Princeton Team Challenges Darwin: Evolution Not Random?
A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution, which appears to offer evidence of a hidden mechanism guiding the way biological organisms respond to the forces of natural selection, provides a new perspective on evolution.
"The discovery answers an age-old question that has puzzled biologists since the time of Darwin: How can organisms be so exquisitely complex, if evolution is completely random, operating like a 'blind watchmaker'?" said Chakrabarti, an associate research scholar in the Department of Chemistry at Princeton. "Our new theory extends Darwin's model, demonstrating how organisms can subtly direct aspects of their own evolution to create order out of randomness."
The researchers -- Raj Chakrabarti, Herschel Rabitz, Stacey Springs
and George McLendon -- made the discovery while carrying out
experiments on proteins constituting the electron transport chain
(ETC), a biochemical network essential for metabolism. A mathematical
analysis of the experiments showed that the proteins themselves acted
to correct any imbalance imposed on them through artificial mutations
and restored the chain to working order.
The work also confirms
an idea first floated in an 1858 essay by Alfred Wallace, who along
with Charles Darwin co-discovered the theory of evolution. Wallace had
suspected that certain systems undergoing natural selection can adjust
their evolutionary course in a manner "exactly like that of the
centrifugal governor of the steam engine, which checks and corrects any
irregularities almost before they become evident." In Wallace's time,
the steam engine operating with a centrifugal governor was one of the
only examples of what is now referred to as feedback control. Examples
abound, however, in modern technology, including cruise control in
autos and thermostats in homes and offices.
The research,
published in a recent edition of Physical Review Letters, provides
corroborating data, Rabitz said, for Wallace's idea. "What we have
found is that certain kinds of biological structures exist that are
able to steer the process of evolution toward improved fitness," said
Rabitz, the Charles Phelps Smyth '16 Professor of Chemistry. "The data
just jumps off the page and implies we all have this wonderful piece of
machinery inside that's responding optimally to evolutionary pressure."
The
authors sought to identify the underlying cause for this
self-correcting behavior in the observed protein chains. Standard
evolutionary theory offered no clues. Applying the concepts of control
theory, a body of knowledge that deals with the behavior of dynamical
systems, the researchers concluded that this self-correcting behavior
could only be possible if, during the early stages of evolution, the
proteins had developed a self-regulating mechanism, analogous to a
car's cruise control or a home's thermostat, allowing them to fine-tune
and control their subsequent evolution. The scientists are working on
formulating a new general theory based on this finding they are calling
"evolutionary control."
The work is likely to provoke a
considerable amount of thinking, according to Charles Smith, a
historian of science at Western Kentucky University. "Systems thinking
in evolutionary studies perhaps began with Alfred Wallace's likening of
the action of natural selection to the governor on a steam engine --
that is, as a mechanism for removing the unfit and thereby keeping
populations 'up to snuff' as environmental actors," Smith said.
"Wallace never really came to grips with the positive feedback part of
the cycle, however, and it is instructive that through optimal control
theory Chakrabarti et al. can now suggest a coupling of causalities at
the molecular level that extends Wallace's systems-oriented approach to
this arena."
Evolution, the central theory of modern biology,
is regarded as a gradual change in the genetic makeup of a population
over time. It is a continuing process of change, forced by what Wallace
and Darwin, his more famous colleague, called "natural selection." In
this process, species evolve because of random mutations and selection
by environmental stresses. Unlike Darwin, Wallace conjectured that
species themselves may develop the capacity to respond optimally to
evolutionary stresses. Until this work, evidence for the conjecture was
lacking.
The experiments, conducted in Princeton's Frick
Laboratory, focused on a complex of proteins located in the
mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell. A chain of proteins, forming
a type of bucket brigade, ferries high-energy electrons across the
mitrochondrial membrane. This metabolic process creates ATP, the energy
currency of life.
Various researchers working over the past
decade, including some at Princeton like George McClendon, now at Duke
University, and Stacey Springs, now at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, fleshed out the workings of these proteins, finding that
they were often turned on to the "maximum" position, operating at full
tilt, or at the lowest possible energy level.
