Does the fact that we don't (appear to) observe any ageless vertebrates or humans mean that it's probably not a genetic problem?
Alternately...is it possible that there are adaptive genetic traits that have not yet evolved, but will evolve in future, or is life on Earth already so old that everything that will exist has likely already evolved?
I think of this as a curve fitting problem: finer granularity of the data points (a shorter lifespan with faster sexual maturation) would more quickly produce a wider variety of genotypes, some of which are more suited to fit to a rapidly changing environment (the curve). On the contrary, rougher granularity of the data (longer lifespan, slower sexual maturation; instead of data points, data line segments trying to fit to the curve) would be more suited to a flatter or gradually shifting curve (a more slowly changing environment).
I think if you have an acute environmental shock, as is happening right now with global warming, the folks who have lots of kids at a younger age will have the genetic advantage from a population perspective (ignoring influences from financial and technological resources).
In practice immortality in a complex organism requires many steps, those will never be done because they up the energy budget and put the creature at a disadvantage.
The fact that it's an evolutionary disadvantage not to be replaced with superior offspring is irrelevant, that implies intent which evolution does not have.
> For example, if there was a human or animal genetic pattern that made the organism not age, wouldn't that organism have created many offspring (in its long life) and the mutation have spread?
First, aging is extremely complex and caused by a host of factors. No single gene or regulatory sequence could cause or prevent all of those things. Take DNA damage, for example. Read through this wikipedia article and notice how just within this single issue how many things can go wrong: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_damage_theory_of_aging
> Does the fact that we don't (appear to) observe any ageless vertebrates or humans mean that it's probably not a genetic problem?
The right way to think of this is that there's no genetic solution, or that one hasn't evolved yet in humans.
> is life on Earth already so old that everything that will exist has likely already evolved?
Evolution isn't linear. It just optimizes for whatever the current situation is. New genes are still being created (on evolutionary timescales anyway).
Until very recently, the average lifespan for a human was in the 20-30 year range. Even if lifespan-enhancing genetic changes did occur in some individuals, those people were dying of bacterial infections or starvation or whatever, so they never got the chance to live 300 years and have 280 children and thus "take over" the population. Also, as others have pointed out, genes that confer longevity may come at a cost. Humans are just so complex that every change is a tradeoff.
> "Alternately...is it possible that there are adaptive genetic traits that have not yet evolved, but will evolve in future, or is life on Earth already so old that everything that will exist has likely already evolved?"
Evolution seems to be a really ineffective mechanism though. It's sort of like how planets "evolve" to support life. Most don't. Some planets might need a terraforming lifeform to evolve. Evolution has done its duty, but now it's up to us mortals to take the next step and evolve ourselves.
You can argue that life saving medical techniques make us more likely to select for cancer and the like, but it doesn't really matter as long as we can eliminate it.
Telomeres, for example, put an upper limit on how many times a cell can divide; much of the anti-aging work is focused on getting around this limit. But, telomeres are an important anti-cancer adaptation. The fact that they limit how many times a cell can divide, and thus how long the cell line can persist, is not a bug, it's a feature, and in fact the primary feature. If you managed to disable them, you would not become immortal, you would probably die sooner (of cancer) than you would otherwise.
It's also not uncommonly the case that changes in society come from the younger generations, who get power as the older ones die off. If Stalin's generation had lived forever, the Soviet Union might still be shooting people who tried to leave. Actually that wouldn't have happened because we would probably still be living under the god-emperors of the ancient empires.
But, a society next door that did NOT have agelessness, which was therefore more able to innovate, would eventually come across the border and kill off the ageless.
So agelessness isn’t a 100% win by any means.
We definitely have not seen every combination of possible genetic traits yet. To my knowledge the griffin has not yet evolved, for example.
https://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/02/magazine/can-a-jellyfish-...
[..] We now know, for instance, that the rejuvenation of Turritopsis dohrnii and some other members of the genus is caused by environmental stress or physical assault. We know that, during rejuvenation, it undergoes cellular transdifferentiation, an unusual process by which one type of cell is converted into another — a skin cell into a nerve cell, for instance. (The same process occurs in human stem cells.) [..]
