Everything about The Gene-centered View Of Evolution totally explained
The
gene-centered view of evolution,
gene selection theory or
selfish gene theory holds that
natural selection acts through differential survival of competing
genes, increasing the frequency of those
alleles whose
phenotypic effects successfully promote their own propagation. According to this theory,
adaptations are the phenotypic effects through which genes achieve their propagation.
Evolution by natural selection
The predominant modern scientific explanation for the adaptation of living beings was initially tailored by
Charles Darwin and
Alfred Russel Wallace, who proposed the
theory of
evolution by
natural selection (Darwin & Wallace, 1858) as opposed to the Lamarckian idea of evolution via acquired changes. According to this theory, a
population of
reproductive individuals is subject to natural selection if the following are present: (1)
variation in the reproductive performance of individuals within the population; (2)
heredity, meaning "like begets like"; and (3)
competition for the resources required for reproduction, be it fertile mates or food. So, those characteristics that augment reproductive performance tend to be represented at a greater proportion than their competing alternative.
Improved theory of heredity
The
theory of
evolution by
natural selection was initially based on a vague concept of
heredity. Darwin endorsed the
blending inheritance hypothesis due to the absence, at that time, of a rigorous theory of heredity. Subsequently, significant discoveries about both the mechanisms of
inheritance and those of
development have revolutionised this area of biology.
Discoveries in heredity
Gregor Mendel
In the mid-19th century, the
Czech Augustinian monk
Gregor Mendel proposed the particulate inheritance theory, which states that genes are preserved during development and are passed on unchanged (Fisher, 1930). According to this theory, genes can and usually do mix their phenotypic effects in an
organism, but themselves are not mixed and are transmitted in an "all-or-nothing" mode to the next generation.
August Weismann
The biologist
August Weismann proposed the continuity of the germ plasm, where phenotypic changes environmentally caused in the
soma are not converted into changes in the
genotype (Weismann, 1893). The classic illustration of this principle is that even if you cut off the tails of thousands of
generations of rats, that'll always produce tailed
offspring. Similarly
puppies of breeds of
dogs which consistently over generations have had their
tails or ears docked are born with tails and ears.
Francis Crick
This principle was reflected at molecular level by
Francis Crick when he formulated the
central dogma of molecular biology in 1958: information flows only from
nucleic acid to nucleic acid or protein, and never from
protein to nucleic acid or protein.
Acquired characteristics are not inherited
These discoveries made it clear that the
inheritance of acquired characters wasn't an evolutionary factor and identified genes as lasting entities that survive through many generations. Maynard Smith summarized the issue:
mathematical evolutionary
biology developed by
Ronald Fisher (particularly in his 1930 book,
The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection),
J. B. S. Haldane and
Sewall Wright, they paved the way to the formulation of the
selfish gene theory. For cases when environment can influence heredity see:-
Epigenetics.
Gene as the unit of selection
The view of the gene as the
unit of selection was developed mainly in the books
Adaptation and Natural Selection (1966), by
George C. Williams, and in
The Selfish Gene (1976) and
The Extended Phenotype (1982), both by
Richard Dawkins. It had earlier been proposed by
Colin Pittendrigh in his 1958 article,
Adaptation, natural selection, and behavior, and in the classic papers about altruism of 1963 and 1964 by
William Hamilton.
According to Williams' 1966 book:
phenotypes can't in itself produce cumulative change, because phenotypes are extremely temporary manifestations." (Williams, 1966) Each phenotype is the unique product of the interaction between genome and environment. It doesn't matter how fit and fertile a phenotype is, it'll eventually be destroyed and will never be duplicated.
Since 1954, it has been known that
DNA is the main physical substrate to genetic information, and it's capable of high fidelity
replication through many generations. So, a particular sequence of DNA can have a high permanence and a low rate of endogenous change. The question that remains is how long the segment must be.
In normal sexual reproduction, an entire
genome is the unique combination of father's and mother's chromosomes produced at the moment of fertilization. It is generally destroyed with its organism, because "
meiosis and
recombination destroy genotypes as surely as death." (Williams, 1966) Only half of it's transmitted to each descendant due to the
independent segregation, and only fragments of it are transmitted because of
recombination.
