4-Billion-Year-Old Fossil Protein Resurrected
First time accepted submitter Zoë Mintz writes "Researchers have 'resurrected' a 4-billion-year-old Precambrian protein and found they resembled those that existed when life began, proving that protein structures have the ability to remain constant over extended periods of time."
Hows a protein alive?
They took present-day versions of the protein in living organisms, used a computer to interpolate a hypothetical common ancestor, then 'found' sequence homology - but people already knew the sequence was highly conserved, it's evident in modern organisms. There were no "fossils" involved. And conserved sequences make for poor molecular clocks, so who knows if it was 4 billion years ago.
Which implies that we must know what proteins looked like 4Bn years ago.
Zoà Mintz overstated the ibtimes piece so extremely that she must be a "journalism" student jonesing for a job at Fox News.
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
of this protein?!?
seems like a reasonable use of tax payer money....
It's faintly possible that an absolutely essential component of cellular function suddenly worked its way into the genomes of every single organism on Earth one Tuesday afternoon, and that despite every indication of all copies being descendant from a single master source, they were simply made to look that way after the fact, and that the last universal common ancestor got along just merrily without it, despite it being much more logical that this one particular protein happened to be there alongside all the other ancient essential proteins we know and cherish... but that would require an incredibly petty and childish divine being, or one with terrible planning skills. Possibly the divine being that buries dinosaur bones to test the faith of His followers.
So, no; not really. Why do you ask?
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Any protein that existed in LUCA has to be at least as old as LUCA. That's somewhere around 3.5BYA. The journalists rounded that up to 4.
To be fair to the journalists, it wasn't them doing the rounding: Conservation of Protein Structure over Four Billion Years.
"FDA staff reviewers expressed concern about the number of patients who were left out of the study because they died."
"We spared no expense."
Which is quite honestly a reasonable thing to say, as that's what the molecular clock dictates. It probably means that thioredoxin was a little more variable at first than it is today.
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I for one welcome our new Precambrian Protein Overlords... in whatever form they may take!
To be fair to the journalists, it wasn't them doing the rounding: Conservation of Protein Structure over Four Billion Years.
OK, then, let's look at the first sentance of the summary of the source:
"Little is known about the evolution of protein structures and the degree of protein structure conservation over planetary time scales."
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Yes, relatively little compared to a lot of biology. This is origin of life, or in another word, abiogenesis research. This is a very young and small field. The field is wide open for ground breaking discoveries. The research community is just beginning to organize. Abiogenesis is hard. How do you create life from no life, without the interference of God? The answer is that there are hundreds, thousands of steps, and each one has to be figured out, and it can take years of work and millions of dollars. The BioTech companies patent and proprietarize everything. They charge you hundreds of dollars for a few dollars worth of chemicals. Evolution from LUCA forward is very mature. Chemical evolution, essentially, abiogenesis, is an immature field. If you don't want to follow along, come back in 25 years and a billion dollars later for a progress report.
Right, but the object of the paper is to then advance what is known in that very area, in which I think it is highly successful. Varieties of thioredoxins are present in every free-living organism on earth. One of their many functions is to donate electrons to an enzyme called ribonucleotide reductase which converts ribonucleotides into deoxyribonucleotides, so in a roundabout way, working thioredoxin proteins are necessary to make DNA. Between its ubiquity and general structural similarities in modern organisms, there is reason to think that the general structure of thioredoxins was settled long ago in the history of life, before archaea and eukaryotes split off from bacteria. As other posters have noted, the timeframe of this event is generally held to have been ~3.5-3.8 billion years ago.
"FDA staff reviewers expressed concern about the number of patients who were left out of the study because they died."
Hilarious!
.. and I won't speculate what kind of sample.
Is it possible something got uploaded to a torrent (or the other thing that we don't talk about) that contained watermarks so He could catch the infringers?
I figure it wasn't a meteorite that did for the dinosaurs; they got sued to death by the RIAE.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
I heard they found it in some freezer in China, along with tons of chicken. I'm sure it'll be fine after some bathing in peroxide...
Is it possible something got uploaded to a torrent (or the other thing that we don't talk about) that contained watermarks so He could catch the infringers?
I figure it wasn't a meteorite that did for the dinosaurs; they got sued to death by the RIAE.
I think you're onto something here. We used to get many instances of miracles and divine interventions in the past: plagues, floods, burning bushes, lightning bolts smiting the wicked, immaculate conceptions, etc
Perhaps the copyright lawyers invaded the heavens, and nowadays gods can't manifest themselves physically on us mortals for fear of infringing some patent
"Men rarely (if ever) manage to dream up a god superior to themselves. Most gods have the manners and morals of a spoiled child. "
Heinlein
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
We have a pretty good idea of the minimum genome needed for a free-living organism, and even if we figure out what that possible ancestral genome looks like, we still know nothing of how it came to be. Any cell is a spectacularly complicated machine, and for it to fall together spontaneously is improbable beyond all reason.
And blaming aliens or even a transfer from Mars is only kicking the proverbial can down the road.
Don't be so hard on the RIAE; they were simply exercising their legal freedom to shoot themselves in the foot by destroying their whole industry. (Although if you're semi-vaguely-actually curious, the Venter Institute put a watermark in the Mycoplasma laboratorium genome a couple of years ago, which everyone thought was in terribly bad taste. Such sequences usually mutate randomly into illegibility in a few decades because nothing depends on them staying put.)
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Now we need to insert it into a bovine stem cell taken from fetal blood, grow that in a culture until we have a suitable amount and voila... dinoburgers!
How can you find something that's 4 billion years old when the universe is only 7000 years old? Hard to believe if you ask me
Perhaps one might say "reinstantiated" or "recreated" instead of "resurrected" if what one actually means is "recreated" or "reinstantiated". I mean, instead of purposely using an incorrect term and claiming Humpty-dumpty's right of random redefinition.
The insufferably lame portion of the scientific community, you mean. Here in computer science we occasionally have a few people who can understand the value of semantics, so we have virii instead of viruses, bytes instead of bites, and gibibytes just to drive the SI boys nuts.
Sam Watterson had something to say about this.
Quark, quark, quark, quark.
I really have to be more careful about making glib off-the-wall comments. This isn't the first time I've said one that was true.
One place I worked at a long time ago had an informal taboo against saying "But nobody would ever be stupid enough to ..." on the grounds that on uttering it somebody would do precisely that.
I'm wondering if there's some underlying mechanism behind this, and that rule 39 is just another manifestation of it.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
It's probably the same fundamental principle that causes there to be no original ideas.
Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!