Which part of the fluorescent gene is not found in mice - which nucleotide? Which part of the protein it encodes is not found in mice - which amino acid? At the molecular level what is so special about this gene that makes it unnatural in mice? If the molecules that made it up were foreign to the mouse, we wouldn't be able to express it in mice.
Are you being serious
. It's unnatural to mice because the sequence does not exist in mice - evolution has never brought this gene into being in mice. Therefore by cutting out the gene from the jellyfish genome and putting it into a mouse, we are bi-passing all the millions and millions of years of natural selection and random mutation that evolution states would be needed to make this gene, and we are doing it within a few hours.
Let me put it this way - the gene naturally belongs in the jellyfish - it does not naturally occur in the mouse -evolution has not chosen this to happen. We then place the gene into unnatural surroundings (the mouse genome) and by-pass the process of evolution all together. We get a fluorescent mouse which is unnatural - yeah? A fluorescent mouse never occurs in nature - this is undeniable.
And we have been able to for quite awhile. My question was: What is so revolutionary about right now?
Because the technology is becoming more available to anyone that wants to do it if they so chose to. You know the genetic laws about cloning humans -yet we get a scientist in some country claiming to have cloned the first human. As we begin to sequence the genomes of animals (we've only just done the human and even more recent is the chimp) we are discovering new genes and figuring out what those genes do. This therefore increases the library of genes which we can cut out and put into other animals and experiment with. It doesn't take a genius to work out that you get a rogue state and lax genetic laws - you are going to have people messing with nature in a way it was never suppose to be messed with.
I also only said that i believed mankind was entering a new era in evolution - we are bound to eventually find genes in other organisms which confer to them an advantage that we humans don't have but would like to have. All it takes is cutting out this gene and engineering it into the humans - we are jumping the natural process of evolution. What about the genes that confer long life? How long before we start getting oral gene therapy which replaces existing genes with these genes for long life? Again jumping the evolutionary process.
Use your imagination - there's a pile of genes that could potentially be used in humans or existing human genes that can be manipulated in ways only the evolutionary process would have done before.
I'm not going to sit here and argue this point with you anymore - it's common sense and anyone who can see the technological advances in this area in a mere decade and look two or three decades down the line will acknowledge this will be the case.