What have scientists conclude?
All living things use the same DNA code, adding weight to the hypothesis that all living things are related to each other and all have evolved from a common ancestor.
Despite the common ancestor, the code in the DNA will be different for different species. Explain why.
What is speciation?
It is an ancestral species giving rise to two or more new species.
What happens when Speciation occurs?
What is a Genome?
It is the complete set of DNA in each cell of an organism.
Through the examination of the genome which is the closest living relatives to the human species?
The chimpanzees, shows that they share more than 98% of our DNA.
Interestingly, humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes while chimpanzees have 24. How do scientists explain this?
Scientists believe this can be explained by two small chromosomes found in chimpanzees having fused to form one of the human chromosomes at some time in the past.
What do comparisons of junk DNA provide?
What is a good example of stretches of apparently non-functional DNA?
Endogenous Retroviruses (ERVs)
What is an ERV?
Endogenous Retroviruses; is a viral sequence that has become part of an organism’s genome.
Describe Retroviruses.
How does a Retrovirus become endogenous?
What have scientists found out about the location of ERVs?
ERVs make up 8% of the human genome, and that other primates also possess some of the same ERVs in exactly the same locations in their genomes.
What is a compelling evidence that humans and chimpanzees share a common ancestor?
What is the strong indication that all “these” animals shared a common ancestor, diverging at differing periods?
The experimentation with the DNA strands from different species suggests an increasing genetic distance between humans and the other primate groups as one progresses from chimpanzees, to gorillas, to orang-utans, to gibbons and to Old World monkeys.
What do mitochondrial DNA contain?
Why is it much easier to find and extract mtDNA from mitochondrion than DNA from the nucleus?
This is because most cells contain large numbers of mitochondria and therefore usually have between 500 and 1000 copies of the mtDNA molecule.
What makes mtDNA particularly interesting?
Why has human mtDNA been slowly diverging from the mtDNA of our original female ancestor?
Due to the higher rate of mutation of DNA in mitochondria;
the amount of mutation is roughly proportional to the amount of time that has passed.
How are scientists able to use the similarity between the mtDNA of any two individuals to provide an estimate of the closeness of their relationship through their maternal ancestors?
When has the use of mtDNA been found to be most valuable?
How are Protein Sequences formed?
How does modern biochemical techniques enable the sequence of amino acids in a protein to be determined?
By comparing the type and sequence of amino acids in similar proteins from different species, the degree of similarity can be established.
Compare Protein Sequences to DNA analysis.