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Mutation
Evolution
Or Degeneration
Are
mutations responsible for evolution from amoeba to man? Evolutionists
have ascribed wondrous powers to mutations, the ability to create new
body parts and new animals (amoeba to man evolution). In reality,
mutations are extremely dangerous and are wreaking havoc on the human
race and other living creatures.
It is
held by evolutionists that genetic mutations are an avenue of positive
change in living organisms. For example, Richard Dawkins' book, The
Blind Watchmaker, seeks to establish a godless cosmos of chance in
which the appearance of design in life has occurred by accident, by the
incremental accumulation of positive changes in genes. His evidence
relating to biochemical genetics, however, consists of theoretical
models of little relevance to the real world.
Thus,
the question remains: What do we actually see in the world around us
when we use scientific tools of measurement and observation? Do we see
this "blind watchmaker" at work in any real-life examples, or do we see
the opposite?
The
purpose of this article is to demonstrate the poverty of evolutionary
theory to explain the facts in one well-researched area of
biology--that is, the area of human genetics. It will show how the
facts unearthed by this research show mutations to be, not a "blind
watchmaker," but more truthfully analogous to a "blind gunman."
Literally
thousands of human diseases associated with genetic mutations have been
catalogued in recent years, with more being described continually. A
recent reference book of medical genetics listed some 4,500 different
genetic diseases. Some of the inherited syndromes characterized
clinically in the days before molecular genetic analysis (such as
Marfan's syndrome) are now being shown to be heterogeneous; that is,
associated with many different mutations. This review will only scratch
the surface of the many recent discoveries. Still, the examples cited
will illustrate a compelling general principle which extends throughout
this expanding field.
Mutations
are defined as random changes in cellular DNA. They change the genetic
code for amino acid sequence in proteins, thus introducing biochemical
errors of varying degrees of severity. Mutations have been classified
as deletions (loss of DNA bases), insertions (gain of DNA bases), and
missense or nonsense (substitution of a DNA base).
If
the mutations affect germ cells (female ova and male spermatozoa), they
will be passed to all the cells of the offspring, and affect future
generations. Such mutations are called "germline mutations," and are
the cause of inherited diseases.
Mutations
also occur in other populations of body cells and will accumulate
throughout a lifetime without being passed to the offspring. These are
called "somatic mutations," and are important in the genesis of cancers
and other degenerative disease processes.
To survey the mutation
problem, it will be helpful to consider a few examples of how mutations
work their biochemical havoc.
In
the cardiovascular system, it has long been recognized that a high
circulating cholesterol content in the blood is associated with
degeneration and narrowing of large and medium-sized arteries. this
process is called "atherosclerosis" and is a leading cause of heart
disease. More recently, a genetic biochemical defect causing hereditary
high blood levels of cholesterol has been discovered and is know as
"familial hypercholesterolemia" (FH).
This
disorder has been traced to mutation of a gene coding a transmembrane
receptor protein. The gene is on chromosome 19 and has about 45,000
base pairs with 18 exons. Its encoded receptor protein is anchored in
the membranes of all body cells, and allows them to capture and take in
"packages" of fats and cholesterol (called "low-density" lipoproteins,"
or LDL) that are manufactured in the liver. The receptor protein has
772 amino acids which form five functional domains.
At
least 350 different disease-producing mutations of the cholesterol
receptor have been described. These may be classified according to the
affected functional domain.
In
the first class of mutation, little or no receptor is synthesized at
all. In the second, receptor protein is synthesized, but does not take
its proper place in the cell membrane. Third, receptor protein is
present in the membrane, but does not link with the LDL packages.
Fourth, the receptor protein is unable to stay in the membrane. Fifth,
receptor protein is present in the membrane and links with the LDL
packages, but does not bring them into the cell. None of these are
beneficial.
All
body cells need cholesterol for their membranes, so a certain amount is
necessary and good. However, defects of this receptor protein result in
high blood levels of cholesterol through a feedback loop. When the
receptor protein is not working, the cells keep on sending the signals
for more cholesterol packages, and the liver complies. In homozygotes,
cholesterol levels are three to five times the proper level, while
heterozygotes have about twice the proper level. This results in rapid
atherosclerosis, sometimes resulting in fatal heart disease in
childhood.
![]() A
second example is a common genetic disease, cystic fibrosis (CF). This
multisystem disease cripples children and leads to early death. It
damages the lungs, digestive organs and, in the male, the vas deferens
(spermatic duct). Its differing effects, from mild to severe, are in
part due to different types of mutation affecting one key gene.
This
biochemical basis is the mutation of a gene coding for a transmembrane
protein regulating chloride ion transport across the cell membrane.
This gene has 250,000 base pairs and is called the CFTR gene. It codes
for a transmembrane protein of 1,480 amino acids. Research on this gene
showed a mutation, delta-F508, occurring in most clinical cases of CF.
This mutation is a deletion of three nucleotides resulting in loss of
phenylalanine residue at position 508 on the peptide chain.
Normal DNA . . . T ATC ATC TTT GGT GTT
Cystic Fibrosis
DNA . . . T ATC AT- --T GGT GTT
In
addition to this fairly common mutation, over 200 other mutations of
this gene have been described. Just a few of these are associated with
the more severe forms of the disease, which lead to early death from
lung infections. Other mutations or combinations of mutations lead to
lesser disease states, like chronic pancreatitis or male infertility,
but again, no beneficial results have been observed.
