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Ground-Breaking King of the Lab: Venter Creates Synthetic DNA

20 May

Synthetic DNA

From Denny: Frankenstein move over ’cause a new kind of scientist is in town: a Vietnam era ex-Navy guy gone micro-organism tech. Scientists are crowing they have succeeded in creating a living cell from DNA synthesized in a lab. It isn’t yet a synthetic organism but give them time.

It is just me or is it just a bit creepy to create life in a lab? Can we all imagine a generation from now of the typical high school kid creating synthetic life in their lab? Of course, people of my mind are wondering where this may go since science has never owned a great track record on exercising wisdom in their achievements.

J. Craig Venter, creator of synthetic genome

Who is the scientist behind this scientific curiosity? Craig Venter is his name, a name that draws a lot of unfriendly fire in the science community. He sure has his detractors but even they admit he does think big.

What Did Venter Do?

Venter and his team have worked on this synthetic life idea since 1995. They utilized four chemical DNA constituents – called A, T, C and G – to form a synthetic genome. They inserted that synthetic genome into a cell, giving the cell orders as it grew and multiplied.

When you have worked on a project for that many years it’s obvious there were a number of high hurdles to overcome. Venter said his first question was to figure out how to make a very big piece of DNA. You see – for those of us not in the DNA biz he explained – most chemical synthesis techniques will stop working once you arrive at a few thousand DNA letters. Great, so how to solve that problem? He discovered he could not copy a whole genome so he decided to do it in parts – sort of like the old adage of “the ant eating the elephant” solution. Venter said, “We wanted to make something close to a million.”

How Venter Did It

Solving that chemistry issue took him most of the last 15 years of his life. How did they solve that problem? He and his team placed smaller fragments of synthesized DNA into bacterial cells where they huddled together into a tight group like a football team, becoming larger fragments. The second stage of the solution was to then insert the now enlarged fragments into yeast cells so the yeast cells could slap them all on the back making everyone fast friends. Read that as the yeast cells were successful at stitching those larger fragments all together like a quilt. Hmmm… brings up Frankenstein images, doesn’t it? 🙂

And if that wasn’t enough to solve, they still had to figure out how to transfer that huge chunk of DNA into a cell without fumbling said football and losing the game. They didn’t want all their hard work to end up breaking as they transferred it. Venter also wanted to prove that he could transfer a working chromosome from one football team to another – like one species of bacteria to another.

Venter was crowned Creator God of Bacteria when he took the genome from a simple small cell bacteria, known by the impressive handle of Mycoplasma mycoides, and transferred it to another bacteria species (Mycoplasma capricolum). He will now be worshiped by very low life forms for at least a millennium – maybe longer.

You would think the new title of Creator God of Bacteria would have satisfied his scientist ego but no, Venter pressed on. He whipped out his science version of a copier and made an exact copy of the mycoides genome (think Football Team Red if your eyes are starting to glaze over at all the technicalities) in his lab and then transferred his synthetic genome into capricolum (think Football Team Blue).

Was it truly this easy? Wishing was not happening. To get the system to work correctly Venter and his team had to determine a more accurate DNA sequence for the mycoides genome (Football Team Red) and that detour journey took a number of years to figure out. This week, in the scientists’ Holy Grail of journals, Science, Venter and his team got to scream their success from the rooftops.

Weighing in on the accomplishment is synthetic biologist from Boston University, Jim Collins, who claims this really isn’t a new life form. He is saying basically what I’ve been thinking about this story is that “Its genome is a stitched together copy of the DNA of an organism that exists in nature.”

While Collins concedes Venter has created something remarkable it still isn’t the Holy Grail of creating life. “We don’t know enough biology to create or synthesize life,” says Collins. “I think we’re far removed from understanding how would you build a truly artificial genome from scratch.”

While it’s cool that Venter has figured out how to control a cell’s behavior by using DNA created in the lab it sure leaves us wondering about this new situation in our world. Bioethicists have yet another tough task ahead as they wrestle with the morality.

