《万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森》

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万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森- 第86部分


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that鈥檚 hard on the heart。 thus those designed to live at high altitude get increased breathingefficiency; but pay for it with higher…risk hearts。 by such means does darwinian naturalselection look after us。 it also helps to explain why we are all so similar。 evolution simplywon鈥檛 let you bee too different鈥攏ot without being a new species anyway。

the 0。1 percent difference between your genes and mine is accounted for by our snips。

now if you pared your dna with a third person鈥檚; there would also be 99。9 percentcorrespondence; but the snips would; for the most part; be in different places。 add more people to the parison and you will get yet more snips in yet more places。 for every one ofyour 3。2 billion bases; somewhere on the planet there will be a person; or group of persons;with different coding in that position。 so not only is it wrong to refer to 鈥渢he鈥潯uman genome;but in a sense we don鈥檛 even have 鈥渁鈥潯uman genome。 we have six billion of them。 we are all99。9 percent the same; but equally; in the words of the biochemist david cox; 鈥測ou could sayall humans share nothing; and that would be correct; too。鈥

but we have still to explain why so little of that dna has any discernible purpose。 it startsto get a little unnerving; but it does really seem that the purpose of life is to perpetuate dna。

the 97 percent of our dna monly called junk is largely made up of clumps of lettersthat; in ridley鈥檚 words; 鈥渆xist for the pure and simple reason that they are good at gettingthemselves duplicated。鈥

2most of your dna; in other words; is not devoted to you but toitself: you are a machine for reproducing it; not it for you。 life; you will recall; just wants tobe; and dna is what makes it so。

even when dna includes instructions for making genes鈥攚hen it codes for them; asscientists put it鈥攊t is not necessarily with the smooth functioning of the organism in mind。

one of the monest genes we have is for a protein called reverse transcriptase; which hasno known beneficial function in human beings at all。 the one thing itdoes do is make itpossible for retroviruses; such as the aids virus; to slip unnoticed into the human system。

in other words; our bodies devote considerable energies to producing a protein that doesnothing that is beneficial and sometimes clobbers us。 our bodies have no choice but to do sobecause the genes order it。 we are vessels for their whims。 altogether; almost half of humangenes鈥攖he largest proportion yet found in any organism鈥攄on鈥檛 do anything at all; as far aswe can tell; except reproduce themselves。

all organisms are in some sense slaves to their genes。 that鈥檚 why salmon and spiders andother types of creatures more or less beyond counting are prepared to die in the process ofmating。 the desire to breed; to disperse one鈥檚 genes; is the most powerful impulse in nature。

as sherwin b。 nuland has put it: 鈥渆mpires fall; ids explode; great symphonies are written;and behind all of it is a single instinct that demands satisfaction。鈥潯rom an evolutionary pointof view; sex is really just a reward mechanism to encourage us to pass on our genetic material。

scientists had only barely absorbed the surprising news that most of our dna doesn鈥檛 doanything when even more unexpected findings began to turn up。 first in germany and then inswitzerland researchers performed some rather bizarre experiments that produced curiouslyunbizarre outes。 in one they took the gene that controlled the development of a mouse鈥檚eye and inserted it into the larva of a fruit fly。 the thought was that it might producesomething interestingly grotesque。 in fact; the mouse…eye gene not only made a viable eye inthe fruit fly; it made a fly鈥檚 eye。 here were two creatures that hadn鈥檛 shared a monancestor for 500 million years; yet could swap genetic material as if they were sisters。

the story was the same wherever researchers looked。 they found that they could inserthuman dna into certain cells of flies; and the flies would accept it as if it were their own。

2junk dna does have a use。 it is the portion employed in dna fingerprinting。 its practicality for this purposewas discovered accidentally by alec jeffreys; a scientist at the university of leicester in england。 in 1986jeffreys was studying dna sequences for genetic markers associated with heritable diseases when he wasapproached by the police and asked if he could help connect a suspect to two murders。 he realized his techniqueought to work perfectly for solving criminal cases…and so it proved。 a young baker with the improbable name ofcolin pitchfork was sentenced to two life terms in prison for the murders。

over 60 percent of human genes; it turns out; are fundamentally the same as those found infruit flies。 at least 90 percent correlate at some level to those found in mice。 (we even havethe same genes for making a tail; if only they would switch on。) in field after field;researchers found that whatever organism they were working on鈥攚hether nematode wormsor human beings鈥攖hey were often studying essentially the same genes。 life; it appeared; wasdrawn up from a single set of blueprints。