If the gene is defined as "that which segregates and recombines with appreciable frequency", it'll generally fulfill the requisite of high degree of permanence and a low rate of endogenous change. The gene as an informational entity persists for an evolutionary significant span of time through a lineage of many physical copies.
In his book
River out of Eden, Dawkins coins the phrase
God's utility function to further expound his view on genes as units of selection. He uses this phrase as a synonym of the "
meaning of life" or the "purpose of life". By rephrasing the word
purpose in terms of what
economists call a
utility function, meaning "that which is maximized", Dawkins
reverse-engineers the purpose in the mind of the Divine Engineer of Nature, or the
Utility Function of God. In the end, Dawkins shows that it's a mistake to assume that an
ecosystem or a
species as a whole exists for a purpose. In fact, it's wrong to suppose that individual organisms lead a meaningful life either. In nature, only genes have a utility function – to perpetuate their own existence with indifference to great sufferings inflicted upon the organisms they build, exploit and discard.
Genic selection
The selfish gene theory of natural selection can be restated as follows:
adaptations are the phenotypic effects of genes to maximize their representation in the future generations. An adaptation is maintained by selection if it promotes genetic survival directly or some subordinate goal that ultimately contributes to successful reproduction.
Vehicles
As stated above, genes are not naked in the world. They are usually packed together inside a genome, which is itself contained inside an organism. Genes group together into genomes because "genetic replication makes use of energy and substrates that are supplied by the metabolic economy in much greater quantities than would be possible without a genetic division of labour" (Haig, 1997). They build vehicles to promote their mutual interests of jumping into the next generation of vehicles. As Dawkins put it, organisms are the "
survival machines" of genes.
The phenotypic effect of a particular gene is contingent on its environment, including the fellow genes constituting with it the total genome. A gene never has a fixed effect, so how is it possible to speak of a gene for long legs? It is because of the phenotypic
differences between alleles. One may say that one allele, all other things being equal or varying within certain limits, causes greater legs than its alternative. This difference may be enough to enable the scrutiny of natural selection.
"A gene can have multiple phenotypic effects, each of which may be of positive, negative or neutral value. It is the net selective value of a gene's phenotypic effect that determines the fate of the gene" (Cronin, 1991). For instance, a gene can cause its bearer to have greater reproductive success at a young age, but also cause a greater likelihood of death at a later age. If the benefit outweighs the harm, averaged out over the individuals and environments in which the gene happens to occur, then phenotypes containing the gene will generally be positively selected and thus the abundance of that gene in the population will increase.
Detecting selection of genotypes
Individual altruism, genetic egoism
The gene is a unit of hereditary information that exists in many physical copies in the world, and which particular physical copy will be replicated and originate new copies doesn't matter from the gene's point of view. (Williams, 1992) A selfish gene could be favoured by selection by producing altruism among organisms containing it. The idea is summarized as follows:
somatic cell of an individual may forego replication to promote the transmission of its copies in the germ line cells. It ensures the high value of
p = 1 due to their constant contact and their common origin from the
zygote.
The
kin selection theory predicts that a gene may promote the recognition of kinship by historical continuity: a mammalian mother learns to identify her own offspring in the act of giving birth; a male preferentially directs resources to the offspring of mothers with whom he's copulated; the other chicks in a nest are siblings; and so on. The expected altruism between kin is calibrated by the value of
p, also known as the
coefficient of relatedness. For instance, an individual have a
p = 1/2 in relation to his brother, and
p = 1/8 to his cousin, so we'd expect,
ceteris paribus, greater altruism among brothers than among cousins.
Green-beard effects gained their name from a thought-experiment of
Richard Dawkins (1976), who considered the possibility of a gene that caused its possessors to develop a green beard and to be nice to other green-bearded individuals. Since then, a 'green beard effect' has come to refer to forms of genetic self-recognition in which a gene in one individual might direct benefits to other individuals that possess the gene.