Carcinogens
(agents causing cancer) also tend to be powerful mutagens (agents
producing mutations). The discovery of "oncogenes" and "tumor
suppressor genes" has shown how this relationship works. Basically,
these genes are concerned with regulation of the cell cycle. The
oncogenes drive the process of cell replication forward, while the
tumor suppressor genes hold it back. Both are necessary for proper cell
function and growth. But mutational damage to components of both
systems may produce an uncontrolled growth of cells, which is cancer.
This
phenomenon may be compared to a car in which there is damage to the gas
pedal, causing it be be stuck "on," while the brakes are damaged at the
same time. These mutations are usually acquired over decades, so cancer
is mainly a disease of old age. However, studies have shown that
inherited germline mutations of key oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes
can predispose persons to development of cancers in childhood.
Examples
of this include childhood cancers like retinoblastoma, as well as
familial cases of more common cancers (e.g., breast or colon) that have
been linked to specific mutant genes (e.g., the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes
for familial breast cancer, and the APC gene for familial colonic
polyps and cancers).
Do mutations have any
positive results?
With
this array of human diseases that are caused by mutations, what of
positive effects? With thousands of examples of harmful mutations
readily available, surely it should be possible to describe some
positive mutations if macroevolution is true.
These
would be needed not only for evolution to greater complexity, but also
to offset the downward pull of the many harmful mutations. But, when it
comes to identifying positive mutations, evolutionary scientists are
strangely silent.
The
mutation responsible for sickle cell anemia has been put forward as an
example of Evolution. The problems with this are obvious, as the sickle
cell mutation, like the many other described hemoglobin mutations,
clearly impairs the function of the otherwise marvelously well-designed
hemoglobin molecule. It can in no way be regarded as an improvement in
our species, even though its preservation is enhanced in
malaria-endemic parts of central Africa by natural selection.
Even
more strangely, the process of cancerous cellular degeneration has been
vied as a Darwinian form of mutation! Again, this idea fails to hold up
under scrutiny. Malignant cells can hardly be considered to be an
improvement over their normal counterparts. They are "fitter" only in
their replicative activity, but even this is just an exaggerated use of
already existing cellular machinery. In many other important ways, they
have degenerative features. They show no gain of information, but
generally a loss or disorder of functions.
In
all this research, not one mutation that increased the efficiency of a
genetically coded human protein has been found.
What
conclusions may be drawn from these few examples, and countless others
like them? First, that the human mutation problem is bad and getting
worse. Second, that it is unbalanced by any detectable positive
mutations.
To
summarize, recent research has revealed literally tens of thousands of
different mutations affecting the human genome, with a likelihood of
many more yet to be characterized. These have been associated with
thousands of diseases affecting every organ and tissue type in the
body. The medical descriptions of many forms of inherited disease have
a common theme: 80-90% of cases have affected individuals in the family
tree, but the remaining cases are sporadic--the result of ever
increasing numbers of new mutations. In all this research, not one
mutation that increased the efficiency of a genetically coded human
protein has been found.
Mutations
behave like a "blind gunman," a destroyer who shoots his deadly
"bullets" randomly into beautifully designed models of living molecular
machinery.
Instead
of a "blind watchmaker," the mutations behave like a "blind gunman," a
destroyer who shoots deadly "bullets" randomly into beautifully
designed models of living molecular machinery. Sometimes they kill.
Thus, the "blind watchmaker" is an illusion. Worse than that, it is the
intellectual and moral equivalent of an idol--an invention of the
imagination, to which superhuman powers are falsely ascribed.
This
research affirms the reality of the past Vedic curse of decay and
degeneration on the world of nature, as stated in the Puranas
It
also highlights the grim reality of the future hopelessness of the
human race without the saving intervention of chanting of the Hare
Krishna mantra. Mutations continue to slowly harm us. Each generation
has a slightly more disordered genetic constitution than the preceding
one, and no amount of eugenics can reverse this process of decay. Gene
therapy may mask the effects, but it will not reverse the underlying
degenerative process.
Mutations
will eventually turn the human genetic code to gibberish.
A
slight but definite ongoing mutation rate, accompanied by a zero rate
of positive genetic change, will eventually turn the human genetic code
to gibberish. The problem is like a large book, written with perfect
grammar in the beginning, but with random letter substitutions
introduced at an ongoing rate. The book will still be readable for some
time, but it will eventually lose all sense. Just as the universe is
projected to reach a state of maximum entropy, so also the human race
is condemned to a degenerative death, not just as individuals, but as a
whole.
References
1.
Richard Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution
Reveals a Universe Without Design (W.W. Norton and Co., 1987).
2. Lubert Stryer, Biochemistry, 3rd
edition (W.H. Freeman and Co., 1998).
3. C. Koch and N. Hoiby, "The
Pathogenesis of Cystic Fibrosis," The Lancet, Volume 341 (1993).
4.
Friedman Cohn, et al., "Idiopathic Chronic Pancreatitis and Mutations
of the Cystic Fibrosis Gene," The New England Journal of Medicine,
Volume 339 (1998).
5. Robert Weinberg, "Oncogenes and
Tumor Suppressor Genes," CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, Volume
44, Number 3 (1994).
6. Felix Mitelman, "Chromosomes,
Genes, and Cancer," CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, Volume 44, No.
3 (1994).
7. J. Defasche and J. Kastelein,
"Molecular Epidemiology of Familial Hypercholesterolemia," The Lancet,
Volume 352 (1998).
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![]() SUBTITLES The Human Mutation Problem Conclusions |