Life's Greatest Secret

Home > Other > Life's Greatest Secret > Page 47
Life's Greatest Secret Page 47

by Matthew Cobb


  25Francis Crick at a house party, mid 1960s © Guy Selby-Lowndes/ Science Photo Library

  26Jacques Monod with Leo Szilárd ©Photograph by Esther Bubley. Copyright Jean Bubley

  27Crick with Benzer, courtesy of Wellcome Library, London

  28Letters between Seymour Benzer and Francois Jacob © Institut Pasteur

  29Banner in Marshall Nirenberg’s laboratory © The Marshall W. Nirenberg Papers /US National Library of Medicine /Courtesy of Marshall W. Nirenberg

  30Asilomar conference © The Maxine Singer Papers/US National Library of Medicine /Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine

  While every effort has been made to contact copyright-holders of illustrations, the author and publishers would be grateful for information about any illustrations where they have been unable to trace them, and would be glad to make amendments in further editions.

  INDEX

  Note

  The index covers the main text and glossary only; page references beyond 315 are glossary entries. The suffixes f and n indicate treatment in a figure and a footnote respectively on the pages indicated.

  A

  acquired characteristics, inheritance 138, 260

  adaptations

  enzymatic (later induction) 152–3

  and Lamarckian inheritance 261

  adaptive hypothesis (genetic code) 293–4

  adaptor hypothesis (tRNA) 121, 135, 209

  adenine see purines

  Adrian, Edgar 82n

  alien life forms 275

  alkaptonuria 11

  Allison, Tony 126

  α-helix structure 95, 97, 100, 105

  alternative splicing 223, 242

  Altman, Sidney 288

  Alu sequences 245

  amino acids

  acidity and codon structure 292

  code(s) for phenylalanine 174, 182, 184–6, 198–9, 206, 208–9

  defined 316

  encoding by DNA base sequence 124–6, 133

  genetic code specification of x, 114, 116–17, 199

  Miller-Urey experiments yielding 286

  nature of RNA link to 292–4

  need for DNA to code twenty 71–2, 117, 179

  occurrence in comets 286

  patterns, as clues to the genetic code 120, 122–3

  physical template model 72

  RNA Tie Club names 118

  in the RNA world 291

  sequence changes in A and S haemoglobin 127–8, 165

  sequence determining protein function 133, 263–4

  synthetic RNA triplets and 210

  unnatural amino acids 225, 277–8, 284

  Anderson, Thomas 67

  André, Christian 2

  Anfinsen, Christian 264

  anthrax 37

  anti-aircraft systems 21–4

  anti-sense RNA 243

  anticodons 211–12, 293, 316

  Apter, Michael 85, 298, 300

  Arabidopsis, heritable gene silencing 259

  Archaea, discovery of 238–9

  Arkwright, Joseph 36–7

  arsenic-based life 276

  Asilomar Conference, 1975 280–1, 285

  Astbury, William

  at the Cambridge SEB meeting 53–4

  early DNA X-ray work 54, 91–4

  early structure for DNA 102–4

  atomic bomb (Manhattan Project)

  genetic code project compared to 217

  George Gamow and 113

  Leo Szilárd and 151

  Maurice Wilkins and 18, 89

  Norbert Wiener and 29

  NRDC and 20

  Oak Ridge Laboratory and 142

  USSR and 29, 86

  von Neumann and 28–9

  AUG codon 213, 225, 316

  Augenstine, Leroy 144–5

  automation

  in science 310

  self-reproducing automata 32, 80, 119, 146

  Wiener on the potential of 74–7, 310

  Avery, Oswald T.

