for particular instruments. Though it doesn't actually specify what an instrument should sound like. That's the job of the other data files, known as SoundFonts.

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    2. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by bhartman34 · · Score: 1

      That's kind of what I was thinking, too. I remember reading years ago about experiments w/ HOX genes (I think) where they were able to get flies' limbs to grow out of their eyes and things like that. This doesn't seem like too much of an advance to me.

    3. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by Suiggy · · Score: 2

      According to a purvey of information posted on Wikipedia, Hox transcription factor proteins produced from the expression of the Hox genes activate the transcription of specific genes while at the same repressing the expression of other genes. Hox proteins are themselves regulated by other genes, such as gap genes and pair-rule genes, and there's a transcription factor cascade which controls the whole process for each stage, which has been explored in depth. Apparently, there's been a lot of work in this field since 2000.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HOX_genes

    4. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 3, Informative

      That may sound novel and exciting, but what you've described is how every transcription factor works. enderwig was making a point about the timing mechanism. If you leave a transcription-driven genetic circuit to keep its own clock without any assistance, it generally does a pretty bad job. There has to be something fairly elaborate guiding the chromatin unwinding.

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      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    5. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by enderwig · · Score: 1

      Precisely. From the abstract and press release, the authors imply that the opening of the super-coiled DNA is necessary and sufficient for the HOX genes to be temporally regulated. Now parsimony and K.I.S.S. usually are the correct ways of thinking about things, but based on what we already know from 10 years ago, simple unwinding can not be the temporal mechanism.

      tl;dr summary: We still don't know what starts the cascade of temporal regulation. I don't think this work moves us very far upstream in the regulatory chain.

    6. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      I might argue otherwise—if we can visualize the shifts in effect with this much precision, we can use bioinformatics and chemical kinetics to work our way backward and find what's generating the signal, both tasks that are comparatively well-solved.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    7. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's kind of what I was thinking, too. I remember reading years ago about experiments w/ HOX genes (I think) where they were able to get flies' limbs to grow out of their eyes and things like that. This doesn't seem like too much of an advance to me.

      Flies with limbs growing out of their eyes... what a gruesome vision! (No pun intended.)

    8. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the genetic tik tok.

    9. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While eventually we will learn about the mechanism and how it opens up, one can imagine that at fertilized stage, either an enzyme or protein is also released which might open or slice the first knot on the hox strand and the rest follow. So, some simultaneous actions are taking place when an egg is fertilized. Any new development is welcome news and keep up your burning question.

    10. Re:It's in Science 'cuz now we can SEE it? by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      It's the first step. I did not read the full article either, only browsed Figures, concentrating on Fig.3 (which is clearer for general audience, my biology-related Ph.D. is much further from the subject) but as far as I understand they discovered a sequence of regulatory events. I am not sure how new this is. From your remark it looks like it is not a big deal.

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  12. Snakes by TeknoHog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The sinuous body of the snake is a perfect illustration. A few years ago, Duboule discovered in these animals a defect in the Hox gene that normally stops the vertebrae-making process. “Now we know what’s happening. The process doesn’t stop, and the snake embryo just keeps on making vertebrae, all identical, until the process just runs out of steam.”

    Looks more like a feature than a bug to me. Another fine example of evolution by mutations.

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    1. Re:Snakes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      The real amazing discovery is that snakes run on steam!

    2. Re:Snakes by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      I've heard a snake can grow a new tail if you cut it in half, while humans can't grow a new spine if you cut them in half. If that's true, one could argue that it's the humans with the defect.

    3. Re:Snakes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what would happen if the defect was fixed? Would you end up with really short snakes? Would the embryos not be viable because they've evolved too much biological dependence on the genetic defect? Or would they suddenly express dormant genes for limbs that the defect had been blocking?

    4. Re:Snakes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Makes you wonder what a snake would look like with a "fixed" HOX gene.

    5. Re:Snakes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Looks more like a feature than a bug to me.

      Not when you're on a plane!

    6. Re:Snakes by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Cutting a snake in half would kill it. They have vital organs along almost the full body length, and it'd bleed to death anyway. Perhaps if you just cut the tip of the tail off, though... equivilent to amputating a human's legs.

    7. Re:Snakes by Arancaytar · · Score: 2

      They can't. You're probably thinking of worms.

      The only vertebrate with a (very limited) form of limb regeneration is the salamander, and that's an amphibian, not a reptile like the snake.

    8. Re:Snakes by TeknoHog · · Score: 1
      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    9. Re:Snakes by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      a lizard with no feet?

      It would be pretty useless, can't walk and can't wriggle to move.

    10. Re:Snakes by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      there are lizards with no legs, Glass Lizards of the genus Ophisaurus. Two - thirds of their body is a tail which they can detach, twitching for minutes, to distract a predator.

    11. Re:Snakes by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the various types of Glass Lizard, of which two-thirds of their legless body is tail they can detach. They superficially resemble snakes, but are not. When they regenerate their tail, it is often shorter.

    12. Re:Snakes by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      also the amphisbaenia, a reptile that superficially resembles a worm. It can lose and regenerate its tail. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amphisbaenia

    13. Re:Snakes by mcswell · · Score: 1
    14. Re:Snakes by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      "Run out of steam" is not very specific, including in TFA. That's the kind of thing I'd put on a biology test if I forgot the details.

