Religion
Related: About this forumWhat role did viruses play in evolution?
I mean, evolution is real, despite the claims of some religionists. It turns out that at least part of human evolution may have occurred due to the inclusion of ancient retroviruses in our genome. It's complicated, but here's an article that simplifies it, somewhat, and provides food for further exploration, using Google to find more complex information:
Maybe the creator of humans was a virus? Wouldn't that be cool?
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-percent-virus-are-you/
The more scientists look for viruses, the clearer it becomes that they exist nearly everywhere a drop1 of surface seawater typically contains about 10 million of them. Viruses are found across the globe on land, in oceans, and in a variety of host organisms, from bacteria to plants and animals. And that includes humans, down to our genetic building blocks.
Since viruses cannot replicate on their own, they use the cells of the organisms they infect to make new copies of themselves. One type of virus, retroviruses, inserts a DNA copy of its RNA sequence into the host cells genome upon infection. If the virus inserts into a reproductive cell and that cell goes on to produce an offspring, the viral DNA gets passed on from parent to child as part of the genome.2 At this point, the virus is locked in and is passed on from generation to generation. These are called endogenous retroviruses, or ERVs, and this can happen in any type of organism that viruses infect, including humans.
So yes, that means your genome is part virus. More than 100,000 sequences in the human genome3 originated this way. Scientists have recognized the presence of viral DNA in the human genome for decades, but it wasnt until after the human genome was sequenced, or mapped, in 2003 that they could study just how much of our DNA comes from viruses. While the viral sequences in the human genome today originated from about 50 infection events in the distant past that were passed on as described above, the viral sequences were copied and reinserted hundreds, sometimes thousands, of times.
With advances in genome sequencing and computational tools to analyze genomic information, researchers are able to estimate that about 8 percent of the human genome is made of sequences that originated as invasive retroviruses. To put that number in perspective, genes4 make up about 1 percent to 1.5 percent of your genome.
Much more at the link, and infinitely more to be discovered on Google, if you want...
thbobby
(1,474 posts)I have read this and seen it on documentaries.
MineralMan
(147,636 posts)There are other ERV genes that are active in our system and have active metabolic and other functions. That's the most interesting part of all this. Perhaps it is ancient viral infections that separate us from other protohuman species and help to make us what we are. The placental thing goes back much, much further, of course, and may be the reason there are placental mammals at all.
Perhaps viral infections play a larger role in evolution than we suspected in the past. Wonderful! Now, damnit, I have yet another train of information to learn about. I'm already busy, but this is fascinating.
thbobby
(1,474 posts)about retroviruses. Vincent Racaniello hosts TWIV. It is about viruses and has quite a few on retroviruses. Check out http://www.microbe.tv/
MineralMan
(147,636 posts)I've been looking at journal articles. I have access to a lot of that, and it costs me plenty each year.
Major Nikon
(36,904 posts)We are all here thanks to GMO.
MineralMan
(147,636 posts)But, it's natural GMO. Who knows, maybe the flu, one year, will fix our moronic problems. It's certain that we need more intelligence thn we are demonstrating these days.