On Wednesday, May 29, 2019 at 12:10:03 AM UTC-4, John Harshman wrote:
> On 5/28/19 4:44 PM, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> > On Friday, May 24, 2019 at 9:50:03 AM UTC-4, John Harshman wrote:
> >> On 5/23/19 8:46 AM, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> >>> On Wednesday, May 22, 2019 at 9:40:03 AM UTC-4, John Harshman wrote:
> >>>> On 5/22/19 4:48 AM, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> >>>>> On Monday, May 20, 2019 at 11:40:03 AM UTC-4, John Harshman wrote:
> >>>>>> On 5/20/19 6:03 AM, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> >>>>>>> On Friday, May 17, 2019 at 11:35:03 PM UTC-4, John Harshman wrote:
> >>>>>>>> On 5/17/19 6:29 PM, Peter Nyikos wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> Mystery 3: Did meiosis predate the LCA of living eukaryotes?
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Yes, obviously, unless you want to propose that meiosis arose multiple
> >>>>>>>> times convergently.
This cocksure comment of yours is echoed twice by you below,
and yet the following comment by me still applies:
> > We still lack enough data to justify your "obviously" here, and
> > it looks like it may be that way for a good long time to come.
<snip for focus>
> > Picking up the part of your post which I haven't addressed yet:
> >
> >>>> Further, the way in which [the Jakobids] are odd has nothing to do with meiosis.
> >>>> So could you explain?
>
> > <snip for focus>.
> >
> >>> In partial answer to your question: you seem to think
> >>> that phylogenetic trees are the be-all and end-all of systematics.
> >>> But the tree does not give an adequate reason for rejecting various
> >>> states as primitive, because it is always a compromise between
> >>> a huge number of pieces of conflicting evidence.
> >>
> >> Not sure what you mean by that. Do you mean that the tree itself is
> >> uncertain and therefore not a basis for character inference,
> >
> > Not necessarily.
> >
> >> or do you mean that not even a certain tree is such a basis?
> >
> > Yes, but try to stay focused. The issue is whether a given
> > character is primitive or derived. In the case of the Jakobids,
> > the "peculiar" character is their retention of a bigger part of
> > the bacterial genome in their mitochondria than in other eukaryotes.
>
> Have we fundamentally changed the subject from meiosis then? If not,
> what does this have to do with that subject?
I think it is worth discussing both, because it appears that
the following two statements are increasingly tending towards
becoming the conventional wisdom:
A. The LCA of extant eukaryotes had mitochondria.
B. The LCA of extant eukaryotes had meiosis.
Close study of the various phylogenetic trees, especially of
differences between where the rootings (including alternative ones)
are hypothesized to be, might shed light on both questions
simultaneously.
It's getting late, so I am snipping a lot that I'll be discussing
later, some of it next week.
The placement of that one critter could be relevant to both A
and B. It seems to lack all sign of ever having had mitochondria,
and I've seen no suggestion that it undergoes meiosis.
> I think you don't quite understand what "rooting" means. It's separate
> from topology.
What is behind this bolt out of the blue? It doesn't
have any connection with anything I wrote anywhere, and the second sentence
is something I've known about since I learned the concept of rooting,
back in the 1990's in sci.bio.paleontology.
>
> > Under the circumstances, including the fact that these papers
> > are a mere year apart, and the fact that the latter cites the
> > former several times, we cannot be sure any rooting will stand
> > the test of time in the next decade.
>
> Agreed. The rooting is not completely clear. But it doesn't have to be
> in order to make my point.
Stop being obscure and spell out what this "point" is; and
I hope it isn't something we've already agreed on several times.
> >>>> And even so, it makes neiwther diplomonads nor jakobids the
> >>>> sister group of other eukaryotes.
> > [...]
> >>>
> >>>
https://cshperspectives.cshlp.org/content/6/5/a016147/F1.large.jpg
> >>>
> >>> And if you "look out that window," you will see, close to the edge,
> >>> one of the five dotted arrows that mark possible rootings of
> >>> the tree of Eukarya. On one branch off that split, there are just
> >>> three taxa: euglenids, diplonemids, and kinetoblastids.
> >>>
> >>> On the other branch, representing ALL other eukaryotes, the jakobids
> >>> are the second of two basal taxa: the jakobids are the
> >>> sister group of all the rest.
> >
> >
> > <snip for focus>
> >
> >
> > Here is that 2015 paper:
> >
> > "Sex is a ubiquitous, ancient, and inherent attribute of eukaryotic life," by three authors (2015):
> >>
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4517231/
> >>
> >> I direct your attention especially to Fig. 2.
> >
> > Yes, and with a minor detail it gives the same huge split that
> > I give above. And it has another possible rooting in which
> > the Euglenozoa split off from **ALL** other eukaryotes.
>
> The root in this case is not relevant, since regardless of the root
> position there is meiosis on both sides of the basal branching.
More cocksureness from you, without you giving a smidgin of
evidence for it here or below.