Synthetic genome chart

Ethical Science Dilemmas

Another scientist to give his opinion is Gregory Kaebnick, a scholar at the Hasting Center, a bioethics think tank. Kaebnick is concerned about this new field of synthetic biology. What happens if any synthetic organisms make their escape from the lab and run wild, creating chaos? Does this cross the line where humans start playing God before they are fully grounded in wisdom? The bacteria crowd might be taking back Venter’s crown as King of the Lab.

What happens if organisms no longer evolve on their own as they always have? Kaebnick thinks this could be a troubling developmental change in our world. Pretty much sounds like an “all bets are off” scenario as the rules of the world as we know it could change drastically or subtly. No one knows.

Of course, Venter, ever the controversial Devil’s Advocate, believes his work is the very reason we should be exploring this area of creating life. “We decided that writing new biological software and creating new species, we could create new species to what we want them to do, not what they evolved to do,” says Venter.

Venter’s new company is called Synthetic Genomics. What he wants to do with these newly created species is make fuels and new vaccines. Currently, Venter and his colleagues have a monopoly on the techniques for genomic manipulation. They are also handsomely funded. There are other competitors working in related fields. The world of synthetic micro-organisms is inching closer and closer into colliding with the world of what we know and changing into the world of possibilities to cheer and fear.

*** For a bio on Craig Venter and more about his institute: J. Craig Venter Institute

*** For his 2007 book, A life decoded: my genome, my life By J. Craig Venter, check out the Google reader preview of 62 pages.

*** THANKS for visiting, feel welcome to drop a comment or opinion, enjoy bookmarking this post on your favorite social site, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!

Moon Water: Order Up Your Cocktail Today

22 Mar

An artist’s rendering of the Centaur upper stage rocket separating from its shepherding spacecraft, on its way to crashing into the moon’s surface, as part of the LCROSS experiment testing for evidence of water ice. (AP Photo/NASA)

From Denny: Last year all of planet Earth was excited we found trace amounts of water on the moon. Visions of future moon colonies danced in our heads. Ever since that discovery, scientists have been pouring over the massive data returned by the probes sent to map the lunar surface. What did they find? There are actually different forms of water compounds on the moon.

Just when you thought water was just water… 🙂 Turns out Moon water comes from different sources which accounts for the varying organic compounds each contains. So, when you next belly up to the bar at your favorite nightspot and order a Moon Cocktail make sure to ask for one of three kinds of Moon Water: “nearly pure ice, a fluffy mix of ice crystals and dirt or a thin layer of water that comes and goes across the surface.” When drinking Moon water we have our gourmet choices. Evian and Perrier, move over, because Moon water is coming into the market and onto your grocery store shelves soon.

India’s Chandrayaan-1 moon probe found frozen water in 40 craters. It was NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) mission to slam into the moon. Brilliant, huh?! They wanted to test soil content from the resulting impact plume. From the initial impact they found water and hydroxyl – and also tiny bits of pure ice mixed in from the surface layer which is younger ice. Underneath this was a deeper layer of water released which scientists believe to be from a much earlier time period.

What compounds did they find in this ice? According to Paul Spudis, of Houston’s Lunar and Planetary Institute, “That water contains more water ice, in addition to a variety of molecular compounds – sulfur dioxide (SO2), methanol (CH3OH), and diacetylene (H2C4). This layer, at least one-half-meter below the surface, is probably older than the ice we’re finding on the surface.”

Spudis speculates that “some surface water likely comes from bodies that have impacted the moon over the eons – comets, for example, which are primarily ice and that some water might have been formed on the moon. Protons in the solar wind can make small amounts of water continuously on the lunar surface by interacting with metal oxides in the rocks.”

While you are waiting at the futuristic space station in your mind for your ride to the new Moon colony, remember that special Moon Cocktail that inspired you to be a space tourist. Just when scientists think they have nailed down what they think something to be, new information comes into their world and now ours to prove them wrong. Have you ever seen so many people so excited to realize there is more beyond their wildest hopes? Stay tuned; there is still more data to be examined and who knows what will turn up next to delight and amaze us.

*** THANKS for visiting, feel welcome to drop a comment or opinion, enjoy bookmarking this post on your favorite social site, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!