    15. Re:Snakes by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Dragons are always snortin' out steam. Must be some connection.

    16. Re:Snakes by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Teleology called. They'd like their terms "defect", "feature", and "bug" back.

      So does Genesis 3:14, but that's a whole different can of... snakes.

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    17. Re:Snakes by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Not even the tip. When moving our snake's tank a short distance (a little Western Ribbon snake, essentially a fancy-looking garter snake), a piece of her tank furniture fell over and severed the tip of her tail (maybe half an inch). I can assure you it didn't grow back.

      It did continue to flex and jump around the tank for a minute or so, which was interesting. And FYI, the snake did OK, she hardly bled at all and was back to normal within a few days. We did consult our vet. :)

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
  13. So snakes suffer from by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    an infinite loop error?

    1. Re:So snakes suffer from by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      apparently even God can miss an '='

    2. Re:So snakes suffer from by kylemonger · · Score: 1

      Tail recursion.

  14. Defect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Given how old and successful snakes are as a life form, I'd hardly call this a "defect". Just a "fascinating difference" in how the genes are expressed.

    1. Re:Defect? by Abstrackt · · Score: 1

      I'd call it a "random feature". ;)

      --
      They say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but it's not one half so bad as a lot of ignorance. - Terry Pratchett
  15. Two headed snakes. by LongearedBat · · Score: 1

    it will grow from the top to the bottom, one slice at a time

    First the neck, then the thorax, then the lumbar, and so on,”

    I wonder how two headed snakes happen. According to TFA, I can imagine how a snake head could have two bodies, but I've never heard of that.

    1. Re:Two headed snakes. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      At a guess, the process initiates at two seperate locations (Perhaps even two seperate embryos), and continues as normal until the two developing spines make contact. At which point the chemical process can't distinguish between them, so they continue growing as a single spine.

    2. Re:Two headed snakes. by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      Conjoined twins. In this case, you start out with two heads which then merge into a single body.

    3. Re:Two headed snakes. by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      Conjoined twins. In this case, you start out with two heads which then merge into a single body.

      Can you have conjoined twins in an egg situation? Aren't each of the fertilized eggs isolated from each other by a membrane or incipient shell?

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
    4. Re:Two headed snakes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think conjoined twins start out as identical twins... in the egg case they would be in the same shell.

    5. Re:Two headed snakes. by Loveless62 · · Score: 1

      This is correct. Conjoined twins start as the same fertilized egg, just like identical twins. However, the twins become conjoined when the egg doesn't separate cleanly into two embryos.

  16. Snake? by Razed+By+TV · · Score: 1

    So what is the implication of the defective snake? What happens if we could repair this defect? Would it grow to encompass a different form? Or would it just be a shorter, fatter snake?
    I'm sure there's a joke to be made here somewhere...

    1. Re:Snake? by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 3, Informative

      It would either be short and fat, or dead because there wouldn't be enough room for its organs to grow. Either way, it wouldn't slither very well, and would be at something of a disadvantage.

      The use of the word "defect," as you can probably already imagine, is a very biased way of looking at things and will probably do more harm than good. Although, of course, at the time the mutation first appeared, when snakes still had non-vestigial limbs, it probably was at least partially something of an inconvenience.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
  17. HOTAIR? by Killer+Instinct · · Score: 1

    From Wiki
    Non-coding RNA (ncRNA) has been shown to be abundant in Hox clusters. In humans, 231 ncRNA may be present. One of these, HOTAIR, silences in trans (it is transcribed from the HOXC cluster and inhibits late HOXD genes) by binding to Polycomb-group proteins (PRC2).[19] The chromatin structure is essential for transcription but it also requires the cluster to loop out of the chromosomal territory.


    -KI

    --
    #include bier;
    1. Re:HOTAIR? by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Absurd names are common in molecular biology. Here is the usual example.

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      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    2. Re:HOTAIR? by enderwig · · Score: 1

      I remember reading that Cell article when sonic hedgehog was first published. It made me chuckle when I got to the part where they cite Sega, since I had a great time playing Sonic 1 on the Genesis at university.

  18. Macro and micro by tepples · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the best excuse I've heard from advocates of intelligent design was that God creates families, and well-documented processes of microevolution create genera and species within those families.

    1. Re:Macro and micro by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 2

      That excuse falls down fast when you look at the genomes themselves. It's very obvious where and how the DNA has mutated, even over hundreds of millions of years. I don't mean to pick on you so much as give you ammunition with which to fire back.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    2. Re:Macro and micro by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I'd be most amused to run into an intelligent design advocate claiming God created families, and that genera and species evolved. A creationist finally admitting they're a monkey's uncle.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    3. Re:Macro and micro by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      I don't mean to pick on you so much as give you ammunition with which to fire back.

      Anything where cannons may be pointed in the direction of Creationists piques my interest.

    4. Re:Macro and micro by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Pointing weaponry of any kind at Creationism is a waste of time. If you want to make a difference, go to the source, and defeat the charismatic leaders by revealing their true intentions to their power base. The rhetoric is not the danger—it's meaningless, irrelevant mudslinging meant to confuse and delay the enemy. It's a power game, and dealing with the symptoms before you fix the source is only going to keep you treading water.

