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Erin Hamson

MIT OpenCourseWare | Biology | 7.012 Introduction to Biology, Fall 2004 | Video Lecture... - 0 views

  • And what this means is that if you look at a pedigree like this, and for example, here we have a mother and a father, girls are always round, boys are square. And here you'll see the mitochondrial DNA, it's donated to all of the children, but the fact is that these boys, when they mate, when they have offspring, they will no longer pass along her mitochondrial DNA, so it will be lost. And the only way the mitochondrial DNA can be transmitted is through one of her daughters, who in turn, have daughters.
  • Here's some other interesting principles. Mitochondrial DNA passes always from the mother, so when a fertilized egg is formed, Dad gives his chromosomes, but he doesn't donate for any, doesn't donate any mitochondrial DNA.
  • animals are related to one another. This is kind of a fun undertaking. Look at this. Why is it fun? Well it's, it's kind of an amusing idea, how often were cows domesticated during the history of humanity? How often were sheep domesticated? Pigs, water buffalos, and horses. And what you see here is that cattle were domesticated on two occasions, probably once in Western Asia, the middle east, and once in Eastern Asia. Sheep were domesticated twice, all modern sheep following these two families here
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  • And that is, certain genes can evolve progressively over a long period of time, because they don't encode vital functions, or they may even be sequences between genes that don't encode phenotype at all. Imagine, for example, we have a situation were here we have a gene which encodes a vital function, like the eye, here's another gene that encodes another function, oh I don't know, a leg. And here we have intergenic sequences. After all, as you have learned by now, more than 96% of the DNA in our genome, doesn't encode proteins, and probably isn't even responsible for regulating genes. So these sequences, right in here, can mutate freely during the course of evolution, without having a deleterious effect on the phenotype of the organism. There's no evolutionary pressure to constrain the evolution of these genes
  • And many of these neutral mutations, which have no effect on organismic fitness, but are simply evolutionary neutral, are sometimes called polymorphisms. The term polymorphism, -morph is once again morphology, derives from the fact that species tend to be polymorphic, we don't all have blond hair, we don't all have brown eyes.
  • If you look at two chimpanzees living on opposite sides of the same hill in West Africa, they are genetically far more distantly related to one another, than any one of us, by a factor of 10 to 15. Two chimpanzees, they look exactly the same, they have the same peculiar habits, but they're genetically far more distantly-related than we are to one-another, than I am to any one of you, or than any one of you is to one another. And what does that mean? It means that, roughly speaking, the species of chimpanzees is, at least, 10 or 15 times older than our species are. We're a young species, chimpanzees probably first speciated three or four million years ago, if the paleontological record is, is accurate. Paleontology is the study of old, dusty bones, so you can begin to imagine when chimpanzee bones become recognizable in the earth.
  • And what you see already, in such small populations, is that for example, this male here has two girls, and right away, to the extent he had an interesting Y chromosome, that Y chromosome was lost from the gene pool. This girl, here, had an interesting mitochondrial DNA, but right away that's lost, because she has, she has just two boys. And what you see, in very rapid order, in small populations, there's a homogenization of the genetic compliment, just because the alleles are lost within what's called, genetic drif
  • And if you ask that question, the answer is that we all had a common ancestress who lived about 150,000 years ago. All of us trace our mitochondrial DNA to her. Does that mean that there was only one woman alive there, she's called, Mitochondrial-Eve, again, we don't know her name. Does that mean there was only one woman alive, well it doesn't mean that at all because of what I just told you, in small populations the proto-human population.
  • How much are all of our mitochondrial DNA are related to one another, how distantly related are they to one another, given the rate of evolution of mitochondrial DNA sequences?
  • So where do we all come from, all of us human beings? How closely related are we to one another? Here's, here's a measurement of the distances between different mitochondrial DNA's from different branches of humanity. And what you see is something really quite extraordinary and stunning. Here, you'll see that the people, the non-African lineages here and here, are actually relatively closely related to one another.
  • And by the way, all the genes that are present here, the alleles that are present here, can also be found in Africa, but in relatively small proportions in Africa
    • Erin Hamson
       
