cotjones
10+ year member
CarAudio.com Veteran
- Thread Starter
- #106
You mean this?And where the fuck does it say that "MOST pheontypic mutations are negative, not neutral or positive"?
Here:
Actually, most mutations go unnoticed since they mostly occur in non-translated parts of the genome in the "junk" DNA). Most bad mutations are destroyed or cannot function due to structural instability in their tertiary structure. Whereas the negative mutations that are noticed maintain structural integrity and have a separate function, or no function at all (where in this case, the body would need something important from this malformed protein, ei. chaperone protein). Same goes for a positive mutation, where this new/improved protein functions better/has positive effect on the body.
Here I said "EXPRESSED" Mutations are most likely negative. That means phenotype. IE: PHENOTYPE EXPRESSED MUTATIONS ARE MOST LIKELY NEGATIVE. Are they possibly positive or neutral? Sure. But the most likely outcome is negative. If you randomly change something in a car engine, is it more likely that the car will run better or worse?Touche'
I was referring to phenotype traits, should have made that clear. Most "expressed" mutations will be negative. Non functioning eyes in cave dwellers are an example of a neutral phenotype mutation.
This is were I assumed you were confused. Because an "expressed" trait is synonymous with a "phenotypic" trait. Thus your post didn't make much sense. Actually the whole thing didn't really make sense.Wrong again. Won't these "expressed" positive mutations have a phenotype of being able to adapt better? That's a phenotype. Also, some of the BEST positive mutations have a phenotype. People only focus on the negative phenotypic traits due to their visible abnormalities.
No, i'm saying that most changes in the phenotype due to mutation will be negative, meaning they will hurt not help. Technically, most genotype mutation are invisible and don't change the phenotype at all. I think you are getting confused here, let me clarify.
All positive and negative mutations are both phenotypic and genotypic. It has to be expressed in the phenotype to have either a negative or positive effect.
Neutral mutations however could be EITHER only genotypic or both. The vast majority of the time these neutral mutations won't be expressed phenotype. They are also rare in nature because most traits are suited for the environment, so the selective factor on that trait has to be eliminated for the trait to evolve neutrally. IE (something with eyes being trapped in a cave.)
