1.
Describe your feelings about or
response to the interview.
The nature of
the hypothesis for the RNA World had perhaps led to more philosophical
questions on the nature of life itself.
I did not personally realize the difficulty in which we encountered in
receiving responses from experts in the biological sciences. Perhaps few are willing to stand by a hypothesis
that can be considered untestable. This
is to say, no one was present in the time in which such events may have
occurred. Aside from hypothetical
situations, I suppose that even the research of workers such as Cech cannot
ultimately support one way or the other, that the pre-DNA material of life
involved RNA and ribozymes. Ultimately,
we are faced with our own opinions and philosophy on how we define life and the
origins of life itself. Though much
research, and the grid-computing project we became involved in, has provided
many compelling arguments supporting the RNA World hypothesis, we may not fully
understand the implications for the hypothesis in our modern view, known as the
Central Dogma of Biology. We may define
life as an organism capable of self-replication, but it does not provide enough
substance to hypotheses which posit that pre-DNA forms existed as RNA and
ribozymes. I may feel that there are few
better explanations, but until our modes of inquiry improve concerning this
subject, we may always refer to the RNA World view as a hypothesis.
2.
What changes occurred for you as a
result of your interview?
I feel that I
now have a greater appreciation for the work of researchers in this field, and
also for the impact that may be brought about for these scientists if they were
to definitively conclude that the RNA World hypothesis is supported. Perhaps, for some who we interviewed, it was
a matter of their namesake not being attached to such an inquiry from biology
majors on a topic which raises more questions than are answered. In any case, I respect the views of these
individuals and their organizations in promoting ideas which they can
specifically support using their own research.
In the future, however, I would hope that views on understanding the
origin of genetic material will relax as more information pours in to
substantiate hypotheses on the RNA World.
In much the same way people refer to the Big Bang Theory as a theory,
perhaps a day could come which provides more relevant evidence for the RNA
World and becomes a theory as well. A
theory, in the scientific mode of inquiry, should always be substantiated with
many years of data and independent analysis from well- qualified, authoritative
individuals and organizations which dedicated the whole of their work to
understanding and not merely hypothesizing.
3.
Did anything about the interview
disturb you?
Perhaps one
implication that I did not have the foresight at the beginning of the semester
on was how this hypothesis would ultimately meld together with philosophical
beliefs on the origin of life, the nature of life and how we define life. Scientists constantly struggle to find out
how phenomena occur, how mechanisms of life processes occur. But it is not often asked why. Why would genetic material evolve into DNA if
RNA had been sufficient, given that the RNA World hypothesis is accurate? One may say that DNA is more stable than RNA
and allows for greater complexity within an organism, but it still does not
answer a more general question of why. Furthermore,
upon exploration into the possible origin of life on the Earth, we may find it
relevant to consider whether life could or is evolving in a similar manner
elsewhere in the universe. Perhaps the
best way to understand the origin of life on Earth is to actually investigate
other planets similar to ours for even the smallest and simplest semblance of
life imaginable.
4. Describe the connections you found
between the interview and your research & classwork.
Within this study of the RNA World, it becomes ever
more apparent the value of evolution as a mechanism of change in life forms on
Earth. There is no doubt that evolution
and adaptation heavily influenced the outcome of life and how life replicates
genetic material and subsequently produces the proteins that are the ultimate
building blocks of life itself. Within
our class, we talked about many changes due to evolution, which itself is
defined for our purposes as the change in allelic (and for some, genotypic) in
a population over time. HIV, for
example, is a rapidly evolving virus that infects many humans all over the
world. Though, in a strict sense,
viruses are not considered living because they depend on the machinery of a
host cell in order to replicate its genetic material and ultimately produce
more viruses. But if you look at the
genetic material of HIV, single stranded RNA, it becomes interesting as to why
HIV would maintain RNA instead of having its genetic material converted to DNA
for what might be considered as more efficient in the utilization of the host
cell, which itself houses its genetic information as double stranded DNA. More
questions like this may be raised as to how and, more importantly in my
opinion, why organisms have evolved the way they are now and what exactly were
the precursors to the current status of these organisms. Also, these questions are all relevant to
those more philosophical questions that are ultimately raised when one
endeavors to research a topic and complex and hypothetical and the RNA World
hypothesis.
I would also like to mention how much I appreciate the opportunity for our class to participate in grid-computing projects and to endeavor into biological topics that may not be otherwise covered in a class such as ours. In the future I hope that more students push themselves to work diligently to find a biological topic of their own choosing.
All,
ReplyDeleteOnce again, I am sorry that your interview was a bit frustrating and atypical. I am pleased to know that all of you and your interviewee were invited to ponder some of the philosophical issues surrounding evolution and the RNA World. And I sincerely appreciate your candor in expressing your reflections on these matters and on the interview itself. Thank you for your patience and persistence! Well done.
30 out of 30.
-Dr. Walker