      Suggesting that all people came from Africa
  • So, what happens there, that's a testimonial to the tragic fate of the Indians, where the conquistadors from Spain came in, killed all the men, and took all the women, to be their brides. How else can you explain the fact that there's no Indian Y chromosomes, there's all, there is instead only European Y chromosomes.
  • When you do genetic counseling of family these days, one of the strictures is, that you never tell the family if the children have genetic polymorphisms that don't match that of the person whom they think is their father. They don't look like their, the person whom they regard as father, but that's always assumed to be a role of the genetic dice.
  • Here's a fun story I like to tell each year, and it's about the Cohen and Y chromosome, and you'll see what an amusing story this is, just from genetics. Now the name Cohen, in Hebrew means, a high priest, and you've heard people named Cohen, it's not such an uncommon name among the Jews. And it says, in the Bible, in Genesis and Exodus, that all the high priests in the Bible are the descendants of Aaron, the brother of Moses.
  • hen it should be the case that all male Cohen's should have the same Y chromosome, right?
  • Because keep in mind, any single affair with the milkman or the mailman, over 3,000 years, would've broke this chain of inheritance, any single incidence of non-paternity. It's a really astounding story, and it's hard, there can be no artifact to it, there's no bias in it, there's no other way to explain it.
  • And what they found was that all members of the, almost all members of the ruling cast among the Lembas, had the same Y chromosome, and the Y chromosome had exactly the same polymorphisms of the Cohen Y chromosome
  • What I'm telling you is that these two genes are totally interchangeable, that they are effectively indistinguishable from one another, functionally they have some sequence relatedness, but in terms of the way they program development, they are effectively equivalent. And what this means is that the progenitor of these two genes must've already existed at the time that the flies and we diverged, which six or seven-hundred million years ago, and in the intervening six or seven-hundred million years, these genes have been totally unchanged.
  • once the gene was developed, evolution could not tinker with it, and begin to change it in different ways, ostensibly because such tinkering would render these genes dysfunctional, and thereby would inactivate them, thereby depriving the organism of a critical sensory organ.
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    An excellent discourse on who evolution works, and what it means for us today.
Madeline Rupard

For the Digitally Illiterate - 1 views

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    This flowchart speaks the truth. Just for fun.
Mike Lemon

This Just In: Nerds Have No Friends, No Fun « Classroom as Microcosm - 2 views

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    Thought you might like this "insight" into nerds. 
Andrew DeWitt

Stuff No One Told Me ( but I learned anyway ) - 0 views

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    Fun blog of short comic strips depicting life truths.
Brandon McCloskey

BBC News - Hardware hacking just for a laugh - 1 views

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    More hacking for fun
James Wilcox

The NEW LDS.org - 1 views

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    I have had a lot of fun with this. There is a new ward callendar and directory that are far easier to use and add to then the old calendars and are far more efficent. Also, as a Ward Executive Secretary it allows me to get on to a large chunk of the MLS enabling me to get most of my work done without having to kick the Ward Clerk off of the churches computers.
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    So cool! I love this. We just went over all this in church. You gotta love having the best calling!
Danny Patterson

Timeline of Charles Darwin's life - 0 views

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    This is a fun timeline of the events attributable to Charles Darwin's life. It includes information regarding his life, his death, and how he has affected society and science after his death.
Danny Patterson

Natural Selection Prezi - 0 views

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    Here's a fun, concise presentation with examples on how the natural selection principle works and has affected various species around the world.
Danny Patterson

Interactive computer history museum - 0 views

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    This is a fun interactive site dedicated to the work performed by Jean Jennings Bartik, one of the first computer programmers in the world.
Margaret Weddle

Atomic Age #1 - Atomic Age (comic book issue) - Comic Vine - 0 views

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    ""Atomic Age #1" is a comic whose story involves the arrival of an alien humanoid on a US Air Force base located on a fictional island in the South Pacific." History, Science, & comic books! fun!!
Danny Patterson

Fear the Boom and Bust Rap - 2 views

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    I found this fun music video of a rap dedicated to the economic principles of John Maynard Keynes.
Margaret Weddle

YouTube - GM Futurama - 1939 World's Fair - Part 1 - 1 views

shared by Margaret Weddle on 14 Nov 10 - Cached
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    Discover the "Wonder World of 1960" ... "A Vision" Utopia, from the way it is described! New & better! Close, but not quite! But fun to see!!
Madeline Rupard

God in the Age of Adz - 1 views

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    I know that this is a pretty indulgent post, but I was thinking about self-directed learning and it hit me that we shouldn't discount the things that are fun to read as non self-directed learning. This is one of my favorite artists' Sufjan Stevens. He's kind of like a modern day David Byrne, but he also happens to be a devout christian. I like the way he mixes religion with music in subtle forms and so I appreciated his comments on religious worship here.
Kristi Koerner

New science theory and key issues in physics theory - 0 views

    • Kristi Koerner
       
      This cool SitePal feature with text-to-speech is really fun to play with!
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    Interesting site on New Science Theory including physics and Descartes.
Jeffrey Whitlock

Naked economics: undressing the ... - Google Books - 1 views

    • Jeffrey Whitlock
       
      For those who shudder in fear or flee because of boredom when faces with the subject of economics, then this book is for you! this book breaks down economics in a gloriously simple and fun way.
Andrew DeWitt

xkcd: a webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math, and language - 0 views

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    A funny comic strip for the intellectually minded. Randall Munroe, the creator of xkcd must be an open-source kind of guy because he has put something like a Creative Commons (noncommercial, attribution) license on his work.
Jeffrey Whitlock

Tumblr - 1 views

    • Jeffrey Whitlock
       
      Tumblr is a very promising microblogging and blogging site.
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    Yeah, I think its most popular with photographers. I started one for fun this semester. Check it out, if you want: http://treesclaptheirhands.tumblr.com
Jeffrey Chen

Procedure for a proper hack - 1 views

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    At MIT, great hacks are always fun to see because of their perfection and completion. Here are some brief overviews of hacks
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