Projo Subterranean Homepage NewsBottom-up journalism from the pros: News, tech and culture by Sheila Lennon |
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Weird science: A step closer to creating life out of chemical soup. Los Angeles Times: Using off-the-shelf chemical compounds, scientists for the first time have constructed the entire genome of a bacterium, a key step toward their ultimate goal of creating synthetic life forms, researchers reported today. What jumped out at me was the language used by Dr. Hamilton O. Smith, the Nobel Prize-winning biologist who led the research team at the J. Craig Venter Institute in Rockville, Md.: "...It's a matter of time before we have it booted up in a cell." Frankenstein is perhaps an old-fashioned way to view the outcome of this experiment. He's describing life as an operating system in a biological computer. The result may, of course, be the same.
CANBERRA (Reuters) - An Australian teenage girl has become the world's first known transplant patient to change blood groups and take on the immune system of her organ donor, doctors said on Friday, calling her a "one-in-six-billion miracle." Brennan seems to have acquired a new operating system. 1 CommentsLeave a comment |
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Can DNA change in the recipient of an organ transplant, both ancestry and medical?
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