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Ancient Planet

Long before our Sun and Earth ever existed, a Jupiter-sized planet formed around a sun-like star. Now, almost 13 billion years later, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has precisely measured the mass of this farthest and oldest known planet. The ancient planet has had a remarkable history, because it has wound up in an unlikely, rough neighborhood. It ...

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AncientPlanet
Chemistry

When Chlorine Met Sodium...

Sodium is a required element in human physiology. The eleventh element in the periodic table, sodium is a soft, silvery white metal that can be easily cut through with a paring knife. It is highly ... Continue reading

WhenChlorineMetSodium
Geology

Crater Lake

Crater Lake: overwhelmingly yet sublimely beautiful. Moody. At times brilliantly blue, ominously somber; at other times buried in a mass of brooding clouds. The lake is magical, enchanting - a remnant ... Continue reading

CraterLake
Geology

A National Park of Caves

Carlsbad Caverns National Park has been designated as a world heritage site because of its unique and surprising geology - a story more than 250 million years old that can be read both above and below ... Continue reading

ANationalParkofCaves
Biology

Who Moved My Moldy Cheese?

There are few things less appetizing than a fuzzy, moldy piece of cheese. However, one of the most popular cheeses, Blue Cheese and its varieties, the French Roquefort, the English Stilton and the ... Continue reading

MoldyCheese

The Dogma of Life

MolecularBiologyDogmas are authoritative tenets common in religion and philosophy. But in molecular biology? Molecular biology has a central dogma, proposed by Francis Crick in 1953, that says that genetic information flows from DNA to RNA to proteins.

The journey from raw genetic information to life begins inside the cell's nucleus. There, instructions for life are coded in the language of DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid. DNA language is written with just four 'letters' (bases): A (for adenine), T (thymine), C (cytosine), and G (guanine). The 'D' in DNA comes from one of DNA's components, the sugar deoxyribose. The sugar in RNA, or ribonucleic acid, is ribose, which has one more oxygen atom than deoxyribose. RNA uses the same letters as DNA, but instead of T it uses a U (for uracyl). Whereas DNA is double stranded (it is composed of two backbones bonded by pairs of letters, A pairs with T and C pairs with G), RNA is single stranded.

RNA polymerases synthesize one type of RNA, messenger RNA (mRNA), which is a copy of the DNA sequence in the nucleus. Then, mRNA carries the genetic information from the nucleus to the protein-making machine of the cell, the ribosome. The ribosome reads the sequence of letters in the mRNA - every 3 bases code for an amino acid - to form proteins. Proteins are long chains of amino acids that make up muscles and hair, sense light, and regulate vital functions in the human body. One could say then that life is what it is, thanks to a dogma.