Books About DNA: The Crime of Reason by Robert B. Laughlin
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted January 15, 2009 in Books About DNA

From Stanford Magazine about Robert B. Laughlin’s new book, The Crime of Reason: And the Closing of the Scientific Mind:
Just wait until enough people read Laughlin’s suggestion that, in addition to the open announcements of cloned animals, “It is very likely that we also got Hal (or Heather) the human. . . . There was, however, no public announcement of a cloned human, presumably because of the storm of public outrage that would have ensued.”
Is he serious? “I cannot prove it,” says Laughlin, throwing in a charming smile while emphasizing that the speculation is scientifically sound.

DNA Excerpt: Bringing Home the Birkin
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted June 20, 2008 in DNA Quotes and Excerpts
From Bringing Home the Birkin by Michael Tonello:
Pink-and-green flowered tiles accented the mostly white floor, with the same floral design mirrored in the quilt. The pair of overstuffed chairs and couch were all pink to match, and my masculinity was momentarily threatened until I remembered I was gay. My Y chromosome was further comforted by the dark mahogany furniture and ceiling fans, as well as the gender neutral white walls.
Update: For more, see Christina’s book review at eBeautyDaily.

DNA Quote: Sir William Bragg on Science
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted June 13, 2008 in DNA Quotes and Excerpts

The important thing in science is not so much to obtain new facts as to discover new ways of thinking about them.
~Sir William Bragg, 1862-1942, British physicist and chemist, winner of the 1915 Nobel Prize in Physics

DNA Excerpt: Fermat’s Last Theorem
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted June 6, 2008 in DNA Quotes and Excerpts
From Fermat’s Last Theorem (also titled as Fermat’s Enigma) by Simon Singh:
“In mathematical terms the final proof is the equivalent of splitting the atom or finding the structure of DNA,” announced John Coates.

DNA Quote: Former Surgeon General Dr. Richard H. Carmona
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted May 30, 2008 in DNA Quotes and Excerpts
From a Dr. Val Jones interview of Vice Admiral Richard H. Carmona, MD who served as Surgeon General from August 2002 to August 2006:
This tool [U.S. Surgeon General's Family History Initiative] helped people to begin identifying their risks based on a good family history – which busy docs don’t pay enough attention to anymore. When you know your history, genomics becomes valuable. If we can characterize disease, then we can search for potential genetic loci to help explain what’s going on and take a preventive approach to modifying the person’s environment to mitigate risk.
HT: Kevin, MD

Books About DNA: DNA: Promise and Peril
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted May 23, 2008 in DNA Quotes and Excerpts
DNA: Promise and Peril by Linda L McCabe and Edward RB McCabe
The genetic revolution has provided incredibly valuable information about our DNA, information that can be used to benefit and inform–but also to judge, discriminate, and abuse. An essential reference for living in today’s world, this book gives the background information critical to understanding how genetics is now affecting our everyday lives. Written in clear, lively language, it gives a comprehensive view of exciting recent discoveries and explores the ethical, legal, and social issues that have arisen with each new development.
Here is Kathy Johnston’s impression of the book as originally posted at GENEALOGY-DNA:
As I am sitting here thumbing through the book, I get the impression that it is well written. It touches on forensics, ethics, race, gender, patents, cloning, reproductive medicine, gene testing, engineering and health insurance policies. However, I think they completely missed the impact that genetic genealogy is having right now and will have in the future as more of us order tests on ourselves.
Dr. Edward McCabe is a co-director for the UCLA Center for Society and Genetics so if anyone should know about the social impact that amateur DNA research is having, he should know. But I think they missed the boat on this one. The authors stressed that recreational DNA research represents “an extremely small part of the genome” but I don’t think they realize how many tests are actually being ordered on extended family members.
These academicians never seem to get it when it comes to understanding pedigree collapse, extended family and surname research projects and how the Internet and globalization will be revolutionizing genealogy through DNA search engines and pedigrees as more and more people are tested. Think of all the retired people who are spending their money on this hobby and helping labs to build branches on the phylogenetic trees that previously only universities could do. In addition, I should think a major university with a huge public policy department like UCLA would be looking at the social and medical impact of genetic genealogy. Well, it may be good thing that we are not on their radar screen right now. We can grow undisturbed.
This is what the McCabes think about genealogy DNA testing:
These laboratory analyses are expensive. Studies indicate that an individual’s knowledge of his or her ancestry is relatively accurate. In medical genetics, we know that one of the least expensive and most powerful genetic tools available to us is a good family history. The decision to carry out DNA testing for ancestry will be up to the individual. A far less expensive and excellent alternative available to many of us is to learn about our ancestry from the elders in our families. In addition, relatives’ stories will have far more cultural meaning than biological measures of ancestry.
I was just surprised that they have not seen the explosion of DNA studies being performed by us so-called amateurs. Genealogy will eventually make its way into the academic circles as the researchers figure out they need better pedigrees to help them figure out the more complicated mechanisms of inheritance especially when they look more at epigenetics.