Intragenomic conflict
As genes are capable of producing individual altruism, they're capable of producing conflict among genes inside the genome of one individual. This phenomenon was called
intragenomic conflict and arises when one gene promotes its own replication in detriment to other genes in the genome. The classic example is segregation distorter genes that cheats during
meiosis or
gametogenesis and ends up in more than half of the functional
gametes. These genes persist even resulting in reduced
fertility. Egbert Leigh (1971) compared the genome to "a parliament of genes: each acts in its own self-interest, but if its acts hurt the others, that'll combine together to suppress it" to explain the relative low occurrence of intragenomic conflict.
Challenges to the "Selfish Gene"
Those prominent among the opponents of this gene-centric view of evolution include
paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould (September 10, 1941 – May 20, 2002), biologist and anthropologist
David Sloan Wilson and
philosopher Elliot Sober, who have disputed the theory's applicability and fruitfulness. Gould has characterized this perspective as confusing book-keeping with
causality. Gould views selection working on many levels, and has called attention for a hierarchical perspective of selection. Gould has also called the position "strict
adaptationism," "ultra-Darwinism," and "
Darwinian fundamentalism," describing it as "
reductionist." He saw it as leading to a simplistic "algorithmic" theory of evolution, or even to the re-introduction of a
teleological principle.
(External Link
)
Such challenges may be
phenomenological in character, derived, in part, from
common-sense analysis of the "experience" of evolution.
Summary
The
selfish gene theory is a synthesis of the theory of
evolution by
natural selection, the
particulate inheritance theory and the
non-transmission of acquired characters. It states that those genes whose phenotypic effects successfully promote their own propagation will be favourably selected in detriment to their competitors. This process produces adaptations to the benefit of
genes, which promotes the reproductive success of the
organism, or of others organisms containing the same gene (kin altruism and green-beard effects), or even only its own propagation in detriment to the other genes of the genome (intragenomic conflict).
Other main figures
Besides
Richard Dawkins and
George C. Williams, other
biologists and
philosophers have expanded and refined the selfish gene theory, such as
John Maynard Smith,
Robert Trivers,
David Haig,
Helena Cronin,
David Hull,
Philip Kitcher and
Daniel C. Dennett.
Bibliography
- Crick, F. (1970) Central dogma of molecular biology
Nature 227 (August 8): 561-563.
- Cronin, H. (1991) The Ant and the Peacock. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ISBN 0-521-32937-X
- Darwin, C. & Wallace, A. (1858) On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection.
Proceedings of Linnean Society 3 (July): 45-62.
- Dawkins, R. (1976) The Selfish Gene. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-286092-5
- Dawkins, R. (1982) The Extended Phenotype. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-288051-9
- Dawkins, R. (1982) "Replicators and Vehicles"
King's College Sociobiology Group, eds., Current Problems in Sociobiology, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, pp. 45-64.
- Fisher, R. A. (1930) The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-850440-3.
- Haig, D. (1997) The Social Gene. In J. R. Krebs and N. B. Davies, eds., Behavioural Ecology, Oxford: Blackwell Scientific, pp. 284-304.
- Hamilton, W. D. (1963) The evolution of altruistic behavior. The American Naturalist 97 (896): 354-356.
- Hamilton, W. D. (1964) The genetical evolution of social behaviour. Journal of Theoretical Biology 7: 1-52.
- Leigh, E. (1971) Adaptation and Diversity. Cooper, San Francisco.
- Maynard Smith, J. (1998) Evolutionary Genetics: 2nd Edition. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
- Mayr, E. (1997) The objects of selection
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94 (March): 2091-2094.
- Pittendrigh, C. (1958) Adaptation, natural selection, and behavior. In A. Roe and G. G. Simpson, eds., Behavior and Evolution, New Haven: Yale University Press, pp 390-416.
- Williams, G. C. (1966) Adaptation and Natural Selection. Princeton University Press, Princeton. ISBN 0-691-02615-7
- Williams, G. C. (1985) A defense of reductionism in evolutionary biology. Oxford Surveys in Evolutionary Biology, 2: 1-27.
- Williams, G. C. (1992) Natural Selection: Domains, Levels and Challenges. Oxford University Press, Oxford. ISBN 0-19-506932-3
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