  awards 38, 50

  Francis Crick on 132, 136, 216

  health 38

  on nucleic acids as the transforming principle 43–53

  reactions to his ideas 55–9, 62–4, 68–70

  transformation in pneumococci 34–41

  Avery, Roy (brother of Oswald) 44–5, 59, 63

  B

  Bacillus thuringiensis 270

  bacteria

  based on ‘synthetic’ DNA 267

  capsule formation and virulence 36–7

  DNA sequences online 235

  enzymatic adaptation 152

  generality of transformation in 59

  negative feedback in biosynthesis by 153–5

  sexual reproduction 51

  transformation in E. coli 51–2, 56, 61, 63

  transformation in pneumococci 36–9, 63

  bacteriophages see phages

  Bakewell, Robert 1–2

  Baltimore, David 251–2

  Bar-Hillel, Yehoshuua 144

  Barnett, Leslie 193

  base pairing

  complementary base pairing 106, 109

  frequency in different genomes 295

  κ and Π base pairs 278

  spontaneous 102

  unnatural base pairs 277–8, 285

  Z and P base pairs 278

  base sequence

  as the genetic code 111

  relation to amino acid sequence 117, 124–6, 133

  variability 54, 62, 70

  bases, DNA

  hydrogen bonding between 58, 92, 101, 106

  ratio of pyrimidines to purines 42, 91, 102, 106, 109

  sequence variation and specificity 57–8

  bases, nucleic acid

  defined 316

  investigations of DNA and RNA 198

  orientation 42

  proportions within and between species 62, 90

  tetranucleotide hypothesis 7, 42, 51, 54, 62, 90

  see also purines; pyrimidines

  Bateson, Gregory 22

  Baulcombe, David 259

  Beadle, George

  at Chemical Basis of Heredity symposium 132

  comments on Benzer’s work 162

  Nobel Prize 215

  one-gene-one-enzyme hypothesis 9–11, 204, 243–4

  at the Washington Physics conference 33

  behaviour, genetic effects 304–5

  Beighton, Elwyn 102

  Beljanski, Mirko 189–90

  Bell, Florence 91, 93, 104

  Benner, Steven 277–8

  Benzer, Seymour 161–3, 165, 187n, 203, 215, 302

  Berg, Paul 279, 281, 285

  Bergmann, Max 46

  β-galactosidase 152–3, 156, 158, 160, 165

  ‘Big Science’ 311–12

  Bigelow, Julian 22–4, 27

  Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 180

  bioinformatics 238

  The Biological Replication of Macromolecules symposium 130

  ‘Biological units endowed with genetic continuity’ meeting 53, 59–60

  biosecurity 280–1, 285

  biotechnology

  DNA fingerprinting as 231

  fermentation as 268

  genetically modified organisms 269–71, 284

  regulation of 284–5

  synthetic biology 277

  Birney, Ewan 242, 247, 271

  bits (binary digits) 27, 78

  Blair, Tony 233

  ‘blender experiments’ 68

  Boivin, André

  on DNA leading to RNA 71, 140, 214

  Mirsky and 56–7, 59

  transformation in E. coli 51–2, 56

  on varying DNA quantities 60–1

  Botstein, David 231

  Boveri, Theodor 3

  Brachet, Jean 58, 71–2, 116

  Bragg, Sir Laurence 94–5, 100, 105, 108

  BRCA1 gene 234

  Brenner, Sydney

  adaptor hypothesis 121, 135, 209

  on cell-free systems 182


  on the coding problem 172

  coinage of ‘codon’ 203

  collaboration with Crick 121, 125, 165–6, 189, 192–3

  developmental biology interest 216

  disproves overlapping code idea 123–4, 200

  messenger RNA idea 165–7, 172, 178, 182, 190

  Nobel Prize 215

  nonsense codons 213

  on using polynucleotides 189

  work with viruses 174, 192, 200, 213

  Bridges, Calvin 4

  Brillouin, Léon 76, 202

  Britten, Roy 243

  Brookhaven Laboratory 174

  BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy) 253–4

  Burnet, Macfarlane

  Enzyme, Antigen and Virus: A Study of Macromolecular Pattern in Action 134–5, 139, 141, 146–7

