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Geneticist Explores Evolution鈥檚 Mysteries

Clark, wearing a dark pullover and pants, standing in an aquarium tunnel with sea life swimming behind him

This story, written by Susan Wiedel, is excerpted from聽the issue of 51精品视频 Magazine, the University鈥檚 flagship alumni publication.

is at work,聽traveling around the world, just like he always does. And, as usual, he鈥檚 also traveling back in time. Yet, his mind-boggling exploits take place without him ever leaving his lab on the 10th floor of the 51精品视频鈥檚 Biomedical Science Tower 3. He鈥檚 an evolutionary geneticist and, on this particular day, he and an undergraduate researcher on his lab team are checking results from an experiment involving the genes of dolphins and killer whales, going back millions of years.聽

The results, unexpected, bring their routine to a sudden halt. Clark realizes that if what they鈥檝e learned is valid, it could pave the way for new insights into disease susceptibility and disease origins 鈥 both in these two species and in ourselves.聽

Working closely with colleagues within and outside of his , Clark, an assistant professor in聽the Department of Computational and Systems Biology in 51精品视频鈥檚 , spends much of his workday developing and using computer programs to scour genomes in order to decipher genetic evolution. It was in 2003 that researchers first sequenced the human genome. But Clark points out that scientists still don鈥檛 know what the majority of those genes are doing, genes that are shared across thousands of species, including dolphins and killer whales. In this sense, says Clark, 鈥渨e鈥檙e still kind of in the Dark Ages.鈥

So, if scientists don鈥檛 know which combinations of genes are responsible for which physical traits, Clark asks, how can doctors treat their patients suffering from congenital diseases caused by unidentified genes gone awry? Or, how can scientists know whether, for example, dolphins and killer whales are genetically predisposed to survive human-induced changes taking place in their waterways?

Clark believes his lab鈥檚 research 鈥 such as studying how physical traits, like vision or dietary adaptations, have evolved across species 鈥 can help resolve these questions.聽

There's more to this story of revolutionary research.聽.