- Joined
- Jan 23, 2016
- Messages
- 1,148
- Reaction score
- 1,884
I believe the OP (correct me if I'm wrong) is referring to a myth started a few years ago about how grafted corals happen.
Someone started a rumor that grafted corals happen when a fluorescent protein from one coral somehow "infects" another coral. There is no evidence of this, and it is not known to happen anywhere else in all of biology (horizontal transfer of a gene by way of a protein).
In fact, "grafted" corals happen two ways
1. grafting - two colonies grow together. This happens in nature too, and these colonies are called chimeras. They have two different individual corals' genetics fused into one colony.
2. somatic mutation. All corals have multiple fluorescent protein (FP) genes, in a variety of colors. Sometimes one of these undergoes somatic mutation and a spot of a different color appears.
Someone started a rumor that grafted corals happen when a fluorescent protein from one coral somehow "infects" another coral. There is no evidence of this, and it is not known to happen anywhere else in all of biology (horizontal transfer of a gene by way of a protein).
In fact, "grafted" corals happen two ways
1. grafting - two colonies grow together. This happens in nature too, and these colonies are called chimeras. They have two different individual corals' genetics fused into one colony.
2. somatic mutation. All corals have multiple fluorescent protein (FP) genes, in a variety of colors. Sometimes one of these undergoes somatic mutation and a spot of a different color appears.