  on information flows 139–41, 146–7

  meeting with Avery 34–5

  on non-coding DNA 141, 222

  Bush, Vannevar 20–1, 26

  C

  ‘C-value paradox’ 246

  caddis-fly 175

  Caenorhabditis elegans 231–2, 258, 277

  Cairns, John 218

  Caldwell, P. C. 71–2, 114, 214

  Caltech (California Institute of Technology) 10, 80, 94, 167

  Cambridge

  SEB nucleic acids symposium, 1946 53–5, 58

  SEB nucleic acids symposium, 1947 92

  see also Bragg; Crick; Watson

  cancer

  E. coli experiments and 279

  epigenetic marks 257

  genomic variation and treatment 236–7

  regulator genes and 169, 171

  reverse transcriptases and 250, 252

  capsule formation in bacteria 36–7

  carotenoids 271

  Cas9 endonuclease 282–3

  Caspersson, Torbjörn 8, 58, 71–2, 116

  Cech, Thomas 288

  Celera Genomics 231–3

  Cell (journal)

  discovery of ‘split genes’ 221

  Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance… 259

  cell-free protein synthesis

  Crick’s critique of 206

  early preponderance of uridine 199, 201–2

  Matthaei and Nirenberg’s work on 173, 178–80, 183–4

  in Ochoa’s laboratory 176–7, 191, 209

  oligonucleotide solution 208

  problems with poly(A) 189–91

  varied polynucleotides in 198, 203, 208

  central dogma of genetics

  apparent exceptions 262–3, 266

  Crick’s clarification of 251–3

  Crick’s original formulation of 132–3, 135–7

  epigenetics and 259–60

  natural selection and 262

  prion proteins and 254

  reverse transcriptases and 250–1

  centrifugation

  blender experiments 68

  ultracentrifuges 39, 41, 163, 167

  Cerebral Mechanisms in Behavior symposium, 1948 80

  CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research) 272

  cetacean genome 245

  chain termination DNA sequencing 228

  Chance and Necessity by Jacques Monod 306

  chaperones, molecular 263, 265, 294

  Chargaff, Erwin

  DNA samples from 99, 102

  meeting with Watson and Crick 101–2

  opponent of sequence hypothesis 133–4

  on proportions of DNA bases 57, 59, 62, 90–1, 106

  supporter of Avery 51, 57, 62

  uncertainty about DNA role 132–4

  ‘Chargaff rules’ 109

  Charpentier, Emmanuelle 283–4

  Chase, Martha 67

  Chemical Basis of Heredity symposium, 1956 131, 161–3

  chloroplasts 224

  Chow, Louise 221

  chromosomes

  base pair frequencies 296

  call for multidisciplinary research on 9

  crossing over 4

  defined 316

  discovery 3

  information content 148

  mapping gene locations 4–5

  nucleic acids in 42–3, 60–1

  perfect replication of 6, 11

  role in cell division and heredity 3–4

  Schrödinger’s idea of 14

  seen as coded tapes 81

  ciliates 225, 227

  circular causality see feedback systems

  cistrons, mutons and recons 162

  Cleland, Carol 276

  Clinton, Bill (US President) 233

  co-evolution hypothesis 293–4

  codes

  chromosome tape (Dancoff and Quastler) 81

  Crick on DNA as 110

  diamond code (Gamow) 114–16, 118, 120, 122

  encoded telephone link 26

  Shannon’s view of 78

  specialised meaning in biology 300–2

  Stern’s ‘gene code’ 70–1

  see also genetic code

  code-script idea (Schrödinger) 13–19, 80

  coding problem

  bacterial protein synthesis and 153–4

  Brenner’s predictions 172

  commaless code restrictions 178–9, 189, 206–7

  of complementary DNA strands 200

  Crick’s 1959 summary 174

  Crick’s 1961 summary 193–4

  Crick’s 1962 summary 205–6

  Crick’s 1966 summary 214

  polynucleotide approach 174–6, 196–7

  retrospective of work on 216–18

  and the RNA Tie Club 118

  and ‘the magic twenty’ 117, 179

  theoretical work on 124, 143, 200–1

  codons

  anticodons and 211–12, 293, 316

  coinage of the term 203

  confirmed as triplets 209

  early preponderance of uridine in RNA 199, 201–2, 204

  frequency of alternative codons 294–5

  nature of link to amino acids 292–4

  nonsense codons 213

  stop codons 213

  codon bias 294–5

  codon capture model 226

  cognitive ability 305

  Cohen, Seymour 55

  Cohn, Melvin 153n, 159

  Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

  Al Hershey at 67, 69

  Barbara McClintock at 245

  Monod’s visit 151–2, 220

  phage course 151, 183

  Richard Roberts at 223

  Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology

  1941: Genes and Chromosomes: Structure and Organization 42

  1946: Heredity and Variation in Microorganisms 55

  1947: Nucleic Acids and Nucleoproteins 53, 55–6

  1948: Biological Applications of Tracer Elements 53

  1951: Genes and Mutations 62

  1953: Viruses 117

  1961: Cellular Regulatory Mechanisms 168, 171–2, 175, 182–3, 187, 190

  1963: Synthesis and Structure of Macromolecules 207–8

  1966: The Genetic Code 214

  1977: Chromatin 221, 223

  importance 217

  colinearity

  absence in eukaryotes 221

  DNA sequence and protein structure 213, 220

  see also introns

  Collins, Francis 232–3

  commaless codes 178–9, 189, 206–7

  communication

  as characterised by variable information 25

  in control systems 30

  uncertainty in messages 26

  complementary base pairing 106, 109, 112, 290

  complementary DNA (cDNA) 232, 252

  complementary replication 101–2

  computers

  Gamow’s access to 120

  model for genes 300, 312

  model for organisms 147

  in next-generation sequencing 235

  stored-program 26, 30

  von Neumann’s designs 29–30, 142

  Connolly, Kevin 255
<
br />   constitutive bacterial strains 156, 160

  Copley, Shelley 276

  Correns, Carl 3

  Crabbe, John 304

  Crick, Francis

  on anticodon wobbles 211

  banned from further DNA work 100, 105

  character and meeting with Watson 97–8

  character and meeting with Wilkins 89–90

  coding problem reviews 174, 193–4, 205–6, 214

  on commaless codes 178–9

  comparison with Oppenheimer 217

  disproving diamond code idea 120–1

  impressions made on Jacob 130

  impressions of Gamow 118, 121

  inspiration by Schrödinger’s What is life? 18, 89

  on Jacob and Monod 155

  lecture on the central dogma 130–1, 135–6, 140–1, 152–3, 239, 250

  letter to his son 110

  letter to Nirenberg over press coverage 197

  letter to Temin 264

  Life Itself book 287

  on mathematical approaches to the genetic code 201–2

  on ‘minimum experimental facts’ 99–100

  Nobel Prize 207

  on the origins of the genetic code 292

  overview of the genetic code work 214–15

  reaction to Burnet’s book 134–5, 139

  reaction to Nirenberg’s discoveries 186–7, 192–5

  reaction to the discovery of prions 254

  at the Royaumont colloquium 203

  Scientific American article 131–2, 135, 139

  on the sequence hypothesis 133, 263, 294

  on the synthetic polynucleotide approach 205–6

  on the three flows of protein synthesis 135–6, 306

  on triplet codes 192–3, 197

  X-ray diffraction expertise 95

  Crick, Michael (son of FC) 110

  CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) 282–5, 316

  crocodiles, sex determination 300, 304

  crossing over, in chromosomes 4

  cryptography 26–7, 143

  crystals

  one-dimensional aperiodic 15–17, 80, 113

  unit cell of DNA 100, 104–5

  crystal growth

  prion action resembling 254

  replication model 7, 15

  crystallography 316

  see also X-rays

  ‘cybernetics’

  Bar-Hillel on 144

  coinage of the term 74

  de Broglie on 82

  defined 316

  link with genetics 80–1, 119, 149–50, 159, 306–7

  Monod on 306–7

  national differences in approach 81–3

  resurgence of interest in 307

  satirised 87–8, 88f

  Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine, by Norbert Wiener 73–8

  cytosine

  deamination 290

  methylation 256–8

  see also pyrimidines

  D

  D-2 section, NRDC 21, 27, 77

  Dancoff, Sydney 81, 85

  dangers

  regulation and 284–5

  synthetic biology and genetic engineering 279–80, 284

 

‹ Prev