Chilean Earthquake Shortened Earths Day

3 Mar

From Denny: This is a fact few of us thought about when we first heard the news of the 8.8 earthquake in Chile. It really does make us wonder about the idea of the exponential curve in relation to a longer period of time how these incidences will add up to effect the planet. What am I talking about? The Earth’s day is now just a small amount shorter.

Richard Gross, and another scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, put the pencil to the math. They calculated this recent high magnitude earthquake has now shortened the day by 1.26 microseconds. In case you forgot, a microsecond is one-millionth of a second. The length of a day is the time it takes for Earth to complete one rotation: 86,400 seconds or 24 hours.

OK, so how did this earthquake accomplish this feat of shortening Earth’s day? It caused the Earth to rotate faster by nudging some of its mass closer to the planet’s axis. Reminds you of one of those Olympic skaters in a spin where they pull up their arms to increase the speed of the spin.

The opposite can happen too. An earthquake “can slow the rotation and lengthen the day – if it redistributes mass away from that axis,” Gross said.

Can this small change be permanent? According to Gross the answer is yes. He also commented that a series of high magnitude earthquakes like this one could possible add up to make the day shorter “but these changes are very, very small.”

How small are these changes? There are so small that scientists are not able to record them directly. You would be surprised how much of science is not direct but rather indirect observation and recording. Gross also stated that true observations of the length of the day are accurate to five-millionths of a second. What about his estimate? His estimate about the Chilean quake’s effect is just a quarter of that span of time.

*** THANKS for visiting, come back often, feel welcome to drop a comment, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!

Scary Odd: Chilean Earthquake Shortened Earths Day

1 Mar

From Denny: This is a fact few of us thought about when we first heard the news of the 8.8 earthquake in Chile. It really does make us wonder about the idea of the exponential curve in relation to a longer period of time how these incidences will add up to effect the planet. What am I talking about? The Earth’s day is now just a small amount shorter.

Richard Gross, and another scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, put the pencil to the math. They calculated this recent high magnitude earthquake has now shortened the day by 1.26 microseconds. In case you forgot, a microsecond is one-millionth of a second. The length of a day is the time it takes for Earth to complete one rotation: 86,400 seconds or 24 hours.

OK, so how did this earthquake accomplish this feat of shortening Earth’s day? It caused the Earth to rotate faster by nudging some of its mass closer to the planet’s axis. Reminds you of one of those Olympic skaters in a spin where they pull up their arms to increase the speed of the spin.

The opposite can happen too. An earthquake “can slow the rotation and lengthen the day – if it redistributes mass away from that axis,” Gross said.

Can this small change be permanent? According to Gross the answer is yes. He also commented that a series of high magnitude earthquakes like this one could possible add up to make the day shorter “but these changes are very, very small.”

How small are these changes? There are so small that scientists are not able to record them directly. You would be surprised how much of science is not direct but rather indirect observation and recording. Gross also stated that true observations of the length of the day are accurate to five-millionths of a second. What about his estimate? His estimate about the Chilean quake’s effect is just a quarter of that span of time.

*** For more science posts like this, please visit The Soul Calendar.

*** THANKS for visiting, come back often, feel welcome to drop a comment, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!

Chilean Earthquake Shortened Earths Day

1 Mar

From Denny: This is a fact few of us thought about when we first heard the news of the 8.8 earthquake in Chile. It really does make us wonder about the idea of the exponential curve in relation to a longer period of time how these incidences will add up to effect the planet. What am I talking about? The Earth’s day is now just a small amount shorter.

Richard Gross, and another scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, put the pencil to the math. They calculated this recent high magnitude earthquake has now shortened the day by 1.26 microseconds. In case you forgot, a microsecond is one-millionth of a second. The length of a day is the time it takes for Earth to complete one rotation: 86,400 seconds or 24 hours.

OK, so how did this earthquake accomplish this feat of shortening Earth’s day? It caused the Earth to rotate faster by nudging some of its mass closer to the planet’s axis. Reminds you of one of those Olympic skaters in a spin where they pull up their arms to increase the speed of the spin.

The opposite can happen too. An earthquake “can slow the rotation and lengthen the day – if it redistributes mass away from that axis,” Gross said.