      The people who invent Creationist stories don't really believe what they're saying is objectively true; it's just convenient for them to say it is. Carrying out an argument on the grounds of reason only works on their victims' children—who, incidentally, now staff the traditional church. If you want to fight evangelicals and religion-founders, you must take them for what they really are.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    5. Re:Macro and micro by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Interesting statement.

      If the genetically-engineered "fluorescent cats" were released into the wild, and reproduced with the current population, if you were to review the DNA from an instance resulting population 50000 years from now, by what means would you determine this as a case of design (but, "design we can ignore") rather than occurring purely through evolutionary mechanisms, presuming you lacked the a-priori knowledge of the historical genetic engineering?

      What would be the physical marker/differentiator for the two cases?

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    6. Re:Macro and micro by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Well, for one—those cats would be at a huge disadvantage. They wouldn't last long in the wild at all.

      Two—due to epigenetics, codon bias, Chargaff's second rule, and other sequence biases, it's fairly probable that the sequence itself would be under pressure to mutate regardless of evolutionary pressure, possibly rendering itself inert. The enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) that most labs use is optimized for mammalian expression through things like intron addition, but not at these lower levels. In any case, the cats carrying the gene may not stay glowing green for very long, and that's not counting the possibility of chiasmus cutting it in half.

      However, to answer your question, there are several traits that would stand out:

      1. To get a mammal to produce a synthetic protein stably, you generally have to build a gene construct and then insert the sequence into the genome using a retrovirus or adenovirus. Depending on the specific delivery virus, the site of integration may be obvious. While viral integration sites don't generally come across as anything remarkable, the genetic construct used by the researchers most likely contains an promoter region (like a file header for genes that defines when and in what tissues a gene should be expressed) that was copied from some other gene. A native promoter inside of a viral integration site would be very unusual and obvious.

      2. The payload itself. Green fluorescent protein is only naturally produced by jellyfish. We often combine it with other proteins (in what is called a protein fusion) to make it easy to see where and when the protein is being expressed. It's very much like a debug message.

      3. The point of fusion between the promoter and the coding sequence. It's very possible to synthesize the promoter and the protein together as one unit, but often unnecessarily expensive. There are several steps in the protein expression process where it's safe to insert a few extra nucleotides, and often we use a kind of protein called a restriction enzyme to cut up DNA so it can be reassembled into a longer unit. There are thousands of known restriction enzymes, almost all of which cut at very specific and unique sequences. If we spot one of these sequences (called a "ligation scar" because it's left over when you glue the parts back together) between the protein and the promoter, chances are that it was left over by a molecular biologist. Of course, there are many possible such sequences, all very short, but there are only a handful that are really popular, and they're very recognizable.

      4. The location of the fusion. Similar genes usually cluster together on chromosomes, because they come from one ancestor that got copied by accident and then slowly drifted apart from each other. The promoter they used is probably from a very different part of the genome than where it was integrated—not to mention the payload, which I've already said is completely alien in several respects.

      Hope that's more insightful than not. Let me know if Wikipedia lets you down while looking up any of the terms I've used; I'd be more than happy to help gloss them.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    7. Re:Macro and micro by Empiric · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your thoughtful (and thorough) response.

      I do not have the depth of domain knowledge in biology that you do (indeed, the software analogies were quite clarifying), so do not have the ability to specify which particular cases may be more "interesting" in terms of my thought-experiment, but I'm rather intrigued as to what might be a method for definitively discerning the origins of a particular biological feature for the "general case".

      Say, as another scenario, we propose that 50000 years from now, anthropology unearths a rare creature we might describe in terms of overt physical features as "unicorn-like". That is, basically a horse with mutation(s) that lead to a long horn protuberance from the skull. As before, we are examining the DNA from a projected future timeframe in which both natural selection and genetic engineering are known to be causal factors historically.

      In this case, we presumably would not immediately conclude it was designed due to the synthetic nature of the requirements of biological feature as in the case of the fluorescent protein, and presumably we would not discount a natural selection explanation due to being clearly actively maladaptive (intuitively, as least, we could see the horn as potentially of selection advantage due to its defensive capability), so, seemingly, we would be left with more sophisticated methods which, I would think, could vary from case-to-case.

      So, I suppose, a better way to phrase my question would be... from your perspective, would it be the case that -all- genetic modifications could be differentiated between being caused by natural processes versus human engineering, or would some cases of genetic engineering be in effect "undetectable" at that future date?

      --
      ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    8. Re:Macro and micro by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      There are two categories, I'd say, in which genetic engineering could be undetectable with present technology:

      1. A very small mutation or alteration, especially one produced by selective exposure to a chemical mutagen such as EMS. This has been a common technique in biology for many, many years to produce defective organisms; the idea being that if it's broken, you can figure out what it was supposed to do by examining what is no longer working. A mutation like this would just resemble a random event; it would be indistinguishable from background noise. That being said, they're basically impossible to control, and they never add things, only damage genes, so you wouldn't get a unicorn out of them.

      2. A naturally-induced mutation engineered not directly, but through selective pressure. If you've been near biology for very long, you've probably heard of a company called Monsanto. Their most notorious business is selling herbicides and complementary herbicide-resistant crops. These crops weren't actually spliced in the lab, just selectively bred through plant eugenics until the right immunity developed. This is similar to how we domesticated plants and animals for agriculture in the first place.

