Apologies for big mistake in that last blog!

Oh God, oh God, why do we keep doing this? In last week’s blog Plastic Pollution, killed by neo liberalism and how we can’t keep up, we forgot to include anything that covered that last bit! Tiredness, information overkill, whatever the reason we apologise utterly un-reservedly. This is what we were going to say:

There has been yet another discovery in Biochemistry. A noble and intriguing discovery no doubt. But one which has left us reeling, longing for the simplicity of earlier times. Before we start, read this: The study of RNA’s strangest form, from the admirable Nature Briefings

Circular RNAs (circRNAs) — molecules in which an unusual version of the standard RNA-splicing process folds the strand back on itself — are implicated in diseases from cancer to Alzheimer’s, but exactly what they do is still a mystery. This is in part because circRNAs are so rare, and distinguishing their impact from that of their linear cousins isn’t easy. Fortunately, researchers are quickly assembling a toolbox of materials and methods to recognize, quantify and uncover the functions of these puzzling loops. The database circAtlas is helping to clarify the landscape by requiring listed circRNAs to be identified by two tools, and biotech company Arraystar is designing microarrays to hunt for circRNA in human samples.Nature | 11 min read.

Admirable indeed. But we couldn’t help an odd nostalgia for an age when RNA came in two forms. When there were only three TV channels(in the UK) There was only beer to drink. Do you sometimes, just sometimes, feel the same?

There, Happy Now?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA

#rna #biochemistry #information #nostalgia

Reason or Unreason: which will give you a better life?

What happens when you apply reason to solve your problems? And what happens when you give way to emotions, like fear or anger? Two stories from Nature Briefings illustrate the consequences rather nicely, we think.

Reason: New developments in RNA therapies Older readers, who remember as far back as the Covid-19 pandemic of 2020, may recall how a little thing called an RNA vaccine began to make a big difference. Since when a lot of time has passed, and RNA medical technology has come on leaps and bounds. Don’t take our word for it, read this, RNA treatments nearing reality

As early as the mid-1990s, scientists suggested editing molecules of RNA as a treatment for certain diseases, but at the time, they lacked the tools to do so. Around thirty years later, those tools are at our disposal. Editing RNA instead of DNA has several advantages. It’s a process that cells perform naturally, it doesn’t risk permanently altering a person’s genes and it doesn’t introduce bacterial enzymes to human cells as CRISPR-Cas9 gene therapies do. The field of RNA editing may be in its infancy, but pharma companies are already testing its use in some types of eye disease and cancer.Science | 13 min read

For the record, it’s worth clicking on the link, because the article is very clear, with some truly awesome graphics

Unreason: Let’s chuck foreigners out of our Universities Now try this:

A surge in far-right parties entering governments across Europe is raising concerns for science. Policy experts warn that these parties typically show no interest in research and innovation, leaving scientists vulnerable to budget cuts. In the Netherlands, researchers are bracing for €1 billion (US$1.1 billion) in cuts to the university and research budget under a coalition government including the anti-Islam Party for Freedom. The coalition also wants to limit the intake of international students and implement rules that would require universities to apply for permission to teach courses in English, which could trigger an exodus of foreign academics who don’t want to, or can’t, teach in Dutch.Nature | 5 min read

Chuck out foreigners! Don’t let those evil English speakers corrupt the purity of our language! The really odd thing about this for us is the parallel with football . The most successful Universities are like the most successful clubs(compare the Imperial College with Manchester City, if you like) The trick is to create centres of excellence, drawing in the very best talent you can find, and taking a relaxed view of things like native language, dress sense and marital customs. There is often a strong overlap between certain types of football fan and support for right wing parties. Do they really want their favourite team to send home all the foreign players?

#football #university #learning #reason #unreason

Nature Briefings upsets the apple cart. Big Time

What if everything you learned forty and fifty years ago was wrong? Where would you be then. Something a bit like that happened to us this week when we read this piece from Nature Briefings, Bizarre bacteria scramble workflow of life

Bacteria have stunned biologists by reversing the usual flow of information. Typically genes written in DNA serve as the template for making RNA molecules, which are then translated into proteins. Some viruses are known to have an enzyme that reverses this flow by scribing RNA into DNA. Now scientists have found bacteria with a similar enzyme that can even make completely new genes — by reading RNA as a template. These genes create protective proteins when a bacterium is infected by a virus. “It should change the way we look at the genome,” says biochemist and study co-author Samuel Sternberg.Nature | 4 min read
Reference: bioRxiv preprint (not peer reviewed)
For more coverage of the most abundant living entities on our planet — microorganisms — and the role they play in health, the environment and food systems, update your preferences to sign up to our free weekly
 Nature Briefing: Microbiology

When we were young, there was a central doctrine in biology. Information was stored in genes, deep in the cell nucleus. These were made of DNA. This information was turned into RNA, then used to make proteins. The DNA code was unchangeable, inviolate which made the operations of natural selection all the easier to facilitate. If a large cat suddenly developed DNA to give it stripes, then it could hide better in the jungle, and pass on more copies of the DNA. Hence tigers evolved. Job done. To think the DNA could be modified by some environmental feedback was not only Lamarckian heresy, there was no obvious mechanism by which it could come about.

Now we are Not saying that the above discoveries overthrow the central tenet. Not yet. But remember how the Michelson Morley experiment in the 1880s posed a deep, unanswerable question at the heart of physics which was not fully resolved until Einstein came along a generation or so later. And we are certainly not going to make impulsive conclusions . But our story today, combined with all the recent advances in Epigenetics, do suggest however that the old model is now awaiting a major rethink.

[1]michelson morley experiment##biology #cell biology #dna #rna #darwin #lamarck #bacteria #protein #gene