On Saturday night we went to see Joan Baez. She older than she used to be but still wonderful. I remember her from the 60s in spite of what they say.1
If you remember the 60s, you weren't there.
If you remember the 60s, you weren't there.
Welcome to the fourth edition of the Molecular and Cell Biology Carnival! Let's get down to business right away...Submit your articles here.
How 'molecular machines' inside cells swing into action to activate genes at different times in a cell's life is revealed today (6 November) in new research published in Molecular Cell.How could you not want to find out more? This sounds like a real breakthrough.
Genes are made of double stranded DNA molecules containing the coded information an organism's cells need to produce proteins. The DNA double strands need to be 'melted out' and separated in order for the code to be accessed. Once accessed, the genetic codes are converted to messenger RNAs (mRNA) which are used to make proteins. Cells need to produce particular proteins at different times in their lives, to help them respond and adapt to changes in their environment.I'm underwhelmed. How is science journalism ever going to be taken seriously if this is the sort of thing that university press offices publish?
The new study outlines exactly how a molecular machine called RNA polymerase, which reads the DNA code and synthesizes mRNA, is kickstarted by specialised activator proteins. The scientists have discovered that RNA polymerase uses a tightly regulated internal blocking system that prevents genes from being activated when they are not needed.
SLIGHTLY more practical routes to fuel economy occurred to Cliff Allen when he noticed that, according to his petrol gauge, the fuel in the top half of his tank lasted considerably longer than the bottom half. As any Feedback reader (and possibly only a Feedback reader) would, he investigated. Systematically.
Over several months he recorded the distances travelled using the fuel from the top and bottom halves. The average for the top was 400 kilometres (250 miles) and for the bottom a mere 300 kilometres (185 miles). Since then, he writes, "of course I have only used the top of my tank and have consistently achieved around 250 miles - I'm not stupid!"
Cliff was obviously keen to discuss this, at length, with his learned friends, "some of whom gained General Certificate of Secondary Education qualifications" at age 14. He was "mostly appalled at their incredulity and lack of interest".
However, his friend Alan suggested that the fact that petrol always comes out of the bottom of the tank causes it to use more petrol so we might benefit from turning the tank upside-down. John suggested the increased efficiency might be due to the height of the fuel, so the tank should be put on the roof. Mostyn proposed putting a brick in the tank, as this apparently works very well for saving water in toilet cisterns. Tony wants to make the top of the tank larger than the bottom, to increase the proportion of its volume at the top, and thinks a carrot shape would be optimal.
P.S. for the irony impaired.
Regardless of your political views, I want to urge Christians everywhere to be in prayer about this election. There are many scriptural references wherein King David “inquired of God” when he was faced by troubling circumstances (1 Samuel 23:2,4; 30:8; 2 Samuel 2:1; 5:19,23). It is time for Christians everywhere to turn to Him for guidance and wisdom. Find some time to be still and listen to what He wants to tell you. The National Day of Prayer Task Force, led by my wonderful wife, Shirley, has embarked on a national campaign entitled “Pray for Election Day.” All around the country, individuals and groups are being encouraged to gather every Thursday leading up to Nov. 4 between 12 noon and 12:30 p.m. Spend time with the Lord, asking Him to guide and direct those privileged to cast a ballot. If you are able, I would also encourage you to fast and pray immed”ately before the election. After all, it was the Reverend Billy Graham who once said that “To get nations back on their feet, we must first get down on our knees.”20 Amen, Dr. Graham.Apparently God was listening. He answered their prayers on Tuesday. Here's how Tom Hess describes the result [‘We Need to Continue to be in Prayer for America’].
This election is about the future of the nation, but it will also go a long way toward determining the culture your children and grandchildren will come to know. I know you will vote with your children and your children’s children in mind. That certainly puts the election in a different light, doesn’t it?
With an Obama administration forthcoming, Focus Action’s Tom Minnery says, “We’ve got a big challenge ahead of us.”You can't make this stuff up.
He and FRC Action President Tony Perkins encouraged CitizenLink viewers to remain hopeful of what God might do in the next four years — and to be in prayer.
“For those who have been praying for weeks, our responsibility does not end today,” Perkins said. “In Luke 18, Jesus said men should not lose heart, but they should pray. We need to continue to be in prayer for America.”
Minnery pointed out that in the Bible, God worked through pagan rulers such as Nebuchadnezzar, Darius and Cyrus to accomplish his purposes, and that values voters ought to begin praying for President-elect Obama.
