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Inheritance of T3SS pilusModerator: BioTeam
2 posts • Page 1 of 1
Inheritance of T3SS pilusI am not a professional biologist (background in anthropology) but have developed a serious interest in evolutionary biology. I explore topics often as they come up, and debating online have gained enough information to make reasonably competent arguments for evolution from biological evidence. (ERV's are my favorite)
However, I came across an ID proponent who questioned the speculative path of the evolution of the bacterial flagellum, and presented an idea that I could not immediately recognize as valid or not. A brief search of information did not present an immediate answer and I feel that I am missing some pertinent information. I believe the question would be concerning the inheritance of the T3SS pilus. Any help explaining whether this point is valid or faulty would be appreciated. His argument goes as follows:
-SFS "I never said it. Honest. ... I said "billion" many times on the Cosmostelevision series...But I never said "billions and billions". For one thing, it's too imprecise." - Carl Sagan
The issue here is the usefulness of all this "stickiness" - would a mutationally-modified protein that preferentially stuck be advantageous over the ancestral protein that might or might not? Would a mutation in an internal carrier or a variation in expression time help the process?
Since mutational changes in this system are easily heritable, it isn't much of a leap. And right now, the ancestral proteins for a huge part of the bacterial flagellum are well-established. I understand that this is part of the religious weakness of Intelligent Design - if the "proof" of the Designer is in the "gaps" between useful intermediates and final form, as more and more intermediates are discovered, the role of the Designer is more and more diminished. Conceivably to nothing, which is problematical to belief.
2 posts • Page 1 of 1
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