> > And in both cases, the whole issue of primitiveness of meiosis
> > revolves around one detail: does *Trypanosoma* *brucei* undergo
> > meiosis?
>
> No, it doesn't.
In the 2015 paper, it does.
> It's enough that meiosis is known on both sides of
> whatever you think is the basal split. Given the rooting you mention
> above, it's only necessary that there be meiosis in some euglenozoan,
> any euglenozoan.
Stop belaboring the obvious, and instead let us know whether
you know something that you don't seem to know.
> While it's true that Trypanosoma is the only
> euglenozoan mentioned in the text, you shouldn't assume that it's the
> only one known to do meiosis.
Are you categorically claiming above that there ARE some others known?
Or do you have some reason to think that what you write below
proves that Trypanosoma *does* have meiosis?
>
> > And now the plot starts to thicken. The 2015 paper says "meiosis and gametes were only detected very recently (10, 11)" in this species.
> >
> > 10. Peacock L, et al. Identification of the meiotic life cycle stage of *Trypanosoma* *brucei* in the tsetse fly. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2011;108(9):3671–3676. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
> > 11. Peacock L, Bailey M, Carrington M, Gibson W. Meiosis and haploid gametes
> > in the pathogen *Trypanosoma* *brucei*. Curr Biol. 2014;24(2):181–186. [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
> >
> > However, the first only speaks of "homologs of meiotic genes in the T. brucei genome" and "three functionally distinct, meiosis-specific proteins".
>
> No, that's not all it speaks of. It says they are expressed at a
> particular time, right before cellular fusion.
At which time cytoplasm is exchanged, according to the second article.
Where are the chromosomes in all this? Can you find any clue in
either paper?
> This is when we would
> expect meiosis to happen,
In humans, meiosis II is spurred by penetration. What other source
do you have for this expectation?
> but not other suggested functions of those genes.
Do you include the ones mentioned in the embargoed 2019 article
among the "others"? Why or why not?
>
> > The second also talks about such things, and contains photographs of various pairs and groups of trypanosomes "exchanging cytoplasmic material." > However,
> > there is no photographic evidence of meiosis, nor is there a single picture
> > that identifies any chromosome.
Your failure to address this comment suggests that you were
bluffing above; this is where one would expect you to either
produce proof of meiosis in Trypanosoma or to produce another
euglenozoan that has meiosis.
> > The plot really thickens with the following "embargoed"
> > [whatever that means] article, which seems to call the first Peacock
> > paper and much of the second into question:
>
> Embargoed articles are usually those you aren't allowed to see before
> official publication. In this case it seems to be one that's been
> published but that you have to pay for until a certain date, when it
> becomes free.
>
> > "‘Meiotic genes’ are constitutively expressed in an asexual amoeba and are
> > not necessarily involved in sexual reproduction," Sutherland K. Maciver,
> > Zisis Koutsogiannis, Alvaro de Obeso Fernández del Valle Biol Lett. 2019
> > Mar; 15(3): 20180871. Published online 2019 Mar 6.
> > doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2018.0871 PMCID: PMC6451372
> > Currently embargoed: Free in PMC on Mar 1, 2020; PubMed
>
> > I have been able to access the abstract using the doi reference, and it ends with:
> >
> > We contend that they are only involved in meiosis in other
> > organisms that indulge in sexual reproduction and that homologous
> > recombination is important in asexual protists as a guard against
> > the accumulation of mutations. We also suggest that asexual
> > reproduction is the ancestral state.
> >
> > IOW, Peacock et. al. may have run afoul of a favorite argument
> > against Behe by anti-ID zealots, by confusing factors exapted in
> > meiosis with the existence of meiosis itself.
>
> I don't think that's the case,
But your attempt to justify this skepticism is extremely underwhelming.
> since the figure has separate indications
> for meiosis and for meiotic genes.
If you are talking about that Fig 2 in that 2015 paper, I'm way
ahead of you. I saw euglenozoans credited with "sex known"
but the only evidence I saw for it in the text was in Trypanosoma.
That's why I said what I did about "revolves around one detail".
> But they don't go into enough detail
> on the actual sources of the data represented in the figure. It's
> possible that the figure is wrong. If it's wrong, one can't draw good
> inferences from it.
Huge backpedal from what looks now like a bluff, noted. Also from
your sending me specifically to fig. 2 in your earlier post,
as if it cleared up any doubts about meiosis being on both branches
of any divide.
> However, this asexual amoeba can't be an example of primitive asexuality
> unless you want to have meiosis evolving multiple times, which we agree
> is implausible.
This cocksure comment is an echo of the one at the top of this
post. No explanation provided, of course.
> This is not good evidence that homologous recombination
> is the primitive role of the genes.
Let's just wait till we see this article before you make
comments like this, shall we?
Peter Nyikos
Professor, Dept. of Mathematics -- standard disclaimer--
University of South Carolina
http://www.math.sc.edu/~nyikos
PS In this second half of your post, you've been devolving from
*Homo* *sapiens* *sapiens* into *Homo* *sapiens* *polemica*.
Does promoting fruitful discussion bore you?