%0 Journal Article %T Mobile DNA and evolution in the 21st century %A James A Shapiro %J Mobile DNA %D 2010 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1759-8753-1-4 %X The review assumes that readers of this journal are familiar with the actions of mobile DNA and other genome restructuring functions. It will try to integrate that familiarity into the historical development of evolutionary concepts and incorporate recent discoveries from genome sequencing. Just as our knowledge of mobile DNA has introduced new ways of thinking about hereditary change, the results of sequence analysis have documented several types of genome alterations at key places in evolutionary history, alterations which are notable because they happened within a single generation and affected multiple cellular and organismal characters at the same time: horizontal transfers of large DNA segments, cell fusions and symbioses, and whole genome doublings (WGDs). These rapid multi-character changes are fundamentally different from the slowly accumulating small random variations postulated in Darwinian and neo-Darwinian theory.Cell mergers and WGDs are the kinds of events that activate mobile DNA and genome restructuring. In order to fully integrate the genomic findings with our knowledge of mobile DNA, we have to make use of information about the molecular regulation of mobile DNA activities as well as McClintock's view that cells respond to signs of danger, frequently restructuring their genomes as part of the response [1]. This regulatory/cognitive view of genome restructuring helps us to formulate reasonable hypotheses about two unresolved questions in evolutionary theory: (i) the connections between evolutionary change and ecological disruption; and (ii) the origins of complex adaptive novelties at moments of macroevolutionary change.Since Darwin, three issues have been seen as central to formulating a coherent theory of evolutionary change:(i) descent with modification (that is the inheritance of novel characters),(ii) the origins of hereditary variation, and(iii) the operation of natural selection.All evolutionists accept descent with modification as fundament %U http://www.mobilednajournal.com/content/1/1/4