Assis R., and D. Bachtrog. 2013. Neofunctionalization of young duplicate genes in Drosophila. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 110, no. 43:17,409–17,414.
Birney E. C., R. Jenness, and K. M. Ayaz. 1976. Inability of bats to synthesise L-ascorbic acid. Nature 260, no. 5552:626–628.
Birney E. C., R. Jenness, and I. D. Hume. 1980. Evolution of an enzyme system: Ascorbic acid biosynthesis in monotremes and marsupials. Evolution 34, no. 2:230–239.
Chatterjee, I. B. 1973. Evolution and the biosynthesis of ascorbic acid. Science 182, no. 4118:1271–1272.
Chaudhuri, C. R. and I. B. Chatterjee. 1969. L-ascorbic acid synthesis in birds: phylogenetic trend. Science 164, no. 3878:435–436.
Combs, G. F. Jr., 2008. The vitamins: Fundamental aspects in nutrition and health. San Diego, California: Elsevier.
Criswell, D. 2007. Adam and Eve, vitamin C, and pseudogenes. Acts & Facts 36, no. 5. Dallas, Texas: Institute for Creation Research.
Cui, J., Y. H. Pan, Y. Zhang, G. Jones, and S. Zhang. 2011a. Progressive pseudogenization: Vitamin C synthesis and its loss in bats. Molecular Biology and Evolution 28, no. 2:1025–1031.
Cui J, X. Yuan, L. Wang, G. Jones, and S. Zhang. 2011b. Recent loss of vitamin C biosynthesis ability in bats. PloS One 6, no. 11:e27114.
Drouin. G., J.-R. Godin, and B. Page. 2011. The genetics of vitamin C loss in vertebrates. Current Genomics 12, no. 5:371–378.
Fairbanks, D. J. 2010. Relics of Eden: The powerful evidence of evolution in human DNA. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books.
Fu, W., T. D. O’Connor, G. Jun, H. M. Kang, G. Abecasis, S. M. Leal, S. Gabriel, et al. 2013. Analysis of 6,515 exomes reveals the recent origin of most human protein-coding variants. Nature 493, no. 7431:216–220.
Funk, C. 1912. The substance from yeast and certain foodstuffs which prevents polyneuritis (beri-beri). British Medical Journal II:787.
Gropper, S. S., and J. L. Smith. 2012. Advanced nutrition and human metabolism. Stamford, Connecticut: Cengage Learning.
Hancock, R. D., J. R. Galpin, and R. Viola. 2000. Biosynthesis of L-ascorbic acid (vitamin C) by Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FEMS Microbiology Letters 186, no. 2:245–250.
Harris, B. S., P. F. Ward-Bailey, L. R. Donahue, K. R. Johnson, R. T. Bronson, and M. T. Davisson. 2005. Spontaneous fracture 2 Jackson (sfx2J), a second mutation of the gulonolactone oxidase gene (Gulo). Retrieved from
http://www.informatics.jax.org/allele/MGI:3510598.
Hasan, L., P. Vögeli, P. Stoll, S. S. Kramer, G. Stranzinger, and S. Neuenschwander. 2004. Intragenic deletion in the gene encoding L-gulonolactone oxidase causes vitamin C deficiency in pigs. Mammalian Genome 15, no. 4:323–333.
Helliwell, K. E., G. L. Wheeler, and A. G. Smith. 2013. Widespread decay of vitamin-related pathways: Coincidence or consequence? Trends in Genetics 29, no. 8:469–478.
Inai Y., Y. Ohta Y., and M. Nishikimi. 2003. The whole structure of the human nonfunctional L-gulono-gammalactone oxidase gene—the gene responsible for scurvy—and the evolution of repetitive sequences thereon. Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology 49, no. 5:315–319.
Innan, H., and F. Kondrashov. 2010. The evolution of gene duplications: Classifying and distinguishing between models. Nature Reviews Genetics 11, no. 2:97–108.
Jiao, Y., X. Li, W. G. Beamer, J. Yan, Y. Tong, D. Goldowitz, B. Roe, and W. Gu. 2005. A deletion causing spontaneous fracture identified from a candidate region of mouse Chromosome 14. Mammalian Genome 16, no. 1:20–31.
