From: J. R. Molloy (jr@shasta.com)
Date: Fri Nov 19 1999 - 23:07:47 MST
Curt Adams wrote,
>This has been proposed many, many times but it doesn't hold water. A mutant
>allele that doesn't kill its owner early will eliminate the killer gene. It
>gets any benefits of accelerated evolution, because it's in the same species,
>plus its carriers live longer and have more offspring. It's the old
>principle of group selection; a group benefit allele can only have
>negligeable costs to individuals possessing it.
Thank you for the information. Apparently, modifying the genes of mice can
extend their life span. If identical modification happened as a result of
mutation rather than engineering, would the mutant individual have a biological
advantage? Could such a mutation occur naturally in millions of years of mice
generations? --J. R.
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