TechnologyReview | Carl Woese published a provocative and illuminating article, “A New Biology for a New Century,” in the June 2004 issue of Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
His main theme is the obsolescence of reductionist biology as it has
been practiced for the last hundred years, and the need for a new
biology based on communities and ecosystems rather than on genes and
molecules. He also raises another profoundly important question: when
did Darwinian evolution begin? By Darwinian evolution he means evolution
as Darwin himself understood it, based on the intense competition for
survival among noninterbreeding species. He presents evidence that
Darwinian evolution did not go back to the beginning of life. In early
times, the process that he calls “horizontal gene transfer,” the sharing
of genes between unrelated species, was prevalent. It becomes more
prevalent the further back you go in time. Carl Woese is the world’s
greatest expert in the field of microbial taxonomy. Whatever he writes,
even in a speculative vein, is to be taken seriously.
Woese is
postulating a golden age of pre-Darwinian life, during which horizontal
gene transfer was universal and separate species did not exist. Life was
then a community of cells of various kinds, sharing their genetic
information so that clever chemical tricks and catalytic processes
invented by one creature could be inherited by all of them. Evolution
was a communal affair, the whole community advancing in metabolic and
reproductive efficiency as the genes of the most efficient cells were
shared. But then, one evil day, a cell resembling a primitive bacterium
happened to find itself one jump ahead of its neighbors in efficiency.
That cell separated itself from the community and refused to share. Its
offspring became the first species. With its superior efficiency, it
continued to prosper and to evolve separately. Some millions of years
later, another cell separated itself from the community and became
another species. And so it went on, until all life was divided into
species.
Now, after some three billion years, the Darwinian era is over. The
epoch of species competition came to an end about 10 thousand years ago
when a single species, Homo sapiens, began to dominate and
reorganize the biosphere. Since that time, cultural evolution has
replaced biological evolution as the driving force of change. Cultural
evolution is not Darwinian. Cultures spread by horizontal transfer of
ideas more than by genetic inheritance. Cultural evolution is running a
thousand times faster than Darwinian evolution, taking us into a new era
of cultural interdependence that we call globalization. And now, in the
last 30 years, Homo sapiens has revived the ancient
pre-Darwinian practice of horizontal gene transfer, moving genes easily
from microbes to plants and animals, blurring the boundaries between
species. We are moving rapidly into the post-Darwinian era, when species
will no longer exist, and the evolution of life will again be communal.
In
the post-Darwinian era, biotechnology will be domesticated. There will
be do-it-yourself kits for gardeners, who will use gene transfer to
breed new varieties of roses and orchids. Also, biotech games for
children, played with real eggs and seeds rather than with images on a
screen. Genetic engineering, once it gets into the hands of the general
public, will give us an explosion of biodiversity. Designing genomes
will be a new art form, as creative as painting or sculpture. Few of the
new creations will be masterpieces, but all will bring joy to their
creators and diversity to our fauna and flora.
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