Jiao, Y., J. Zhang, J. Yan, J. Stuart, G. Gibson, L. Lu, R. Willaims, and Y. J. Wang. 2011. Differential gene expression between wild-type and Gulo-deficient mice supplied with vitamin C. Genetics and Molecular Biology 34, no. 3:386–395.
Kapranov, P., and G. St Laurent. 2012. Dark matter RNA: Existence, function, and controversy. Frontiers in Genetics 3:60.
Kawai, T., M. Nishikimi, T. Ozawa, and K. Yagi. 1992. A missense mutation of L-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase causes the inability of scurvy-prone osteogenic disorder rats to synthesize L-ascorbic acid. Journal of Biological Chemistry 267, no. 30:21,973–21,976.
Lachapelle, M. Y., and G. Drouin. 2011. Inactivation dates of the human and guinea pig vitamin C genes. Genetica 139, no. 2:199–207.
Lee, C. W., X. D. Wang, K. L. Chien, Z. Ge, B. H. Rickman, A. B. Rogers, A. Varro, M. T. Whary, T. C. Wang, and J. C. Fox. 2008. Vitamin C supplementation does not protect L-gulonogamma-lactone oxidase-deficient mice from Helicobacter pylori-induced gastritis and gastric premalignancy. International Journal of Cancer 122, no. 5:1068–1076.
Li, H. B., K. Ohno, H. Gui, and V. Pirrotta. 2013. Insulators target active genes to transcription factories and polycomb-gulonogammarepressed genes to polycomb bodies. PLoS Genetics 9, no. 4:e1003436.
Linster, C. L., T. A. Gomez, K. C. Christensen, L. N. Adler, B. D. Young, C. Brenner, and S. G. Clarke. 2007. Arabidopsis VTC2 encodes a GDP-L-galactose phosphorylase, the last unknown enzyme in the Smirnoff-Wheeler pathway to ascorbic acid in plants. Journal of Biological Chemistry 282, no. 26:18,879–18,885.
Linster, C. L., and E. Van Schaftingen. 2007. Vitamin C. Biosynthesis, recycling and degradation in mammals. FEBS Journal 274, no. 1:1–22.
Martinez del Rio, C. 1997. Can passerines synthesize vitamin C? The Auk 114, no. 3:513–516.
Mohan, S., A. Kapoor, A. Singgih, Z. Zhang, T. Taylor, H. Yu, R. B. Chadwick, et al. 2005. Spontaneous fractures in the mouse mutant sfx are caused by deletion of the gulonolactone oxidase gene, causing vitamin C deficiency. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research 20, no. 9:1597–1610.
Nishikimi, M., R. Fukuyama, S. Minoshima, N. Shimizu, and K. Yagi. 1994. Cloning and chromosomal mapping of the human nonfunctional gene for L-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase, the enzyme for L-ascorbic acid biosynthesis missing in man. Journal of Biological Chemistry 269, no. 18:13,685–13,688.
Nishikimi, M., T. Kawai, and K. Yagi. 1992. Guinea pigs possess a highly mutated gene for L-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase, the key enzyme for L-ascorbic acid biosynthesis missing in this species. Journal of Biological Chemistry 267, no. 30:21,967–21,972.
Nowak, G., C. A. Carter, and R. G. Schnellmann. 2000. Ascorbic acid promotes recovery of cellular functions following toxicant-induced injury. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 167, no. 1:37–45.
Ohta, Y., and M. Nishikimi. 1999. Random nucleotide substitutions in primate nonfunctional gene for L-gulonogamma-lactone oxidase, the missing enzyme in L-ascorbic acid biosynthesis. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1472, no. 1–2:408–411.
Padh, H. 1990. Cellular functions of ascorbic acid. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 68, no. 10:1166–1173.
Phillips, J. E., and V. G. Corces. 2009. CTCF: Master weaver of the genome. Cell 137, no. 7:1194–1211.
Pirrotta, V. 2012. Molecular biology. How to read the chromatin past. Science 337, no. 6097:919–920.
Pohanka, M., J. Pejchal, S. Snopkova, K. Havlickova, J. Z. Karasova, P. Bostik, and J. Pikula. 2012. Ascorbic acid: An old player with a broad impact on body physiology including oxidative stress suppression and immunomodulation: A review. Mini Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry 12, no. 1: 35–43.