“God can use any president for his own purposes,” Minnery said.
[Hat Tip: Primordial Blog]
These days, many people grow up believing that bigger is better. Giant factories that produce Wonder Bread have replaced thousands of corner bakeries, driven by the increased efficiency of scale. There is an unfortunate tendency to extend this view to the biological research community, and I have on occasion heard a major symposium speaker introduced in glowing terms as the coauthor of more than fifty papers per year. While I can admire the energy and management skills required to maintain a very large laboratory, the best biology is rarely done in this way. With a few notable exceptions, the biochemists and molecular biologists I most respect run relatively small laboratories and publish when they have something important to report. As I shall argue here, doing good science is very different from producing bread, and there are compelling reasons why large laboratories are in general less efficient and less interesting than smaller ones. To reflect this fact, I believe that changes in funding patterns and expectations would be useful in the biological sciences.Some "big science" is good. The sequencing of the human genome, and other genomes, for example, was a big science project that benefited the entire biological community. But I'm not sure that significant advances in our understanding of how life works come from big labs. Does anyone have examples? What are the most significant conceptual advances to come out of big labs?
Alberts, B.M. (1985) Limits to growth: In biology, small science is good science. Cell 41:337-338. [PubMed] [doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(85)80001-5]
Dear Professor Moran,This makes me angry. No matter what I do, I'm going to be disappointing a student who might really benefit from a reply. In my opinion the student's Professor is at fault for assigning such a task to the students.
As part of a University assignment, I have been asked to email a group of experts to request their professional opinion on a particular question.
I have come to understand that a child with Dyspraxia should supplement their diet with a high dose of essential fatty acids. However, as non-Dyspraxic people age it is advised that they also should supplement their diet with these oils to combat age-related memory loss. Does this mean that people with Dyspraxia should augment their intake yet again when they age? If so, could this have an adverse effect on their health?
As your organisation came up in an internet search as being reputable, your answer to this question would be much appreciated.
I would like to thank you for taking the time to read this email and I hope to hear from you soon.
Yours sincerely,
The Obama presidency is great news for almost everyone. It's bad news for some odd ideological bedfellows: the Religious Right and the so-called New Atheists.Who knew? I bet all atheists and agnostics are feeling pretty stupid right now knowing that they've been tricked by the slick-talking Obama.
Into the all or nothing culture wars, and the all or nothing wars between the so-called New Atheists and religion the election of President elect Obama reintroduces nuance. President elect Obama's ability to believe in Jesus, yet question, is going to rescue American religion in general and Christianity in particular, from the extremes.
There is no way to understand President elect Obama's victory as anything less than the start of not just a monumental political change but a spiritual revolution as well.
To the New Atheists who think that with the resounding defeat of the Religious Right, we are entering a secular age, think again. Obama will block your path. He'll do it for the same reason he'll make the Religious Right's paranoid fantasies about him soon seem shamefully ridiculous. That's because President elect Obama is that rarest of all rare people: a thoughtful, compassionate and likable statesman who also is a thoughtful, compassionate and likable religious believer.Sounds like trouble. President Obama is going to block the path to a secular society. Gosh. I knew that American Presidents were leaders of the free world and the most powerful men (no women so far) on the planet but even I had no idea they were that powerful.
President-elect Obama brings another perspective to faith . It goes something like this:Ohmygod. Frank Shaeffer and Barack Obama have discovered the atheist dirty little secret. All of us atheists are flat and dull—we can't be born, get married, or die without calling upon God to help us.
How do cultures define themselves if not through ritual? In the "big moments" of life; birth, marriage, sickness, death "who" -- in the inimitable words of Ghost Busters -- "you gonna call?" As President elect Obama has said, and I paraphrase: Strip the human race of our spiritual language and what do we tell each other about hope?
As President elect Obama has pointed out, a world of all math but no poetry is not fit for human habitation. If everything feels flat and dull, stripped of mystery and meaning who will bother to do the science? Why bother, if all we're doing is serving those selfish genes for another round of meaningless propagation?
So does this faith always make "sense?" No. Because our perspective is from the inside, something like paint contemplating the painting of which it's a part. We're all in the same boat, all stuck on the same "canvas."
