Reelya, what would be the selection pressure in this case? I mean, we're talking about the genetic code, the thing is so stable that it's basically the same in bacteria and in humans: aka it barely changed in BILLIONS on years. But you seem to think that a few decades of evolution of that SSO will lead to a change.
The selection pressure is specifically the fact that creating something that's deeply sub-optimal itself is the pressure. Actually the fact that basic systems in normal cells
haven't changed in billions of years is actually the point. Those systems took a relatively short time to develop, then once they optimized they stopped changing. If you veer an organism
far from equilibrium then the time to get that into an optimal range is far less than the billions of years your talking about. The sheer lack of change for billions of years is the point. Those systems
didn't take billions of years to develop, they took a much shorter time to develop, then stopped changing once they were in an optimal equilibrium.
An example from real-world lab studies is some amoebas who somehow survived having a bacteria infection that should be fatal. The surviving bacteria were extremely weak and had a very slow dividing time compared to normal. But the researchers kept them alive. After about a month, they had amoebas who could breed about as fast as normal amoebas, but still had hundreds of the bacteria cells inside them. The cool thing was, these amoebas would now
die if you removed the bacteria. They had become dependent on them being there. So yeah, no. Single-cell organisms can in fact adapt to things pretty darn fast. Generation time measured in hours or minutes and the fact that every individual cell is a unique competitor means the equation is
completely different to the "evolution takes million of years" argument that would apply to
humans. Think about two million-year old proto-humans compared to modern humans. if a generation is 20 years, that's 1 million generations. 1 million generations of a bug that splits every 20 minutes is a lot less, especially when the population size of a jelly plate of bugs is more than the historic total population of humans until relatively recently. Bacteria have both population size and rapid generations to provide feedback and have many, many different mutations tried at once. Also they have stronger competitive pressures than human-scale animals. Bacteria want to double every 20 minutes. So at the limit, you've got half your population being culled every generation / 20 minutes, or if not, extremely aggressive competition for limited food resources. So you ask where the selection pressure is coming from? From right there. Basically only half of any generation can possibly pass their genes onto the next one. Additionally, higher animals express high-level changes in phenotype. So you expect 2 million year old humans to have a certain amount of difference to modern humans. But bacteria are low-level organisms. They thus have more likelihood of low-level changes. Basically because there is no high level to be changed. So things like basic chemistry changes and dealing with biochemical threats/systems, that's where all the generational change
is with bacteria, because that's the level they operate at.