Can this small change be permanent? According to Gross the answer is yes. He also commented that a series of high magnitude earthquakes like this one could possible add up to make the day shorter “but these changes are very, very small.”

How small are these changes? There are so small that scientists are not able to record them directly. You would be surprised how much of science is not direct but rather indirect observation and recording. Gross also stated that true observations of the length of the day are accurate to five-millionths of a second. What about his estimate? His estimate about the Chilean quake’s effect is just a quarter of that span of time.

*** THANKS for visiting, come back often, feel welcome to drop a comment, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!

Last Resort Climate Fix: Geo-Engineering

1 Feb

From Denny: Thank you everyone who has been checking back on this blog. I took some time off the first of the year and was ready to start writing science posts again – and then the Haiti earthquake hit.

One of my cousins goes in and out of Haiti often, donating her time as a music teacher. Yes, turns out she was there – along with 45,000 other Americans – when the earthquake devastated the place. The family has been trying frantically for weeks to find out if she survived. Official channels were jammed with high call volume and unofficial channels were chaotic to say the least. We did manage to confirm through several of her music friends they had talked to her immediately after the earthquake.

Finally, more than two weeks later she got a message out to her family. She is fine with only minor bruising and she plans to remain for a while to help the people of Haiti.

Now that big drama is resolved it’s on to the science… You can bet since the Haiti incident I’ve been looking at a lot of articles about earthquakes and violent weather! 🙂

Check out the latest science idea – which I find incredulous. It seems humanity keeps trying to take on bigger and bigger projects without fully thinking through the unintended consequences.

How smart is this? First humanity develops destructive atomic bombs, biological warfare, then Star Wars armed space satellites and now we are going to start tinkering with Mother Nature’s weather systems we still don’t understand well? Where does the arrogance of “because we can” and the fear of what we might lose intersect with wisdom?

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

*** THANKS for visiting, come back often, feel free to leave a comment, a big shout out to current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email!

Video: How Weird Would Earth Look with Saturns Rings?

23 Nov

From Denny: This was a curious video I ran across today on Digg. Someone decided to do an artist’s rendering of what Earth might look like if we had the rings of Saturn. It’s a bit disorienting, amusing and even eerily beautiful to see the images of various cities around the world with how the rings would look in their skyline.

If our night skies looked different all these centuries can you imagine how our religions and mythology stories might have taken a far different track from this astronomical influence?

Take a look at this wonderful video:

*** Thanks for visiting!

22 Interesting Varied Blog Posts, 23 Oct 2009

25 Oct

Photo from Stripes Photography group on StumbleUpon – wonderful photo – if anyone knows the photographer, please pass it along so they can receive attribution…

From Denny: In case you missed a goodie, here are some of the best from all the blogs this past week, enjoy! Thanks for all your support, everyone, and have a great weekend too! XXOO, Denny

Video: Americas Republicans Losing Support Even in Bad Economy

Video: Restaurant Foods Compost Great Wines

Busy Day at The Social Poets, Posts on Dan Browns Book The Lost Symbol and Obama

Video: 2,700 Year Old Mystery Mummy Surfaces at Miami Museum

Video: Meet the Human Calculator

Video: Noetic Science Examines Consciousness

Video: Pregnant Mother Dies of Swine Flu Misdiagnosis

Cool Video: Prez Obama Honored for Nobel in Sand Sculpture

10 Funny Quotes, Late Night Show Funnies, Spiritual Thought of the Day, Why Obama Deserves Nobel Peace Prize

4 Funny Posts and 4 Yummy Recipes

Chocolate, Pecan and Coconut Cookies

Recipe: Velvet Chocolate Cheesecake

Recipe: Fun Halloween Oreo Spider Cookies

2 Easy Basic Brownie Recipes

2 Easy Cake Recipes: Louisiana Praline Toffee Bundt Cake, Southern Livings Popular Praline Cake

Recipes: Make Your Own Cajun Blackened Seasoning for Fish or Chicken!

3 Recipes: 3-Step Slow Cooker Baby Back Ribs, Sweet Tangy Slaw, Sweet Potato Roasted Garlic Turnovers

Do You Remember Your Dreams and Know Why It Is Important?