Chakrabarti and
Rabitz analyzed these observations of the proteins' behavior from a
mathematical standpoint, concluding that it would be statistically
impossible for this self-correcting behavior to be random, and
demonstrating that the observed result is precisely that predicted by
the equations of control theory. By operating only at extremes,
referred to in control theory as "bang-bang extremization," the
proteins were exhibiting behavior consistent with a system managing
itself optimally under evolution.
"In this paper, we present
what is ostensibly the first quantitative experimental evidence, since
Wallace's original proposal, that nature employs evolutionary control
strategies to maximize the fitness of biological networks," Chakrabarti
said. "Control theory offers a direct explanation for an otherwise
perplexing observation and indicates that evolution is operating
according to principles that every engineer knows."
The
scientists do not know how the cellular machinery guiding this process
may have originated, but they emphatically said it does not buttress
the case for intelligent design, a controversial notion that posits the
existence of a creator responsible for complexity in nature.
Chakrabarti
said that one of the aims of modern evolutionary theory is to identify
principles of self-organization that can accelerate the generation of
complex biological structures. "Such principles are fully consistent
with the principles of natural selection. Biological change is always
driven by random mutation and selection, but at certain pivotal
junctures in evolutionary history, such random processes can create
structures capable of steering subsequent evolution toward greater
sophistication and complexity."
The researchers are continuing their analysis, looking for parallel situations in other biological systems.
Posted by Casey Kazan. Adapted from
The researchers -- Raj Chakrabarti, Herschel Rabitz, Stacey Springs
and George McLendon -- made the discovery while carrying out
experiments on proteins constituting the electron transport chain
(ETC), a biochemical network essential for metabolism. A mathematical
analysis of the experiments showed that the proteins themselves acted
to correct any imbalance imposed on them through artificial mutations
and restored the chain to working order.
The work also confirms
an idea first floated in an 1858 essay by Alfred Wallace, who along
with Charles Darwin co-discovered the theory of evolution. Wallace had
suspected that certain systems undergoing natural selection can adjust
their evolutionary course in a manner "exactly like that of the
centrifugal governor of the steam engine, which checks and corrects any
irregularities almost before they become evident." In Wallace's time,
the steam engine operating with a centrifugal governor was one of the
only examples of what is now referred to as feedback control. Examples
abound, however, in modern technology, including cruise control in
autos and thermostats in homes and offices.
The research,
published in a recent edition of Physical Review Letters, provides
corroborating data, Rabitz said, for Wallace's idea. "What we have
found is that certain kinds of biological structures exist that are
able to steer the process of evolution toward improved fitness," said
Rabitz, the Charles Phelps Smyth '16 Professor of Chemistry. "The data
just jumps off the page and implies we all have this wonderful piece of
machinery inside that's responding optimally to evolutionary pressure."
The
authors sought to identify the underlying cause for this
self-correcting behavior in the observed protein chains. Standard
evolutionary theory offered no clues. Applying the concepts of control
theory, a body of knowledge that deals with the behavior of dynamical
systems, the researchers concluded that this self-correcting behavior
could only be possible if, during the early stages of evolution, the
proteins had developed a self-regulating mechanism, analogous to a
car's cruise control or a home's thermostat, allowing them to fine-tune
and control their subsequent evolution. The scientists are working on
formulating a new general theory based on this finding they are calling
"evolutionary control."
The work is likely to provoke a
considerable amount of thinking, according to Charles Smith, a
historian of science at Western Kentucky University. "Systems thinking
in evolutionary studies perhaps began with Alfred Wallace's likening of
the action of natural selection to the governor on a steam engine --
that is, as a mechanism for removing the unfit and thereby keeping
populations 'up to snuff' as environmental actors," Smith said.
"Wallace never really came to grips with the positive feedback part of
the cycle, however, and it is instructive that through optimal control
theory Chakrabarti et al. can now suggest a coupling of causalities at
the molecular level that extends Wallace's systems-oriented approach to
this arena."
Evolution, the central theory of modern biology,
is regarded as a gradual change in the genetic makeup of a population
over time. It is a continuing process of change, forced by what Wallace
and Darwin, his more famous colleague, called "natural selection." In
this process, species evolve because of random mutations and selection
by environmental stresses. Unlike Darwin, Wallace conjectured that
species themselves may develop the capacity to respond optimally to
evolutionary stresses. Until this work, evidence for the conjecture was
lacking.
