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Eric J. Johnson

Multifunctionality in proteins ought to give genomic annotators conniptions.

I can see your point. It would seem that if "strong multifunctionism" is true, genomics would tend to often make us think organisms have functionalities they don't really have. A certain functionality of a gene (call it functionality X1), no longer needed by a certain organism, might be removed by negative selection or just decay from lack of purifying selection. But if the gene also has two further functionalities that remain under purifying selection, it certainly won't accumulate nonsense codons and become a pseudogene. An unwary genomicist might think the organism quite likely does have functionality X1.

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