Haiku Style Imagination Quote and Photo

How Do You Know Your Creativity is Art?

How is the Dream Helpful on Our Life Journey?

Why is Joy Important to Cultivate in Your Life?

22 Interesting Varied Blog Posts, 23 Oct 2009

24 Oct

Photo from Stripes Photography group on StumbleUpon – wonderful photo – if anyone knows the photographer, please pass it along so they can receive attribution…

From Denny: In case you missed a goodie, here are some of the best from all the blogs this past week, enjoy! Thanks for all your support, everyone, and have a great weekend too! XXOO, Denny

Video: Americas Republicans Losing Support Even in Bad Economy

Video: Restaurant Foods Compost Great Wines

Busy Day at The Social Poets, Posts on Dan Browns Book The Lost Symbol and Obama

Video: 2,700 Year Old Mystery Mummy Surfaces at Miami Museum

Video: Meet the Human Calculator

Video: Noetic Science Examines Consciousness

Video: Pregnant Mother Dies of Swine Flu Misdiagnosis

Cool Video: Prez Obama Honored for Nobel in Sand Sculpture

10 Funny Quotes, Late Night Show Funnies, Spiritual Thought of the Day, Why Obama Deserves Nobel Peace Prize

4 Funny Posts and 4 Yummy Recipes

Chocolate, Pecan and Coconut Cookies

Recipe: Velvet Chocolate Cheesecake

Recipe: Fun Halloween Oreo Spider Cookies

2 Easy Basic Brownie Recipes

2 Easy Cake Recipes: Louisiana Praline Toffee Bundt Cake, Southern Livings Popular Praline Cake

Recipes: Make Your Own Cajun Blackened Seasoning for Fish or Chicken!

3 Recipes: 3-Step Slow Cooker Baby Back Ribs, Sweet Tangy Slaw, Sweet Potato Roasted Garlic Turnovers

Do You Remember Your Dreams and Know Why It Is Important?

Haiku Style Imagination Quote and Photo

How Do You Know Your Creativity is Art?

How is the Dream Helpful on Our Life Journey?

Why is Joy Important to Cultivate in Your Life?

22 Interesting Varied Blog Posts, 23 Oct 2009

24 Oct

Photo from Stripes Photography group on StumbleUpon – wonderful photo – if anyone knows the photographer, please pass it along so they can receive attribution…

From Denny: In case you missed a goodie, here are some of the best from all the blogs this past week, enjoy! Thanks for all your support, everyone, and have a great weekend too! XXOO, Denny

Video: Americas Republicans Losing Support Even in Bad Economy

Video: Restaurant Foods Compost Great Wines

Busy Day at The Social Poets, Posts on Dan Browns Book The Lost Symbol and Obama

Video: 2,700 Year Old Mystery Mummy Surfaces at Miami Museum

Video: Meet the Human Calculator

Video: Noetic Science Examines Consciousness

Video: Pregnant Mother Dies of Swine Flu Misdiagnosis

Cool Video: Prez Obama Honored for Nobel in Sand Sculpture

10 Funny Quotes, Late Night Show Funnies, Spiritual Thought of the Day, Why Obama Deserves Nobel Peace Prize

4 Funny Posts and 4 Yummy Recipes

Chocolate, Pecan and Coconut Cookies

Recipe: Velvet Chocolate Cheesecake

Recipe: Fun Halloween Oreo Spider Cookies

2 Easy Basic Brownie Recipes

2 Easy Cake Recipes: Louisiana Praline Toffee Bundt Cake, Southern Livings Popular Praline Cake

Recipes: Make Your Own Cajun Blackened Seasoning for Fish or Chicken!

3 Recipes: 3-Step Slow Cooker Baby Back Ribs, Sweet Tangy Slaw, Sweet Potato Roasted Garlic Turnovers

Do You Remember Your Dreams and Know Why It Is Important?

Haiku Style Imagination Quote and Photo

How Do You Know Your Creativity is Art?

How is the Dream Helpful on Our Life Journey?

Why is Joy Important to Cultivate in Your Life?