The experiments, conducted in Princeton's Frick
Laboratory, focused on a complex of proteins located in the
mitochondria, the powerhouses of the cell. A chain of proteins, forming
a type of bucket brigade, ferries high-energy electrons across the
mitrochondrial membrane. This metabolic process creates ATP, the energy
currency of life.
Various researchers working over the past
decade, including some at Princeton like George McClendon, now at Duke
University, and Stacey Springs, now at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, fleshed out the workings of these proteins, finding that
they were often turned on to the "maximum" position, operating at full
tilt, or at the lowest possible energy level.
Chakrabarti and
Rabitz analyzed these observations of the proteins' behavior from a
mathematical standpoint, concluding that it would be statistically
impossible for this self-correcting behavior to be random, and
demonstrating that the observed result is precisely that predicted by
the equations of control theory. By operating only at extremes,
referred to in control theory as "bang-bang extremization," the
proteins were exhibiting behavior consistent with a system managing
itself optimally under evolution.
"In this paper, we present
what is ostensibly the first quantitative experimental evidence, since
Wallace's original proposal, that nature employs evolutionary control
strategies to maximize the fitness of biological networks," Chakrabarti
said. "Control theory offers a direct explanation for an otherwise
perplexing observation and indicates that evolution is operating
according to principles that every engineer knows."
The
scientists do not know how the cellular machinery guiding this process
may have originated, but they emphatically said it does not buttress
the case for intelligent design, a controversial notion that posits the
existence of a creator responsible for complexity in nature.
Chakrabarti
said that one of the aims of modern evolutionary theory is to identify
principles of self-organization that can accelerate the generation of
complex biological structures. "Such principles are fully consistent
with the principles of natural selection. Biological change is always
driven by random mutation and selection, but at certain pivotal
junctures in evolutionary history, such random processes can create
structures capable of steering subsequent evolution toward greater
sophistication and complexity."
The researchers are continuing their analysis, looking for parallel situations in other biological systems.
Posted by Casey Kazan. Adapted from "Evolution's New Wrinkle" [via Princeton University]
Link: http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S22/60/95O56/index.xml?section=topstories






Fascinating article, though you have a copy-paste problem...
The title is quite provocative, it would justify more explicit discussion of how this research relates to intelligent design.
If I were a believer I'd feel very comforted after reading this piece, since suddenly it seems Darwin CAN be challenged.
Posted by: gijs | November 14, 2008 at 01:29 AM
So why are so many malforms being born?
Posted by: pikestaff | November 14, 2008 at 05:07 AM
Isn't it obvious? When a star dies, a supernova goes off, killing all the species, but the gamma rays hit earth and our dna get's blended in with the new dna and we get accelerated growth because of it.
There's a lot of room for new theories, hard to test any of them. Good to hear that these guys found a way.
Posted by: Caleb | November 14, 2008 at 12:08 PM
Isn't it obvious? When a star dies, a supernova goes off, killing all the species, but the gamma rays hit earth and our dna get's blended in with the new dna and we get accelerated growth because of it.
There's a lot of room for new theories, hard to test any of them. Good to hear that these guys found a way.
Posted by: Caleb | November 14, 2008 at 12:08 PM
Isn't it obvious? When a star dies, a supernova goes off, killing all the species, but the gamma rays hit earth and our dna get's blended in with the new dna and we get accelerated growth because of it.
There's a lot of room for new theories, hard to test any of them. Good to hear that these guys found a way.
Posted by: Caleb | November 14, 2008 at 12:08 PM
Good article. Perhaps the Smithsonian and Baylor University et al. administrations will read it and reconsider some of their recent terminations of good scientists for nothing more than doing good science.
Posted by: citizenz | December 30, 2008 at 04:42 AM
I do not believe in evolution by random either.
Please see my concepts in www.cicatrices.com.mx
Posted by: Felix Rocha | January 03, 2009 at 07:33 PM
Darwin and Wallace didn't co-discover evolution! Evolution was already an established idea!
Posted by: JustinP | January 08, 2009 at 05:24 AM