R
rossum
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Other primate species either have the original functioning gene, or the same originally functioning version with added errors – a non-functioning pseudogene is not subject to error-correction by natural selection.Originally Posted by PseuTonym:
However, why isn’t it possible that the so-called “broken” gene is the ancestral form, and that the functioning gene developed in other primate species that aren’t extinct, but didn’t develop in human beings?
Early primates ate a fruit/vegetable diet which meant that the effects of the broken GULO gene were negligible. It is only in unnatural situations, like being away from fresh food on board ship for a long time that the broken gene becomes a problem.
And primates share the same functioning version, different from the version in Armadillos for example. The pattern of different versions of functioning genes is part of the evidence in support of descent with modification.There are different functioning versions in different species.
It can. Individuals with a broken required gene die; individuals with a working version live. Since early primates got a lot of vitamin C in their diet, the GULO gene was not required.If evolution can generate complicated, new genes then why can’t it fix broken genes that are broken in a small number of places?
Where is your evidence for this? In science speculation unsupported by evidence does not get you very far. What function does the mangled product of the GULO-P pseudogene perform. What scientific paper shows this function?Perhaps it is non-functional with respect to vitamin C synthesis, but perhaps it isn’t absolutely non-functional.
Guinea Pigs also have a broken GULO gene. However, it is broken in a different way. The broken primate versions are all broken in the same way. Again, the pattern of the broken gene (and subsequent further changes) is good evidence for common descent.That we see the “broken” gene only in human beings and some other primate species doesn’t imply that it first arose in primates. Another possibility is that there has been enough time and selective pressure for it to change in most mammal species.
rossum