      To produce anything truly exciting, you'd have to be doing some splicing or rewriting. Hypothetically if you knew all of the statistical properties of DNA and could make your constructs look like plausible members of related genes family, and had the power to synthesize an entire mammalian chromosome (or insert into one without evidence, which is fairly easy with PCR, but you still have to get it into the nucleus), then you could produce something that looked natural and authentic—but the benefits of doing so would be extremely questionable. Even after all that, you'd still have the original horse kicking around, and just by comparing the two, you'd be able to see that the modifications all seemed to come in one nice, neat package, and furthermore that they didn't have any ancestors that gave them an alibi as to where they came from.

      Faking life on this level is equivalent to faking an entire branch in a source repo, except the source repo has no code formatting standards, and code can only be contributed in tiny little bits by copying functions and then altering them one line at a time. Do you have the previous revisions? Does the code look like it was written all at once? Are the comments written all by one person? Are there inconsistencies in indentation style? Are there typos all over the place? Do all the other devs have the previous version on their computers still? What about the guy we fired last month; does his machine have the version before that on it? If not, it's fake.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    9. Re:Macro and micro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most common depiction of a unicorn is a horse with a long, thin horn located dead center on the forehead. But what is it made of? Narwhal horns have been sold since antiquity as fake unicorn horn, but the horn of the narwhal is actually a tooth on the upper left side of the jaw that is spectacularly elongated and spiraled. The antler on a deer is a bony growth much like any other bone in the body, and when mature the velvet (covering which supplies nutrients) dies and falls off, the now nutrient-deprived bone dies. Typically they later fall off and are regenerated annually. The antler on a pronghorn antelope is similar, except the bone is living and permanent and is covered by a keratin (fingernail-like) coat that is replaced annually. Then there’s the horn of the rhinoceros, which is composed of densely packed hair-like structures and epidermal cells, with a large proportion of keratin.

      Suppose you’re a biologist commissioned to engineer a unicorn. Where to begin? The closest relative to the horse that has a horn is the rhinoceros. They last had a common ancestor about 55 million years ago. The only other odd-toed ungulate that had horns I can think of is the brontotherium, which had a pair of side-by-side bony projections near its snout and has been extinct for 30 million years. Despite having in some cases significant overlap in biological niche all other horned or antlered animals are even-toed ungulates (giraffe, moose, pronghorn), and the split between even- and odd-toed ungulates occurred sometime in the late Cretaceous, millions of years before the horse/rhino split.

      This matters because we want minimal aggravation in our genetic engineering project, just like any other engineering project. A process that functions in one animal is more likely to function in a closely related animal compared to a distantly related one. The rhino is by far the closest. Additionally the rhino horn is already centrally located like the unicorn horn. Symmetry is a core organizing principle in biological development and taking a bilaterally symmetric process like antelope horn growth, cutting it in half, and centering the remaining half is not going to be trivial even by the standards of this extreme scenario. The rhino horn also offers the advantage of simplicity: hair-like growth plus some epidermal cells and some keratin, versus bone, or bone plus a hair-like growth.

      We know that a gene that controls hair growth, skin growth, and keratin production likely plays a role in horn growth, and a gene involved in horn growth is likely to play a role in skin growth, hair growth, and keratin production. That is, what makes a horn a horn is part of what makes a rhino a rhino, and not a horse. So from an engineering perspective it may very well be easiest to take the set of genes and processes that make a rhino horn in a rhino and take the entire lot under control of some promoter or more likely set of promoters and incorporate it into the horse genome, probably in a way so that we could artificially switch on these genes after the horse is born, or has reached adulthood, in order to have the lowest possible impact on the horsy development of the horse.

      No matter what we’re doing a hell of a lot of engineering, far more than in a simple green fluorescent cat, and we’ll leave a lot more fingerprints behind on the genetic level. Even if we did this tomorrow (yeah right) and the “unicorn” was dug up 50,000 years from now without anything more than skeletal remains, the engineering would be obvious. Horses don’t have horns, never have. They’re not even closely related to any species with horns. Centrally located horns are exceedingly rare, and rhinos are the sole example I can think of. If it didn’t have rhino horn but modified pronghorn antler that was centrally located, the engineering would be even more obvious as there is no precedent for it. If it were the perfect unicorn, with a narwhal tooth coming out of the center of th

    10. Re:Macro and micro by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Pointing weaponry of any kind at Creationism is a waste of time.

      Not if we nuke them from orbit.

    11. Re:Macro and micro by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Personally I prefer the irony of the Genesis Device for my apocalyptic non sequiturs, but to each her own.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
  19. Re:Hox genes are the basic sequence of embryogenes by fikx · · Score: 1

    I think the significant finding is how the layers are timed or sequenced....they knew that embryos develop in layers, they just didn't know how that was achieved. Now they do: layer after layer of the relevant DNA is exposed via a mechanical unwinding of the HOX genes.

    --
    AB HOC POSSUM VIDERE DOMUM TUUM
  20. Re:Golden Girls! by aristotle-dude · · Score: 0

    Thank you for being a friend
    Traveled down the road and back again
    Your heart is true, you're a pal and a cosmonaut.

    That is confidant, not cosmonaut.

