Genome of Controversial Arsenic Bacterium Sequenced
Med-trump writes "One year ago a media controversy was ignited when Felisa Wolfe-Simon and her colleagues held a press conference to announce the discovery of a bacterium that not only survived high levels of arsenic in its environment but also seemed to use that element in its DNA. Last week, the genome of the bacterium, known as GFAJ-1, which gets its name from the acronym for 'Give Felisa a Job.' (No joke!), was posted in Genbank, the public repository of DNA sequences for all who care to take a look. But it doesn't settle the debate over whether arsenic is used in DNA."
We geneticists come up with some of the most goofy names for genes.
Smaug is a fun one.
So is "MADD", which stands for "Mothers Against Dumpy Drosophela"
Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
The paper was fine. Her handling of some of the samples may not have been what one would want.
The sensationalism is the problem. Her conclusion, while unexpected and quite possible wrong, are fine based on the experiment.
This will be worked out like science is worked out. People will try to recreate it, and the DNA will be put under a Mass Spec.
All of which is in the article.
Shit. I just realized you posted AC. So, you are crap. Normally I don't bother with AC, but since I wrote it, I'll post it.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
They know that this bacteria lives in an environment of Arsenic and may use it in its cell process. So any Spectrometric study will show Arsenic as contamination.
What matters is whether the arsenic is covalently bound to functional groups like adenosine, which mass spectrometry is able to detect.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!