Also there was a 507 year old clam discovered off the coast of Iceland. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S00310...
[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Queen:_Sex_and_the_Evo...
Death due to ageing may be dwarfed by death due to other causes. For example, look at short-lived mammals like rodents: An individual is likely to due of predation before senescence. And, everything has a cost: The (short-term) survival and reproduction cost you pay must be worth it.
Immortal species may have appeared, but they probably went extinct, because they had to have few offspring to prevent overpopulation. With fewer offspring, there is less genetic variation, and less ability to adapt to environmental shocks, such as new pathogens.
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/6dff/ee493ddc2e294f32413186...
I have always wondered..if gender a mutation?
Consider a queen bee. Her livespan is so much longer (several years) compared to the worker bee (4 weeks during spring/summer/fall, until winters end for the hibernating generation).
The Queen's task in the live of the hive is to provide an unqenchable source of high quality genetic material to grow worker bees from which in turn will provide the hive with the periolous work required to sustain the hive.
And yet still there is an end to the queen's live.
Cloning a plant from a branch by covering a branch in soil, have it grow roots and then sever the connection is a mechanism of getting a new copy of the organsism. It might be interesting to find out if that resets the clock on a multi-year plant in respect to the original individual from which the branch was taken... Consider the top of an pineapple... you can grow an entire pineapple plant including the fruit from it...)
So longevity is not the absence of aging.
There might be serveral distinct constituents to aging:
1 the accumulation of damage (wear and tear)
2 an actual genetic programmed decline of biological function
3 an update to the genetic programming of the entire organism is not feasible
1 There might be damage which can not be repaired. For example there might be toxic substances building up or there might be a limit to the complexity or plasticity of a neural network. After exceeding such a limit the function may no longer be available in the required quality (Cortanas's Rampage..., Prions, the degradation of tendons (for example: the ligaments in a humans knee degrade...)
2 There is a cycle of life which has evolved in multicellular organisms. Single cell Organisms still have a cycle while not aging:
Build up sufficient material in the cell to sustain 2 individuals * divide into 2 individuals, such that every clone has at minimum the required parts to sustain itself * repeat
All multicellular organisms start reproduction from a single cell. In their youth they build up to their adult forms which are reproductive. After reproduction the parent generation may or may not nurture the offspring.
The complex mechanism of growth from a single cell to adult form relies on molecular clocks: Puberty starts at a certain age, and even before that the development of the embryo requires a sequence of aging - for example the fingers of a hand develop out of a flat proto-hand because the cells between the fingers die. So autocytosis - programmed cell death - is essential to the development of an organism.
*3 Evolution works by altering the genetic programming by mutation in the offspring, putting these copies in living specimens of the next generation into the environment and just by chance the mutations prevail whose specimens did not die before reproduction.
So longevity and aging is of no concern to evolution by itself.
Those mutations which can prevail in the environment will be found at a later date - dying off means vanishing from the population.
So the question is how would not aging benefit the sustained success of a genetic conglomeration of genes in an ever changing environment ?
While you can not fundamentaly alter the programming of an adult individual organism ?
Longevity and aging are of no more concern to evolution as much as it affects the success / survival of the next generation while changing by selection as much as is required to survive.
You don't do anything for your offspring - you get the mayfly.
you feed the baby - bees.
you feed the baby and teach it - the cat which trains the kittens to catch mice
you extend on the training routine until you develop a culture which preserves survival techniques through the ages - homini
You need an ever extending life time to achieve this support to the next generation.
But from the point of self-reliance of the kids in their life there is diminshed evolutional pressure to keep the parents alive.
So longevity / absence of aging would be a fluke - if the old generation was not consuming ressources while still running an old inefficient set of genes and reproducing child generations with less adaptations than the current great-grandchildren.
So no aging would hinder the survival chances of the offspring.
Therefore longevity is selected for as long as the set of genes in the next generation is getting a benefit from the parents being still alive.
Immortality is actively negatively selected.
Aging is allowed by the diminishing effect of parental death on the survival chances of the offspring.