FogeltheVogel
FogeltheVogel t1_j9u0yy3 wrote
Reply to comment by LordFoulgrin in Do all thinking creatures on Earth use neurons? Does an example of non-neuron based biological "intelligence" exist? by Wun_Weg_Wun_Dar__Wun
This all sounds like it's very much an analogue to nerves and muscles.
Do plants then just have their own versions?
FogeltheVogel t1_j9tquoo wrote
Reply to comment by f_leaver in Do all thinking creatures on Earth use neurons? Does an example of non-neuron based biological "intelligence" exist? by Wun_Weg_Wun_Dar__Wun
How does it even notice the breeze in the first place?
FogeltheVogel t1_j69wrs8 wrote
Reply to comment by CubanHermes in Is there an upper limit to structure size in a vacuum? Could a sufficiently advanced civilisation build a galaxy sized structure in space or would it become too massive and collapse in on itself? by CubanHermes
If you want to go full sci-fi with this, look into the concept of the birch world
FogeltheVogel t1_j69weaz wrote
Reply to comment by ManyThingsLittleTime in Is there an upper limit to structure size in a vacuum? Could a sufficiently advanced civilisation build a galaxy sized structure in space or would it become too massive and collapse in on itself? by CubanHermes
A few planets is a tiny fraction of the mass of a start system. How exactly is that an example of a galaxy sized structure needing multiple galaxies worth of material?
FogeltheVogel t1_j31jxvf wrote
Reply to comment by IgotthatBNAD in How does dish soap eliminate bacteria? by [deleted]
Yes. That's why getting soap in an open wound is painful, and why drinking soap is so dangerous.
However, your outer skin is mostly immune to this as it's not made of living cells, but rather a layer of dead cells that made some structures that resist this before they died.
FogeltheVogel t1_j31j52t wrote
Reply to comment by abalawadhi in How does dish soap eliminate bacteria? by [deleted]
Not easily like with Antibiotics. Antibiotics are like scalpels, they target 1 very specific part of the bacteria and disrupt that part. By changing that part slightly, the antibiotic stops having an effect (or alternatively, they set up systems to pump the molecules of antibiotics out of the bacteria before they can do harm).
Meanwhile, soap is almost like a fire. It simply rips the entire membrane apart. In order to prevent this, they'd need to fundamentally change how the membrane is constructed. Fundamental changes like that are, while not impossible, basically unheard off in evolution.
FogeltheVogel t1_j2jskau wrote
Reply to comment by Kauske in Can You Cavitate Radiation Away? by chriswhoppers
It does sound like a phrase that comes after someone explains that they need to reverse the polarity.
FogeltheVogel t1_j2jsd1p wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Can You Cavitate Radiation Away? by chriswhoppers
What reason do you have for thinking that it might? Radiation and glass aren't exactly similar in any way, and it might be easier to properly answer your question if we knew why you ask.
FogeltheVogel t1_j13c9wf wrote
Reply to comment by TeetsMcGeets23 in Could being submersed in a sealed tank of fluid help humans survive heavy G acceleration in outer space? by cheeze_whiz_shampoo
It's not "essentially". It just is. Deceleration is just acceleration in the other direction.
You can't come to a sudden stop any more than a sudden speed.
FogeltheVogel t1_izx28kn wrote
Reply to comment by doc_nano in If genetic mutations are random, why are some (nonhereditary) mutations so common while others are rare? by animalgames
It's always important to remember that "random" does not mean "equal chance".
FogeltheVogel t1_izp3g5s wrote
Reply to comment by Galaxy-Hitchhiker42 in How did viral DNA become part of the human genome? by emelrad12
Copying DNA is not a perfect process. Mutations naturally occur every now and then.
There's no particular cause, mutations are just a fact of life.
FogeltheVogel t1_iy06eoh wrote
Reply to comment by CrateDane in How exactly does CRISPR-CAS9 insert new genes? by AutomaticAd1918
Is there any way to guide this process? It feels like this would have a rather low chance of actually happening.
FogeltheVogel t1_iy01ut5 wrote
When DNA experiences a double stranded break (the type that CAS9 makes), there are 2 methods a cell has to repair it.
