Received: by alpheratz.cpm.aca.mmu.ac.uk id DAA03745 (8.6.9/5.3[ref pg@gmsl.co.uk] for cpm.aca.mmu.ac.uk from fmb-majordomo@mmu.ac.uk); Sat, 10 Feb 2001 03:58:36 GMT Subject: Fwd: Evolution at work: Date: Fri, 9 Feb 2001 22:55:57 -0500 x-sender: wsmith1@camail2.harvard.edu x-mailer: Claris Emailer 2.0v3, Claritas Est Veritas From: "Wade T.Smith" <wade_smith@harvard.edu> To: "memetics list" <memetics@mmu.ac.uk> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Message-ID: <20010210035412.AAA18952@camailp.harvard.edu@[205.240.180.158]> Sender: fmb-majordomo@mmu.ac.uk Precedence: bulk Reply-To: memetics@mmu.ac.uk
Evolution at work:
The tale of a tail - New gene found in fruit flies could impact human 
medicine
By William J. Cromie 
Gazette Staff
http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/2001/02.08/01-evolutionatwork.html
Most people don't think of evolution as very dynamic. If they think of it 
at all, they see it as something that happened in the deep past. But all 
species possess chromosomes, coiled strands of genes in every one of 
their cells, and these genes are constantly changing.
Take fruit flies, for example. These flying specks of life have been 
buzzing around overripe fruit for some 2 million years, and they are 
still evolving. Or at least their sperm tails are.
Harvard researchers discovered this fact accidentally, and their 
subsequent investigation of it could lead to a way to detect evolving 
genes in all species, including humans. Besides satisfying scientific 
curiosity, that information could have medical value.
"Our method might be used to find genes actively evolving in viruses, 
bacteria, and other germs that cause human disease," explains Daniel 
Hartl, Higgins Professor of Biology at Harvard. "This knowledge then 
might be used to find new targets for drugs and other treatments."
Hartl and his colleagues at Tufts University in Boston and the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture were studying so-called motor proteins in 
fruit-fly sperm tails. These proteins power the swimming motion that 
propels sperm to a docking with female eggs.
In one type of fly, Drosophilia melanogaster, but not in others, the 
researchers found a gene that carries instructions for making a motor 
that gives this species' sperm extra horsepower. The researchers were not 
looking specifically for such a gene but came across it serendipitously 
during a general investigation of motor proteins.
Various creatures boast these proteins, which make it possible for them 
to get around in salt water or fresh water, or in a reproductive canal, 
by lashing or spinning threadlike tails. "The tail of D. melanogaster's 
sperm is twice as long as the fly itself," Hartl points out. "Other fruit 
flies may have tails as long as 20 times their body length, intricately 
coiled inside their sex organs until ready for use. We have no idea why 
they grow so long."
A reversal of roles
Finding a gene with instructions for making such a protein promised the 
possibility of a view into a corner of evolution that no one had seen 
before. Upon looking into it, the biologists found that D. melanogaster 
evolved a new gene that none of its relatives had. The new gene fused two 
old genes together. A gene region that once carried a code or blueprint 
for making a protein became an on-off switch, and a region that didn't 
code for anything now carries blueprints for making part of a sperm-tail 
motor.
"It's a beautiful reversal of roles," Hartl comments. "It shows that a 
gene's function is not necessary fixed but can evolve to do something 
quite new."
Originally, the new gene probably gave fruit flies that had it an 
advantage over those who did not. Sperm motility would have helped them 
in nature's most basic competitive race - reproduction. Now, all males 
have it, so the advantage is less.
But the story is not over. The gene is still actively undergoing 
evolutionary improvement.
When a favorable shift like this occurs, it changes the whole 
neighborhood of the chromosome where it happened. Molecular biologists 
can easily see the upheaval with newly available methods of gene mapping. 
For example, if the neighborhood is an old one, researchers see many 
signs of change, i.e., different variations among individual flies. But 
in a newly rebuilt chromosomal neighborhood, little variation exists. The 
latter is what Hartl and his colleagues see in the area of the new 
sperm-tail gene.
"By carefully studying genetic variation along chromosomes, we're 
reasonably certain we can detect which genes are actively evolving in any 
species, including humans," Hartl says. "That information can be used to 
find these genes in viruses and other organisms that cause disease. Such 
a search might reveal vulnerable sites that we could target with new 
kinds of drugs."
Human gene activity
Humans possess a gene that appears to be distantly related to the new 
sperm-tail gene in D. melanogaster. This gene may not be actively 
evolving, but other human genes are. For example, a recently mutated gene 
that has swept through Africa makes people resistant to one type of 
malaria. The gene prevents a parasite called Plasmodium vivax from 
attaching itself to liver and blood cells.
P. vivax is not a lethal strain of malaria but it makes people very sick. 
"It doesn't kill you, but it makes you wish you were dead," Hartl notes. 
The mutation keeps those who have it from getting sick.
Malaria kills about 1 million children per year. Most of these deaths are 
due to Plasmodium falciparum, which, like other strains, is transmitted 
by the bite of anopheles mosquitoes. Another comparatively new mutation 
conveys resistance to P. falciparum, but at a high price. It causes 
sickle cell anemia, a painful inherited blood disease that occurs mainly 
in blacks. Sickle cell anemia, however, is not usually fatal.
These are examples of actively evolving genes in human. A search for such 
evolving genes in malaria parasites might reveal new targets for better 
drugs or even a vaccine.
Hartl and his team are now mapping the new neighborhood of the fruit fly 
sperm-tail gene in hopes of learning more about how evolution works. They 
are also looking at other genes necessary for the male half of 
reproduction. "They are a particularly interesting group to study," he 
says, "because in all species, including humans, they evolve faster than 
any other group of genes. We'd like to find out why."
Copyright 2000 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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