    --
    Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
  21. many answers, but so many questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Attempts to explain the mechanics of DNA leave me with so many burning questions I end up as a bemused pile of ash with some ACGT letters in it. Besides "What controls the HOX genes and their clusters?"

    • Article says When the time is right, the strand begins to unwind, so is there another clock that turns on this clock?
    • the genes encoding the formation of cervical vertebrae come off the spool and become activated . Beware passive voice, what activates them?
    • Does the HOX clock run in every cell? If not, which ones? If each one, what keeps them in sync? Some cells are 3 days old during this process, some are brand new
    • Wikipedia explains the protein product of the Hox gene Antennapedia activates genes that specify the structures of the 2nd thoracic segment, but when new cells form in that area weeks later, how do they know their place? Do they have a little piece of Antennapedia stuck on their office door, or a "You are here" pin on the map? (Perhaps Regulation is achieved via protein concentration gradients, called morphogenic fields "explains" that, but that just raises more questions.)
    • The article title is the mechanism that gives shape to life Go look at any medical illustration and the names given to every protrusion and fold and layer, remember there are thousands more illustrations with that level of detail, then re-read the HOX explanation. I've got about 5 orders of magnitude more structure in me than 30-odd slices. Is the HOX system reused to control the layout of my arm down to five jointed fingers? If not, what takes its place at lower levels?

    I'm in awe that we can puzzle out our own creation, but either our understanding or the explanations of it are riddled with gaps.

    1. Re:many answers, but so many questions by enderwig · · Score: 1

      so is there another clock that turns on this clock?

      My guess is yes, there is something else. It may not be a protein but a small nuclear RNA.

      but when new cells form in that area weeks later, how do they know their place?

      Molecular landmarks sort of like what makes one intersection different from another even if both have a coffee shop, a fast food place, and a gas station. The landmarks could be on the cells, on the extracellular matrix, a diffusable protein gradient, or some other way to differentiate an environment.

      Is the HOX system reused to control the layout of my arm down to five jointed fingers? If not, what takes its place at lower levels?

      Actually, they are. Nature likes to re-purpose genes temporally and spacially to do more than 1 thing when in the correct environment. Scientists have a decent understanding of how fingers in a mouse and a rat are made. It's quite interesting how expression of one Hox gene creates fingers while the another one is required to create the space between our fingers.

    2. Re:many answers, but so many questions by mcswell · · Score: 1

      "Does the HOX clock run in every cell? If not, which ones? If each one, what keeps them in sync? Some cells are 3 days old during this process, some are brand new"

      I'm the original OP, and yes, I wondered about this too--particularly how the current unwinding gets transmitted down the length of the animal as the cells undergo mitosis. Or maybe it only unwinds a little with each division, and only the cells at the posterior end (which I presume are in the last segment produced) govern further division? Except that the anterior cells must be dividing too, if the anterior end continues to grow (which it obviously must, sooner or later, otherwise we'd have pinheads).

      It's an interesting story, but there are lots of unanswered questions.

  22. many answers, but so many questions by spage · · Score: 1

    (reposting as myself, sorry.) Attempts to explain the mechanics of DNA leave me with so many burning questions I end up as a bemused pile of ash with some ACGT letters in it. Besides "What controls the HOX genes and their clusters?"

    • Article says When the time is right, the strand begins to unwind, so is there another clock that turns on this clock?
    • the genes encoding the formation of cervical vertebrae come off the spool and become activated . Beware passive voice, what activates them?
    • Does the HOX clock run in every cell? If not, which ones? If each one, what keeps them in sync? Some cells are 3 days old during this process, some are brand new
    • Wikipedia explains the protein product of the Hox gene Antennapedia activates genes that specify the structures of the 2nd thoracic segment, but when new cells form in that area weeks later, how do they know their place? Do they have a little piece of Antennapedia stuck on their office door, or a "You are here" pin on the map? (Perhaps Regulation is achieved via protein concentration gradients, called morphogenic fields "explains" that, but that just raises more questions.)
    • The article title is the mechanism that gives shape to life Go look at any medical illustration and the names given to every protrusion and fold and layer, remember there are thousands more illustrations with that level of detail, then re-read the HOX explanation. I've got about 5 orders of magnitude more structure in me than 30-odd slices. Is the HOX system reused to control the layout of my arm down to five jointed fingers? If not, what takes its place at lower levels?

    I'm in awe that we can puzzle out our own creation, but either our understanding or the explanations of it are riddled with gaps.

    --
    =S
  23. According to its kind by tepples · · Score: 1

    It all hinges on the precise meaning of the word translated "kind" in Genesis 1:21-25 and 6:20. I guess a creationist would argue that a "kind" is very close to a modern taxonomic "family" but not exactly the same: humans aren't the same "kind" as orangutans, gorillas, and chimps, created during the fifth period, despite their modern classification into Hominidae. Humans were created during the sixth period of creation as God's attempt to see how many of his own qualities he could squeeze into free space in the chimp genome.

    1. Re:According to its kind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The creationist would first argue that the story in Genesis is literally true - because it says so. Then they would go from that assumption. And they wouldn't ever understand Joseph Campbell, Buddha, or probably Jesus either in any deep sense, because a mind that can only operate in a literal and authority-swallowing manner just isn't ready for your input.

