Abstract

When God created the earth, he placed (modern) mankind in East Africa ≈200 000 years ago, as suggested by the phylogenetic and archeological studies.1,2 These hunter-gatherers populated the land and started to migrate, first to the west and southern tip of Africa and then north toward North Africa. Mankind gradually crossed the Arabian Peninsula to the Middle East and Eurasia. Then, over thousands of years of northerly movement, man crossed the Bering land bridge that connected Siberia to Alaska and migrated down to the Americas. This out-of-Africa migration took thousands of generations. It was interrupted by the Ice Age, which led to depopulation and isolation of the surviving population followed by the new waves of migrations, resulting in multiple founding populations.3 Articles see pages 552 and 558 At the genetic level, the tree of life was produced through replication of the genome. For the genome to replicate, cells are equipped with DNA polymerases to copy the parental DNA, which they do at blazing speeds.4 However, “no protein is perfect,” and neither are the DNA polymerases. So, the DNA polymerases commit occasional errors in copying the template (parental) DNA and incorporate wrong nucleotides into the new DNA strands. To correct the errors, nature afforded the cells with DNA repair enzymes, which are assigned the task of maintaining the integrity of the nucleotide pools before replication.5 Nevertheless, the process of DNA replication and editing, although exceedingly precise, is imperfect. The error rate of the DNA replication and editing machinery is estimated to be at 10−6 to 10−10 nucleotides incorporated into the new strand of DNA.6,7 The inheritance is forward. Therefore, the misincorporated nucleotides are passed on to the next generation, and with each generation, new errors in DNA replication are introduced. The occasional “errors of …

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