The Stuff of Genes
Fifty years after the discovery of DNA's structure, the payoff hasn't matched the hype. But really, we've only just begun
- By Horace Freeland Judson
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Now, however, molecular biology is beginning to tell us things that reach beyond the practical, beyond the political, to touch and reshape our understanding of who we are and how we came to be. Since the dawn of human time, every culture has searched for stories of origins—of the universe, of the solar system, of life, of species, of humans, of language, of civilization. With gathering momentum for more than a century, science is telling better, more comprehensive, more grounded, more verifiable stories of origins.
Molecular biology has one of the greatest origin stories as yet untold—and it is now unfolding through the coming together, the fusing, of the two separate kinds of questions that have been fundamental in the century and a half since Mendel and Darwin. Biologists have always pursued questions of how, and these are about physiology—how creatures reproduce, eat, run around. Increasingly since the discovery of the structure of DNA, these questions have been approached in terms of the functioning of genes. Biologists have also been occupied with questions of why. These are about the ways we, and all other creatures, have come to have the traits and behaviors we do. "Why" questions in biology are about adaptation or extinction, the changes in species in the struggle for existence across the immense depths of geological time: in other words, they are about evolution.
Recall that not just the human genome has been sequenced, but bacteria and roundworm and fruit fly and mouse and soon chimpanzee and more, genomes over the entire range of living creatures. Now we can match these genomes up, in a new science, comparative genomics, which is just beginning to yield in full detail the fusion of genetics and evolution—of how and why. One quick example: molecular biologists in England and Germany recently discovered a DNA sequence or gene that appears essential to the human ability to use language. The sequence controls the action of a cascade of genes, affecting several functions. (Nobody said this was going to be simple.) Some members of a large family are afflicted with a single mutation in this DNA sequence that severely limits their ability to use words, to learn and employ normal syntax. Chimpanzees have that gene sequence, too—but it is slightly different from that in humans. In such discoveries lie what my friends the biologists ought to be advertising. Here are the transcendent answers we will thrill to. Darwin said it, in the poignant last paragraph of The Origin of Species: "There is grandeur in this view of life." Here is the triumph of the scientific worldview.
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