    2. Re:According to its kind by Virtual_Raider · · Score: 1

      It all hinges on the precise meaning of the word translated "kind" in Genesis (...) Humans were created during the sixth period of creation as God's attempt to see how many of his own qualities he could squeeze into free space in the chimp genome.

      Allow me to point out that an "omniscient" and "omnipotent" god would have no need to attempt anything. He's omnipotent, thus he can do anything and everything, no holds barred, no need to attempt something that he is guaranteed by definition to be able to do. And being omniscient he would know the outcome of any such attempt without trying.

      The christian god is said to be both omniscient and omnipotent, which is one reason any human attempt to understand such a being or even explain his actions is futile, we simply couldn't. Note I'm not saying that such a god exists or doesn't, merely that all these rationalisations about his supposed motives are nonsense.

      --
      +Raider of the lost BBS
    3. Re:According to its kind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but the Christian notion of an omniscient & omnipotent God is a later conception. The story in Genesis taken at face value depicts a God who is neither.

    4. Re:According to its kind by Virtual_Raider · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the Christian notion of an omniscient & omnipotent God is a later conception. The story in Genesis taken at face value depicts a God who is neither.

      So the christian god... evolved to become omniscient and omnipotent? that is awesome :)

      --
      +Raider of the lost BBS
  24. Heralded as a breakthrough in politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now it will be possible to correct the flawed genes and finally remove Congressmen's heads from there asses!

  25. Yes by ecotax · · Score: 1

    Indeed it does. A blind watchmaker, to be precise.

    --
    "Money is a sign of poverty." - Iain Banks
  26. Great day for humanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now all we have to do is copy that snake defect and build a human centipede!

  27. Another burning question by beachdog · · Score: 1

    A few years ago I found out that the explorers in the science of paper folding have proposed that any three dimensional physical object can be formed by folding a single sheet. That resonated with my contact with embryology (which included watching frog eggs divide under a stereo microscope). And it still resonates with my work with special education kids where I puzzle about which layers of their motor skill function stack are not working well.

    So another burning question, or at least request for explanation is: What is the shape and structure of the embryo before the HOX genes begin unwinding. What is the shape and structure when the second HOX gene begins acting? Is there a neural tube present at this time? Does the HOX gene start a series of surface tension changes in a single cell that sets off an extrusion?

  28. Intelligent Design... by FauxReal · · Score: 1

    I think stuff like this should be touted as proof of Intelligent Design... not to prove God exists but to reconcile American fundamentalist Christian ideas with science. And from there push the meme that God wants us to examine the world and understand his creation so we can bask in the wonder of His glory. Then maybe they'll ease up on trying to oppose science sometimes.

    Question: How do the Jesuits feel about biological science vs. intelligent design? I assume (with total ignorance of their ideas on the subject) that they acknowledge evolution?

    1. Re:Intelligent Design... by 9jack9 · · Score: 1

      "I personally never thought that there was any conflict between evolutionary explanations of change in the natural world and Roman Catholic Christianity." From "Evolutionary Biology at Regis, a Jesuit Catholic School" at http://academic.regis.edu/mghedott/evolut.htm.

    2. Re:Intelligent Design... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make the mistake of thinking that American fundamentalist Christians worship God. They don't. They worship the Bible.

    3. Re:Intelligent Design... by Sensible+Clod · · Score: 1

      If you knew the Bible, you would not say that, because it isn't true. They do not worship the Bible; they worship the parts that seem to fit their preconceived ideas of God. It's very similar to the way some scientists and economists (among others) ignore data that doesn't fit with their conclusions.

      --

      The difference between spam and poop is that you don't have to dig through septic tanks looking for real food. -- Me
    4. Re:Intelligent Design... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Only the Old Testament. They can't read far enough.

  29. This is really amazing... by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    Wow!

    Decades ago, in ninth grade biology class, I asked my biology teacher how a Hydra (or other creatures) knows how to form its shape from cells, but he hemmed and hawed, and essentially would not admit that he did not know, or even that no one knew. We had been supposed to look at some Hydra in class, but they never arrived or something like that. I later studied Hydra in Ecology and Evolution grad studies, but people still did not quite know how they formed their shapes.

    A couple lessons there for me I guess including the one about some teachers and authority:
    http://www.newciv.org/whole/schoolteacher.txt
    http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/chapters/16a.htm

    In pretty much every other way he was a great teacher from my point of view back then though (aside from not being willing to admit he did not know something), because he went covered a lot of material in an interesting way, and was obviously very proud of his knowledge. He definitely sparked my interest in biology with the way he ran the class, the way he handled that question aside. Anyway, thanks for everything Mr. Nast -- one of your students went on to biology graduate studies and making biology-related software made possible by the great job you did in some blue collar high school on Long Island.

    Plants work somewhat differently from animals though. My wife and I implicitly used some of the ideas related to auxins etc. in this software we wrote to breed virtual 3D plants:
    http://www.kurtz-fernhout.com/PlantStudio/
    https://github.com/pdfernhout/PlantStudio/blob/master/README.txt

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  30. Re:Golden Girls! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must not visit very often.

    Don't feed the trolls.

  31. What is New Here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've known about Hox genes and Hedgehog proteins for a long time. Apparently this research has improved our understanding of them, but reading TFA I'm not clear how. Can someone explain it to me?

