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The Future of Molecular Biology

The Future of Molecular Biology. Ryan Emptage & Cole Davis Special Thanks to Dr. Sepeta. Introduction. Catalyst: DNA discovery by Watson and Crick Secrets of DNA still being discovered DNA synthesis is starting to take off. ProtoLife. CEO Norman Packard

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The Future of Molecular Biology

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  1. The Future of Molecular Biology Ryan Emptage & Cole Davis Special Thanks to Dr. Sepeta

  2. Introduction • Catalyst: DNA discovery by Watson and Crick • Secrets of DNA still being discovered • DNA synthesis is starting to take off

  3. ProtoLife • CEO Norman Packard • Creating brand new living organism from lab chemicals: the “Los Alamos Bug” • Life = mechanism of Darwinian Evolution • Simple approach: cover containment, heredity, metabolism

  4. Containment • Oily glob of fatty acid • Hydrophilic heads and hydrophobic tails • Will not require water

  5. Heredity • Double-stranded PNA • Same nucleotides as DNA • Uncharged backbone • Temp makes PNA strand separate • Charged exposed nucleotides migrate to surface & replicated using primers • Sink back into fatty acid glob when completed

  6. Metabolism • “food” will be “masked” fatty acids • Masks are light-sensitive • When masks are hit by a photon, they remove themselves • Fatty acid now charge and joins others in membrane • When membrane too large, surface tension causes division

  7. What the “Bug” could do • Breakdown of toxic chemicals • Produce alternate fuel sources: hydrogen • “Diagnostic” drug • Could evolve to fit into its surroundings • Huge Drawback: Mechanism for evolution shaky

  8. The Old Dogma in Genetics • One gene one protein • Rest of DNA is junk • Not true in prokaryotes

  9. Intronic RNA is just as vital as the Proteins created from the entronic RNA • It is thought that the intronic RNA plays a pivotal role in the development of the fetus

  10. Types of Intronic RNA • RNA interference • siRNA • miRNA • tncRNA

  11. Discovery of RNA interference • Jorgensen and Mol • Purple petunias • Injecting purple pigment genes into the flowers to make them more purple • Opposite happened

  12. Biocomplexity • Protein encoding genes are not relative to complexity • Rice plants have more genes then humans • Non-proton encoding genes are relative to complexity

  13. Precursor to life • Ronald Breaker theorized that the active RNA existed before DNA and proteins. • Increasing the debate about evolution

  14. Pseudogenes • Shinji Hirotsune • Mice genetically engineered to carry a fruit fly gene • When injected into a pseudogene that the mice shared with fruit flies the mice died • Pseudogenes were thought to do nothing

  15. Anti-sense RNA • Some RNA strands have complementary anti-sense RNA strands that mesh together to interfere with the production of the protein.

  16. Introns and Exons • DNA splicing • Before translation, some sequences of nucleotides removed • Classic genetics: all introns removed and trashed • “Wasted” genetic space

  17. Splice Up Your Life • New studies have found: there are many different ways of splicing DNA • Keep introns • Splice selected introns • Place exons on both the normal strand and “waste” strand • Old: 1 protein per gene • New: 3-4 proteins per gene

  18. Where should we stop? • Eckard Wimmer: synthesized poliovirus from mail-order DNA • Craig Venter: Made bacterial virus in 3 weeks • Bioterrorism? • Why risk it? • Benefits very substantial • Treat diseases, repair cells, fuel sources

  19. Reduce the Risk • Research license • Crosschecks on suspicious DNA orders: Blue Heron • “honor code” reporting to government • “self-destruct gene” in all experimental organisms • “Biology is poised to lose its innocence” • George Poste

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