Beyond the Waiting Time: Why Epigenetics Resolves the "Two-Mutation" Paradox of Neo-Darwinism
The core tenet of Neo-Darwinism is the "Modern Synthesis," which asserts that evolution proceeds through the gradual accumulation of small, random genetic mutations filtered by natural selection. This paradigm assumes that given enough time, any complex biological feature can be built through a stepwise process. However, the study "Waiting for Two Mutations: With Applications to Regulatory Sequence Evolution and the Limits of Darwinian Evolution" presents a formidable mathematical challenge to this gradualist view. By calculating the "waiting time" required for just two coordinated mutations in a regulatory sequence, the study exposes a temporal crisis in evolutionary theory a crisis that suggests DNA sequence change alone is too slow to account for the diversity of life. The Neo-Darwinian Stagnation The study focuses on regulatory sequence evolution, specifically the time it takes to deactivate one transcription factor binding site (TFBS) and...