Prado-Martinez, J., P. H. Sudmant, J. M. Kidd, H. Li, J. L. Kelley, B. Lorente-Galdos, K. R. Veeramah, et al. 2013. Great ape genetic diversity and population history. Nature 499, no. 7459:471–475.
Roy, R. N., and B. C. Guha. 1958. Species difference in regard to the biosynthesis of ascorbic acid. Nature 182, no. 4631: 319–320.
Sanford, J. C. 2010. Genetic entropy and the mystery of the genome. Waterloo, New York: FMS Publications. Smirnoff, N. 2001. L-ascorbic acid biosynthesis. Vitamins and Hormones 61:241–266.
Teixeira-Silva, A., R. M. Silva, J. Carneiro, A. Amorim, and L. Azevedo. 2013. The role of recombination in the origin and evolution of alu subfamilies. PloS One 8, no. 6:e64884.
Tennessen, J. A., A. W. Bigham, T. D. O’Connor, W. Fu, E. E. Kenny, S. Gravel, S. McGee, et al. 2012. Evolution and functional impact of rare coding variation from deep sequencing of human exomes. Science 337, no. 6090:64–69.
Tomkins, J. P. 2011. How genomes are sequenced and why it matters: Implications for studies in comparative genomics of humans and chimpanzees. Answers Research Journal 4:81–88. Retrieved from
http://www.answersingenesis.org/article ... e-genomics.
Tomkins, J. P. 2013a. Alleged human chromosome 2 “fusion site” encodes an active DNA binding domain inside a complex and highly expressed gene—negating fusion. Answers Research Journal 6:367–375. Retrieved from
http://www.answersingenesis.org/article ... ome-fusion.
Tomkins, J. P. 2013b. Comprehensive analysis of chimpanzee and human chromosomes reveals average DNA similarity of 70%. Answers Research Journal 6:63–69. Retrieved from
http://www.answersingenesis.org/article ... chromosome.
Tomkins, J. P. 2013c. The human beta-globin pseudogene is non-variable and functional. Answers Research Journal 6:293–301. Retrieved from
http://www.answersingenesis.org/article ... seudogenes.
Tomkins, J., and J. Bergman. 2013. Incomplete lineage sorting and other ‘rogue’ data fell the tree of life. Journal of Creation 27, no. 3:84–92.
Truman, R., and P. Borger. 2007. Why the shared mutations in the Hominidae exon X GULO pseudogene are not evidence for common descent. Journal of Creation 21, no. 3:118–127.
Uddin, R. K., Y. Zhang, V. M. Siu, Y.-S. Fan, R. L. O’Reilly, J. Rao, and S. M. Singh. 2006. Breakpoint associated with a novel 2.3 Mb deletion in the VCFS region of 22q11 and the role of Alu (SINE) in recurring microdeletions. BMC Medical Genetics 7:18.
Van Bortle, K., and V. G. Corces. 2012. Nuclear organization and genome function. Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology 28:163–187.
Wen, Y. Z., L. L. Zheng, L. H. Qu, F. J. Ayala, and Z. R. Lun. 2012. Pseudogenes are not pseudo any more. RNA Biology 9, no. 1:27–32.
Wong, S. Z. H., B. Ching, Y. R. Chng, W. P. Wong, S. F. Chew, and Y. K. Ip. 2013. Ascorbic acid biosynthesis and brackish water acclimation in the Euryhaline Freshwater White-Rimmed Stingray, Himantura signifer. PloS One 8, no. 6:e66691.
Yang, H. 2013. Conserved or lost: Molecular evolution of the key gene GULO in vertebrate vitamin C biosynthesis. Biochemical Genetics 51, no. 5–6:413–425.
Yang, L., M. Zou, B. Fu, and S. He., 2013. Genome-wide identification, characterization, and expression analysis of lineage-specific genes within zebrafish. BMC Genomics 14:65.
Yuan, W., T. Wu, H. Fu, C. Dai, H. Wu, N. Liu, X. Li, et al. 2012. Dense chromatin activates Polycomb repressive complex 2 to regulate H3 lysine 27 methylation. Science 337, no. 6097:971–975.