[Hat Tip: RichardDawkins.net]
Doctor John Northrop. You and your collaborators have developed the crystallization of enzymes and other active proteins into an art, of which you are the masters. The conditions for successful work in this field were explored by you, and in the course of that work interesting relationships between enzymes and related proteins were discovered, which may ultimately afford a clue to a fuller understanding of the mode of action of these substances.We now know that trypsin, pepsin, and chymotrypsin are similar proteases that cleave other proteins. We also know that the active enzymes are derived from inactive precursors called zymogens. The zymogens (pepsinogen, trypsinogen, and chymtrypsinogen) are cleaved to remove part of the protein making the remainder into an acive enzyme. It's interesting to see how John H. Northrop described this discovery in his acceptance speech.
Formation of enzymes from their precursors. Pepsin, trypsin, and chymotrypsin are derived from inactive precursors. These precursors were isolated and crystallized and the formation of the active enzyme studied. The formation of pepsin from pepsinogen and trypsin from trypsinogen are autocatalytic reactions. These enzymes may therefore be "propagated", just as are bacteria. The formation of trypsin from trypsinogen may also be catalyzed by enterokinase, an enzyme of the digestive tract, or by an enzyme produced by a mold (Penicillium.) The formation of chymotrypsin from chymotrypsinogen is catalyzed only by trypsin, so far as is known. In all these reactions the increase in enzymatic activity is accompanied quantitatively by the appearance of the new enzyme protein which is quite different in all its properties from the original precursor. It seems to me that these results are perhaps the most convincing evidence that the enzymatic activity is actually a property of the protein molecule.
This measure would amend the state constitution so that only a union between one man and one woman would be valid or recognized as a marriage in the state. A similar measure was on the ballot in 2006 but failed.According to the exit poll [Arizona Prop.102], 67% of Protestants voted to ban gay marriage as did 51% of Catholics. About 13% of voters said they had no religion and 69% of them voted against Proposition 102.
This measure would prohibit unmarried "sexual partner[s]" from adopting children or from serving as foster parents. The measure specifies that the prohibition applies to both opposite-sex as well as same-sex couples.According to the exit poll [Arkansas Initiative 1], the voters are evenly split between Democrats, Republicans, and Independents. Democrats voted against the initiative (52%) but the other two groups voted in favor of the ban. A majority of college graduates (52%) and those with postgraduate education (54%) voted in favor of the ban on adoptions.
This measure would amend the state constitution to specify that only marriages between one man and one woman would be recognized as valid in the state. If passed, the measure would trump a May 2008 ruling by the California Supreme Court that legalized same-sex marriage.According to the exit poll [California Proposition 8], a majority of whites (53%) and Asians (53%) voted against Proposition 8 while a majority of African-Americans (70%) and Latinos (51%) voted in favor of the ban. Democrats (65%) and Independents (56%) were against the ban but 81% of Republicans voted in favor of the ban on gay marriage.
This measure would amend the state constitution to define the term "person" to include "any human being from the moment of fertilization." This definition would be applied to all aspects of the state constitution, including the provisions that ensure that no person has his or her life, liberty, or property taken away without due process of law. Thus, the measure would essentially have the effect of banning abortion.According to the exit poll [Colorado Amendment 48], this amendment should have been approved by a substantial majority.
This measure would amend the state constitution to define marriage as a union between one man and one woman. In order to amend the Florida constitution, 60 percent of voters must vote in favor of the amendment.According to the exit poll [Florida Amendment 2], 71% of Protestants and 66% of Catholics voted in favor of the amendment to ban gay marriage. A majority of Whites (60%), African-Americans (71%), and Latinos (64%) voted for the ban.
This measure would prohibit all abortions in the state except in cases where mother's life or health is at risk or in cases of rape or incest for pregnancies of less than 20 weeks. A similar measure that did not include exceptions for rape or the health of the mother was on the ballot in 2006, but was rejected by voters 44 to 56 percent.According to the exit poll [South Dakota Initiative 11], only evangelical born-again Christians and conservative Republicans supported the initiative. A majority of all other groups voted against it.
This measure would allow terminally ill, competent, adult residents of the state to request and self-administer lethal medication prescribed by a physician. The person requesting to end his or her life must be medically predicted to have six months or less to live.According to the exit poll [Washington Initiative 1000], this initiative was supported by liberals (81%) and moderates (63%) and opposed by conservatives (66%). There are more liberals (29% of the voters) than in most states. Republicans (63%) voted against the initiative while Democrats (75%) and Independents (59%) voted for it.