further probings revealed the existence of a clutch of master control genes; each directingthe development of a section of the body; which were dubbed homeotic (from a greek wordmeaning 鈥渟imilar鈥潱r hox genes。 hox genes answered the long…bewildering question of howbillions of embryonic cells; all arising from a single fertilized egg and carrying identicaldna; know where to go and what to do鈥攖hat this one should bee a liver cell; this one astretchy neuron; this one a bubble of blood; this one part of the shimmer on a beating wing。 itis the hox genes that instruct them; and they do it for all organisms in much the same way。

interestingly; the amount of genetic material and how it is organized doesn鈥檛 necessarily; oreven generally; reflect the level of sophistication of the creature that contains it。 we haveforty…six chromosomes; but some ferns have more than six hundred。 the lungfish; one of theleast evolved of all plex animals; has forty times as much dna as we have。 even themon newt is more genetically splendorous than we are; by a factor of five。

clearly it is not the number of genes you have; but what you do with them。 this is a verygood thing because the number of genes in humans has taken a big hit lately。 until recently itwas thought that humans had at least 100;000 genes; possibly a good many more; but thatnumber was drastically reduced by the first results of the human genome project; whichsuggested a figure more like 35;000 or 40;000 genes鈥攁bout the same number as are found ingrass。 that came as both a surprise and a disappointment。

it won鈥檛 have escaped your attention that genes have been monly implicated in anynumber of human frailties。 exultant scientists have at various times declared themselves tohave found the genes responsible for obesity; schizophrenia; homosexuality; criminality;violence; alcoholism; even shoplifting and homelessness。 perhaps the apogee (or nadir) of thisfaith in biodeterminism was a study published in the journal science in 1980 contending thatwomen are genetically inferior at mathematics。 in fact; we now know; almost nothing aboutyou is so acmodatingly simple。

this is clearly a pity in one important sense; for if you had individual genes that determinedheight or propensity to diabetes or to baldness or any other distinguishing trait; then it wouldbe easy鈥攑aratively easy anyway鈥攖o isolate and tinker with them。 unfortunately; thirty…five thousand genes functioning independently is not nearly enough to produce the kind ofphysical plexity that makes a satisfactory human being。 genes clearly therefore mustcooperate。 a few disorders鈥攈emophilia; parkinson鈥檚 disease; huntington鈥檚 disease; andcystic fibrosis; for example鈥攁re caused by lone dysfunctional genes; but as a rule disruptivegenes are weeded out by natural selection long before they can bee permanentlytroublesome to a species or population。 for the most part our fate and fort鈥攁nd even oureye color鈥攁re determined not by individual genes but by plexes of genes working inalliance。 that鈥檚 why it is so hard to work out how it all fits together and why we won鈥檛 beproducing designer babies anytime soon。

in fact; the more we have learned in recent years the more plicated matters have tendedto bee。 even thinking; it turns out; affects the ways genes work。 how fast a man鈥檚 beard grows; for instance; is partly a function of how much he thinks about sex (because thinkingabout sex produces a testosterone surge)。 in the early 1990s; scientists made an even moreprofound discovery when they found they could knock out supposedly vital genes fromembryonic mice; and the mice were not only often born healthy; but sometimes were actuallyfitter than their brothers and sisters who had not been tampered with。 when certain importantgenes were destroyed; it turned out; others were stepping in to fill the breach。 this wasexcellent news for us as organisms; but not so good for our understanding of how cells worksince it introduced an extra layer of plexity to something that we had barely begun tounderstand anyway。

it is largely because of these plicating factors that cracking the human genome becameseen almost at once as only a beginning。 the genome; as eric lander of mit has put it; is likea parts list for the human body: it tells us what we are made of; but says nothing about howwe work。 what鈥檚 needed now is the operating manual鈥攊nstructions for how to make it go。

we are not close to that point yet。

so now the quest is to crack the human proteome鈥攁 concept so novel that the termproteome didn鈥檛 even exist a decade ago。 the proteome is the library of information thatcreates proteins。 鈥渦nfortunately;鈥潯bserved scientific american in the spring of 2002; 鈥渢heproteome is much more plicated than the genome。鈥

that鈥檚 putting it mildly。 proteins; you will remember; are the workhorses of all livingsystems; as many as a hundred million of them may be busy in any cell at any moment。 that鈥檚a lot of activity to try to figure out。 worse; proteins鈥櫋ehavior and functions are based notsimply on their chemistry; as with gen
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