Jacob's Ladder: The History of the Human GenomeJacob's Ladder delivers a remarkably lucid explanation of what the sequencing of the human genome really tells us. Decoding the sequence, evolutionary biologist Henry Gee shows, is just the beginning: seeing the letters and words. The next frontier is in understanding snatches of conversation between genes—how they interact to direct the growth of an organism. Gee takes us into the heart of that conversation, illuminating how genes govern a single egg cell's miraculous transformation into a human being, and how they continue to direct that person's day-by-day development throughout a lifetime. Gee tells the story of what we know about the genome today and what we are likely to discover tomorrow. As our knowledge advances, we will be able to direct with increasing authority the conversations between genes: not only performing medical interventions but also creating whole scripts directing birth, ancestry, and diversity in a brave new world. |
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JACOB'S LADDER: The History of the Human Genome
Comentário do usuário - KirkusA detailed history, not so much of the genome as of genetics itself.Nature science writer Gee begins with a description of how a fertilized human egg develops into a person. As everyone has observed ... Ler resenha completa
LibraryThing Review
Comentário do usuário - name99 - LibraryThingThis book was a pleasant surprise. I thought I was getting a description of the state of the art of genome science in 2004. What I actually got was a history of how we reached this state of the art in ... Ler resenha completa
Conteúdo
Birth | 3 |
Ex Ovo Omnia | 20 |
Unfolding | 33 |
Revolution | 48 |
Evolution | 66 |
Monsters | 91 |
Genetics | 104 |
PART TWO | 129 |
Operon | 156 |
Monsters reloaded | 173 |
Scars of evolution | 200 |
My travels history | 227 |
Jacobs ladder | 238 |
Notes | 253 |
265 | |
It has not escaped our notice | 131 |
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Termos e frases comuns
able acid activities ancestors animals appear bacteria bacteriophage bases Bateson become body breeding called cells century chromosomes close cluster colleagues collection complex connection contain created creatures Darwin direct early embryo emerge entirely enzyme evolution evolved example existence experiments explain fact flies function genes genetic genome given Goethe head human human genome idea important individual inheritance insects kind known later less living look material matter million mutation natural selection normal observed offspring once organisms origin pair particles particular pattern plants possible produce proteins published question range reason regulation regulatory relatively remained repressor researchers result scientists seen segments sequence showed simple single species stage structure substance suggested theory things thought traits turned understanding University variation various vertebrates whole
Referências a este livro
Non-representational Theory: Space, Politics, Affect N. J. Thrift Não há visualização disponível - 2008 |