  32. Snake experiment by FridayBob · · Score: 1

    What if someone were to take a newly created snake embryo and repair that 'defective' gene before letting it develop further? Would it automatically develop four limbs and look more like a lizard? Whatever the result, if successful it might give us some more insight into how these fascinating creatures evolved.

  33. Plants Have Shapes (And Are Alive) Too! by MaizeMan · · Score: 1

    Obligatory post by a plant biologist who is sick of the animal folks overgeneralizing their findings in press releases.

  34. So in the future we can build things using DNA by approachingZero+ · · Score: 1

    The 1st thing that comes to mind is the possibility we could construct things out of organic material now. Instead of cutting down a tree to build a house we could organize tree DNA to deliver a real tree house. Patent pending.

    --
    'I don't know what it's called. I just know the sound it makes, when it takes a man's life.' ~ Four Leaf Tayback
  35. Other mutant HOX genes in action by CozmicCharlie · · Score: 1

    Does this mean that lawyers have mutated HOX genes that fail to unwind, thus leaving them spine-less?

  36. The Catholic Church is cool with it by sirwired · · Score: 1

    Galileo was a long time ago. The Catholic church, by now, has no beef with the well-settled science on Evolution, the Big Bang, etc.

    Although I'm not quite sure what process they use to decide which parts should be taken literally (i.e. the resurrection of Jesus) and which should be discarded as poor translations of ancient epics (the seven days of Creation, Adam and Eve, etc.)

    And it baffles me that any form of Christianity decided to include Revelation; whoever wrote that had clearly discovered some Magic Mushrooms...

  37. Re:Hox genes are the basic sequence of embryogenes by Walt+Dismal · · Score: 1

    Organic 3D printing, okay. The printers are cheap but you have buy 18 years worth of expensive ink cartridges in a manner of speaking.

  38. Need This For My Own Snake! by macs4all · · Score: 1

    So how do I get this gene to express itself as greater penis size?

  39. Re:Hox genes are the basic sequence of embryogenes by Walt+Dismal · · Score: 1

    This discovery also illuminates another aspect of growth. Sure, you can build in a slice fashion, but obviously the initial full structure will not have full internal (neural) communications, because that can only be grown point to point AFTER the points are built. So this explains why infant maturing involves such massive neural growth. The building has been constructed, now the phone and IT infrastructure gets built up, over years. Plus, the building keeps getting improvements and expansions, so wiring has to be dynamically upgraded for the first 18 to 20 years. This also gives me some ideas for dynamic AI architectures, so whoo-eee! Fruitful discovery.

  40. Grammar by tepples · · Score: 1

    Allow me to point out that an "omniscient" and "omnipotent" god would have no need to attempt anything.

    "Attempt" was sloppy wording, for which I apologize. Grammatically, I needed a noun in that position.

    And being omniscient he would know the outcome of any such attempt without trying.

    The current age is how God demonstrates to the not-omniscient created beings (spirit creatures and humans) that man cannot effectively rule man.

    1. Re:Grammar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And being omniscient he would know the outcome of any such attempt without trying.

      The current age is how God demonstrates to the not-omniscient created beings (spirit creatures and humans) that man cannot effectively rule man.

      And you know this... how? You didn't address the other point, which was that trying to ascribe intent to an omnipotent and omniscient being is nonsense. The above is another example, if god is omniscient, he must unavoidably know that:

      a) the way he is doing things does not work for there are immense number of people that don't believe (or believe something else entirely, i.e. Buddhism, Hinduism)

      b) he should know the proper way or ways to ensure that everybody will believe (if for whatever twisted reason he doesn't just make people "know")

    2. Re:Grammar by mfnickster · · Score: 1

      And being omniscient he would know the outcome of any such attempt without trying.

      The current age is how God demonstrates to the not-omniscient created beings (spirit creatures and humans) that man cannot effectively rule man.

      Maybe we're omniscient and we don't even know it!

      --
      "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
  41. Re:Hox genes are the basic sequence of embryogenes by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

    whoo-eee! Fruitful discovery./quote.

    Well, informative discovery would probably be more correct. NOW we will see if this discovery will actually bear fruit in finding therapies or the ability to correct for certain early birth defects such as Spinda Bifida.

    --
    Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
  42. Re:Hox genes are the basic sequence of embryogenes by mapkinase · · Score: 1

    "The reason we get so many different organisms, like whales, fruit flies and elephants, is evolution" That's irrelevant here.

    As for the article, the most interesting part is that instead of traditional regulation, where genes are turned on and off by specific interactions of gene area with other molecules (proteins, microRNA), the authors propose a mechanical mechanism where active and inactive HOX genes are spatially segregated in two blobs of DNA.

    The question is what mechanism provides persistent of this blobs arrangement during mitosis. DNA replicates during mitosis which requires dissolution of the spatial arrangement of DNA that existed in the parent.

    --
    I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
  43. The way of man does not belong to man by tepples · · Score: 1

    The current age is how God demonstrates to the not-omniscient created beings (spirit creatures and humans) that man cannot effectively rule man.

    And you know this... how?

    The way of man does not belong to man (Jeremiah 10:23). Satan has challenged God, calling him a liar who withholds good from humankind (Genesis 3:2-5), right in front of millions of angels (Job 38:7; Daniel 7:10).

