Before the rise of
molecular biology in the 1950s and 1960s, a small number of biologists had explored the possibilities of using biochemical differences between species to study
evolution.
Alfred Sturtevant predicted the existence of chromosomal inversions in 1921 and with
Dobzhansky constructed one of the first molecular phylogenies on 17 Drosophila Pseudo-obscura strains from the accumulation of chromosomal inversions observed from the hybridization of polyten chromosomes.
Ernest Baldwin worked extensively on
comparative biochemistry beginning in the 1930s, and
Marcel Florkin pioneered techniques for constructing
phylogenies based on molecular and biochemical characters in the 1940s. However, it was not until the 1950s that biologists developed techniques for producing biochemical data for the quantitative study of
molecular evolution. The first molecular systematics research was based on immunological
assays and protein "fingerprinting" methods.
Alan Boyden—building on immunological methods of
George Nuttall—developed new techniques beginning in 1954, and in the early 1960s
Curtis Williams and
Morris Goodman used immunological comparisons to study
primate phylogeny. Others, such as
Linus Pauling and his students, applied newly developed combinations of
electrophoresis and
paper chromatography to proteins subject to partial digestion by
digestive enzymes to create unique two-dimensional patterns, allowing fine-grained comparisons of homologous proteins. Beginning in the 1950s, a few naturalists also experimented with molecular approaches—notably
Ernst Mayr and
Charles Sibley. While Mayr quickly soured on paper chromatography, Sibley successfully applied electrophoresis to egg-white proteins to sort out problems in bird taxonomy, soon supplemented that with
DNA hybridization techniques—the beginning of a long career built on
molecular systematics. While such early biochemical techniques found grudging acceptance in the biology community, for the most part they did not impact the main theoretical problems of evolution and population genetics. This would change as molecular biology shed more light on the physical and chemical nature of genes.
Genetic load, the classical/balance controversy, and the measurement of heterozygosity At the time that molecular biology was coming into its own in the 1950s, there was a long-running debate—the classical/balance controversy—over the causes of
heterosis, the increase in fitness observed when inbred lines are outcrossed. In 1950,
James F. Crow offered two different explanations (later dubbed the
classical and
balance positions) based on the paradox first articulated by
J. B. S. Haldane in 1937: the effect of deleterious mutations on the average fitness of a population depends only on the rate of mutations (not the degree of harm caused by each mutation) because more-harmful mutations are eliminated more quickly by natural selection, while less-harmful mutations remain in the population longer.
H. J. Muller dubbed this "
genetic load". Muller, motivated by his concern about the effects of radiation on human populations, argued that heterosis is primarily the result of deleterious homozygous recessive alleles, the effects of which are masked when separate lines are crossed—this was the
dominance hypothesis, part of what Dobzhansky labeled the
classical position. Thus, ionizing radiation and the resulting mutations produce considerable genetic load even if death or disease does not occur in the exposed generation, and in the absence of mutation natural selection will gradually increase the level of homozygosity.
Bruce Wallace, working with
J. C. King, used the
overdominance hypothesis to develop the
balance position, which left a larger place for
overdominance (where the heterozygous state of a gene is more fit than the homozygous states). In that case, heterosis is simply the result of the increased expression of
heterozygote advantage. If overdominant loci are common, then a high level of heterozygosity would result from natural selection, and mutation-inducing radiation may in fact facilitate an increase in fitness due to overdominance. (This was also the view of Dobzhansky.) Debate continued through 1950s, gradually becoming a central focus of population genetics. A 1958 study of
Drosophila by Wallace suggested that radiation-induced mutations
increased the viability of previously homozygous flies, providing evidence for heterozygote advantage and the balance position; Wallace estimated that 50% of loci in natural
Drosophila populations were heterozygous.
Motoo Kimura's subsequent mathematical analyses reinforced what Crow had suggested in 1950: that even if overdominant loci are rare, they could be responsible for a disproportionate amount of genetic variability. Accordingly, Kimura and his mentor Crow came down on the side of the classical position. Further collaboration between Crow and Kimura led to the
infinite alleles model, which could be used to calculate the number of different alleles expected in a population, based on population size, mutation rate, and whether the mutant alleles were neutral, overdominant, or deleterious. Thus, the infinite alleles model offered a potential way to decide between the classical and balance positions, if accurate values for the level of heterozygosity could be found. By the mid-1960s, the techniques of biochemistry and molecular biology—in particular
protein electrophoresis—provided a way to measure the level of heterozygosity in natural populations: a possible means to resolve the classical/balance controversy. In 1963,
Jack L. Hubby published an electrophoresis study of protein variation in
Drosophila; soon after, Hubby began collaborating with
Richard Lewontin to apply Hubby's method to the classical/balance controversy by measuring the proportion of heterozygous loci in natural populations. Their two landmark papers, published in 1966, established a significant level of heterozygosity for
Drosophila (12%, on average). However, these findings proved difficult to interpret. Most population geneticists (including Hubby and Lewontin) rejected the possibility of widespread neutral mutations; explanations that did not involve selection were anathema to mainstream evolutionary biology. Hubby and Lewontin also ruled out heterozygote advantage as the main cause because of the
segregation load it would entail, though critics argued that the findings actually fit well with overdominance hypothesis.
Protein sequences and the molecular clock While evolutionary biologists were tentatively branching out into molecular biology, molecular biologists were rapidly turning their attention toward evolution. After developing the fundamentals of protein sequencing with
insulin between 1951 and 1955,
Frederick Sanger and his colleagues had published a limited interspecies comparison of the insulin sequence in 1956.
Francis Crick,
Charles Sibley and others recognized the potential for using biological sequences to construct phylogenies, though few such sequences were yet available. By the early 1960s, techniques for
protein sequencing had advanced to the point that direct comparison of homologous amino acid sequences was feasible. In 1961,
Emanuel Margoliash and his collaborators completed the sequence for horse
cytochrome c (a longer and more widely distributed protein than insulin), followed in short order by a number of other species. In 1962,
Linus Pauling and
Emile Zuckerkandl proposed using the number of differences between homologous protein sequences to estimate the time since
divergence, an idea Zuckerkandl had conceived around 1960 or 1961. This began with Pauling's long-time research focus,
hemoglobin, which was being sequenced by
Walter Schroeder; the sequences not only supported the accepted vertebrate phylogeny, but also the hypothesis (first proposed in 1957) that the different globin chains within a single organism could also be traced to a common ancestral protein. Between 1962 and 1965, Pauling and Zuckerkandl refined and elaborated this idea, which they dubbed the
molecular clock, and
Emil L. Smith and Emanuel Margoliash expanded the analysis to cytochrome c. Early molecular clock calculations agreed fairly well with established divergence times based on paleontological evidence. However, the essential idea of the molecular clock—that individual proteins evolve at a regular rate independent of a species'
morphological evolution—was extremely provocative (as Pauling and Zuckerkandl intended it to be). == The "molecular wars" ==