The first is the sloppy one, called non-Nomologous End Joining. The machinery for DNA repair can't really do anything with blunt breaks (the type that CAS9 makes), it needs ends that stick out a bit. Called literally Sticky Ends (if they overlap). Sticky vs blunt ends. So the first step is enzymes that remove some nucleotides from each end to make them sticky. After that, other enzymes come in that take these sticky ends and extend them into each other, repairing the break. The problem here is that some nucleotides get lost, and some random ones are added. This usually breaks the gene. When using CAS9 to knock out genes, this is sufficient.
The second method is what's used here. It's called Homologous Recombination, and it is not always possible to use. In essence, it uses the other chromosome as a template to accurately repair the DNA. Under normal conditions, this can't be used because the other chromosome is not readily available to serve as a template. During CRISPR treatments to insert a new geme, we provide a piece of DNA along with the CAS9 and it's guide RNA. This piece of DNA is the "new" gene, but it isn't incorporated like you originally thought. Instead, it is specifically designed so that the 2 ends of this piece of DNA are perfect matches to the 2 sides of the break made by CAS9. The DNA repair complexes will see thus use this as a template to 'repair' the break perfectly. Only in this case, they include extra nucleotides that were never part of the original strand.
I hope this helps.
FogeltheVogel t1_ixmhkkp wrote
Reply to comment by ebfortin in If freezing tissue generally damages the cells, how are we able to freeze human eggs and embryos for birthing later? by badblackguy
The media contains nutrients (fuel), that's (part of) its purpose. As for oxygen, it is dissolved in the liquid and the cells get their oxygen from that. Just like how, in our body, oxygen is dissolved in blood.
FogeltheVogel t1_ixlwx8v wrote
Reply to comment by ebfortin in If freezing tissue generally damages the cells, how are we able to freeze human eggs and embryos for birthing later? by badblackguy
The cells won't instantly die. We're talking about a window of (up to) hours here. And we're also talking about vials containing 1 millilitre of liquid.
In general, you thaw such a sample by simply placing it in liquid water. It'll be thawed in minutes.
FogeltheVogel t1_ixl9uro wrote
Reply to comment by Magnetic_Syncopation in If freezing tissue generally damages the cells, how are we able to freeze human eggs and embryos for birthing later? by badblackguy
Lots of cryoprotectants are toxic to the cells we add to. The trick is that, after adding it to the sample, the sample quickly goes in the liquid nitrogen to freeze. This stops biological activity, which is why the toxic properties of the cryoprotectant don't damage the cells.
After thawing a sample, the cryoprotectant is quickly replaced with regular media before it can damage the sample
FogeltheVogel t1_iurke8y wrote
Reply to What is the oldest "surviving" strand of DNA? Could it be from the first living organism? by DumbNBANephew
> However, one of the new cells would still contain the "original" DNA.
This is where your question is based on a wrong assumption.
When a cell divides in 2, it is not the case that 1 daughter cell has the original DNA, and the other has the copy. Instead, DNA is made up of 2 complimentary strands, woven together in a double helix. During replication of the DNA, these strands are separated and a new copy is made against each original. Each daughter cell then gets 1 of those new helixes. Thus, each daughter cell has 1 DNA double helix, that consists of 1 original strand, and 1 new strand that was made during replication of the original cell.
Note that "1 helix" should be multiplied for however many chromosomes a cell has.
FogeltheVogel t1_irayl24 wrote
Reply to comment by CocktailChemist in is it possible to synthesize proteins chemically? by yeeturking
Would it be possible/feasible to do a middle ground, where you take ribosomes outside of a cell, a printed mRNA (AFAIK it's relatively trivial to print DNA and RNA on demand) and those chemically different amino acids on custom tRNA, and have the ribosome assemble the protein?
FogeltheVogel t1_j9u9l3z wrote
Reply to comment by LordFoulgrin in Do all thinking creatures on Earth use neurons? Does an example of non-neuron based biological "intelligence" exist? by Wun_Weg_Wun_Dar__Wun
I'm a microbiologist, so I knew at least some of these on the eukaryote side, but I've never really looked at plants before.