    You didn't address the other point, which was that trying to ascribe intent to an omnipotent and omniscient being is nonsense.

    God makes his intent clear in the Bible. He built this earth to be inhabited (Isaiah 45:18) by human beings who serve him. And he always fulfills his purposes (Isaiah 55:10-11), even when other forces make him change exactly how those purposes will be fulfilled.

    [God] should know the proper way or ways to ensure that everybody will believe

    And this proper way is not by forcing people to believe something. It's by allowing this system of things, which is ruled by Satan (1 John 5:19), to play out to its inevitable conclusion among nonbelievers. God knows that we humans are collateral damage in this demonstration, which is why he provided the ransom in the death of his son Jesus "to break up the works of the Devil" (1 John 3:8) and make everlasting life possible (John 3:16).

    1. Re:The way of man does not belong to man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This shows the authors of the bible were aware of the problem, but it doesn't solve the problem.

    2. Re:The way of man does not belong to man by tepples · · Score: 1

      but it doesn't solve the problem.

      Man cannot solve man's problems; only God can solve them. He reveals his intent and his latest plan to achieve it in stages: the Torah, then the rest of the Hebrew scriptures, then the Greek scriptures. Spilling the beans all at once would affect the plan.

    3. Re:The way of man does not belong to man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Man cannot solve man's problems; only God can solve them.

      Yep, just as I thought - God blames us for what's clearly his own fault.

    4. Re:The way of man does not belong to man by tepples · · Score: 1

      How is it God's fault that Adam and Eve created man's problems by using their free will to choose Satan's temptation over God's authority?

    5. Re:The way of man does not belong to man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is it God's fault that Adam and Eve created man's problems by using their free will to choose Satan's temptation over God's authority?

      Surely you must have heard the argument before - if God is omniscient, and created the Garden, Adam, Eve, and the serpent whilst knowing exactly what would happen, he bears full responsibility for the outcome.

      Secondly, Adam and Eve didn't know good from evil before eating the fruit, so they can't have known it was wrong to disobey.

      Thirdly, God created Satan knowing he would rebel, and allowed it to happen. Christian theology associates the serpent with Satan, although there is nothing in the story itself to indicate this. If Satan tempted man, it's because God allowed it.

      Fourthly, "free will" is hardly a gift if you are rewarded for choosing one thing but punished for choosing another. That's no freedom at all; it's a trap.

      The fatal flaw in the "omniscient, omnipotent creator" concept is that he cannot have created a world that is not exactly as he wants it to be. Ergo, if there is sin, he is responsible for its existence. If people are sinful, it's because he made it that way.

      Theologians try to paper over this, but in the end something has to give - given the premise that there is evil in the world: is God evil, is he not omniscient, is he impotent to stop it, or does he simply not exist?

  44. God allows evil to exist to illustrate a point by tepples · · Score: 1

    Secondly, Adam and Eve didn't know good from evil before eating the fruit

    But they knew their maker from a snake in the grass.

    Christian theology associates the serpent with Satan, although there is nothing in the story itself to indicate this.

    Explicit identification of the serpent with Satan is found later in the Bible. John of Patmos wrote in Revelation 12:9 of "the original serpent, the one called Devil and Satan, who is misleading the entire inhabited earth".

    If Satan tempted man, it's because God allowed it.

    God allows evil to exist to illustrate a point: that evil is a destructive force that man cannot contain alone.

    given the premise that there is evil in the world: is God evil, is he not omniscient, is he impotent to stop it, or does he simply not exist?

    Allowing evil != being evil. God hates evil more than people do, but it's there for a reason. For one thing, it helps people appreciate the coming paradise more because they know what they'll be leaving behind. See what Watch Tower has to say about why God continues to allow evil for the time being.

    1. Re:God allows evil to exist to illustrate a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christian theology associates the serpent with Satan, although there is nothing in the story itself to indicate this.

      Explicit identification of the serpent with Satan is found later in the Bible. John of Patmos wrote in Revelation 12:9 of "the original serpent, the one called Devil and Satan, who is misleading the entire inhabited earth".

      As I said, Christian theology. That's New Testament, not Old Testeament.

      God allows evil to exist to illustrate a point: that evil is a destructive force that man cannot contain alone.
      ...
      God hates evil more than people do, but it's there for a reason. For one thing, it helps people appreciate the coming paradise more because they know what they'll be leaving behind.

      Sorry, but this makes no sense at all. "In order for man to understand evil, he has to experience it" - so the Fall was necessary and planned from the beginning. What is the point of commanding people not to sin if you know they will and intend for them to do so anyway? Adam and Eve were set up... thus their sin is not their fault. They are the victims.

      Look, you can rationalize the mythology however you want, but the truth is that this story was written by an ancient people to explain why we are the way we are, and the origins of our "wicked" ways. The story taken at face value depicts a God who is neither omniscient nor omnipotent, nor even "good" - just one who's in command.

      Nowadays we have science, which is a much more capable means of exploring the forces that shaped humanity into its current state.

      On a personal level, I reject any theology that portrays God as a colossal fuck-up. The universe as we can observe today points to a God who is indifferent if he exists, which is perfectly consistent with a God who doesn't exist.

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