Difference between revisions of "Week 2 Journal Entry"

From LMU BioDB 2013
Jump to: navigation, search
(Week 2 Reading Reflections: Added template)
(added categories)
 
(One intermediate revision by one user not shown)
Line 7: Line 7:
 
:#According to Glyn Moody, the four letters of the genetic code (A, C, G, T) can be read in terms of binary code found in computers by swapping "A" with "00", "C" with "01", "G" with "10", and "T" with "11" (Moody 3).
 
:#According to Glyn Moody, the four letters of the genetic code (A, C, G, T) can be read in terms of binary code found in computers by swapping "A" with "00", "C" with "01", "G" with "10", and "T" with "11" (Moody 3).
  
[[Template: mpetredi Week 2 Journal Entry]]
+
[[User:Mpetredi|Mpetredi]] ([[User talk:Mpetredi|talk]]) 14:48, 5 September 2013 (PDT)Mitchell Petredis
 +
 
 +
[[Category: Journal Entry]]
 +
[[Category: Shared]]

Latest revision as of 21:52, 5 September 2013

[edit] Mitchell Petredis

[edit] Week 2 Reading Reflections

  1. The biggest discovery I made from the assigned readings for this week was how complex and time consuming it was for Nirenberg and his colleagues to properly decipher the genetic code. Most textbooks I've seen gloss over the history of a research project, but being able to hear this story from a personal account made the reading more insightful.
  2. Nirenberg's account was also the most difficult to understand since the many organic chemicals and procedures involved in the research were unfamiliar to me.
  3. Nirenberg and his colleagues spent a year synthesizing all 64 trinucleotides and tested each one to see what amino acids were produced.
  4. According to Glyn Moody, the four letters of the genetic code (A, C, G, T) can be read in terms of binary code found in computers by swapping "A" with "00", "C" with "01", "G" with "10", and "T" with "11" (Moody 3).

Mpetredi (talk) 14:48, 5 September 2013 (PDT)Mitchell Petredis

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox