Posted on 08/29/2006 5:16:17 PM PDT by flevit
A cell isnt merely a bag of enzymes sloshing around in a thick soup of cytoplasm. According to Assistant Professor of Biology Grant Jensen, its more like a multistory factorya set of interwoven production lines complete with conveyor belts, forklifts, and steel I-beams to hold up the roof. Or, if you prefer, the worlds most elaborate Rube Goldberg contraption. The cells cogs and camshafts, springs and motors, girders and sheet metal (or, in the Rube Goldberg case, gloved hands on sticks, precariously balanced bathtubs, and spring-loaded mallets) are protein molecules. Protein machines conduct the cells metabolic business; protein motors make muscles contract, amoebas crawl, and paramecia swim. When a cell is preparing to divide, protein diazo machines make a duplicate set of the genetic blueprints, and then protein winches and cables pull the two copies to opposite ends of the cell. Shells of interlocking proteins armor-plate viruses, protein trusswork gives cells their shape, and protein stickers on the protein girders tell the cell which end is front. Jensens research group wants to photograph each rod, flywheel, and bearing and work out its mechanical interactions with its fellows, in terms as solid as a cast titanium sprocket. As Jensen puts it, Ultimately, of course, we want to understand how things work at an atomic levela proton goes here and it causes this atom to move over there, which causes that atom to move over here, and the sum of it all is that the cell swims, or eats, or reproduces itself.
(Excerpt) Read more at pr.caltech.edu ...
Pancake... Bunny.... Coming right up.
I thought there was a new technology to do a cat scan with a wireless phone.
One day, it'll be weird that electronics and living stuff were ever seen as discrete.
Very interesting, nice find.
bump
you may like this article from cal tech?
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