DNA Quote: Kevin Kelly on Zillionics
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted May 16, 2008 in DNA Quotes and Excerpts
From Kevin Kelly’s The Technium:
When you reach the giga, peta, and exa orders of quantities, strange new powers emerge. You can do things at these scales that would have been impossible before. A zillion hyperlinks will give you information and behavior you could never expect from a hundred or thousand links. A trillion neurons give you a smartness a million won’t. A zillion data points will give you insight that a mere hundred thousand would never.
…Zillionics is a realm much more at home in biology—where there have been zillions of genes and organisms for a long time—than in our recent manufactured world. Living systems know how to handle zillionics. Our own methods of dealing with zillionic plentitude will mimic biology.

Books About DNA: Coming to Life by Christiane Nusslein-Volhard
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted May 9, 2008 in Books About DNA, DNA Quotes and Excerpts
Coming to Life: How Genes Drive Development by Christiane Nusslein-Volhard
Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard, winner of The Nobel Prize in Medicine, gives a concise and illustrative overview of genetics, evolution, and cellular processes as well as a discussing of current ethical issues in human biology.
An excerpt from the American Scientist review of the book:
The subtitle of Nüsslein-Volhard’s book is How Genes Drive Development. That’s really the essence of her conception of developmental biology, a view that guides the organization of the book. She begins with chapters that introduce the genetic machinery, heredity, chromosomes, genes and proteins. She moves on to a brief discussion of the role of model organisms that have been crucial in developmental genetics and proceeds to the first of these, D. melanogaster.

Books About DNA: Tomorrow’s Table
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted May 2, 2008 in Books About DNA, DNA Quotes and Excerpts, Genetically Modified Foods and Organisms
Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food by Pamela C. Ronald and R. W. Adamchak
From Dr. Ronald’s blog:
One of the major themes of our book “Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics and the Future of Food” is that the judicious incorporation of two important strands of agriculture—genetic engineering and organic farming—is key to helping feed the growing population in an ecologically balanced manner. We are not suggesting that organic farming and GE alone will provide all the changes needed in agriculture. Other farming systems and technological changes, as well as modified government policies, undoubtedly are also needed. Yet it is hard to avoid the sense that organic farming and genetic engineering each will play an increasingly important role, and that they somehow have been pitted unnecessarily against each other. Our ambition in this book, therefore, is not to be comprehensive, but to identify roles for both GE and organic farming in the future of food production.
Another theme of the book is that the broader goals of ecologically responsible farming, and the adherence to those ideals, are more important than the methods used to develop new plant varieties. To this end, we have generated a list of key criteria
to help guide policy decisions about the use of GE in food and farming.

Books About DNA: The Century of the Gene by Evelyn Fox Keller
by Dr. Hsien-Hsien Lei
Posted April 25, 2008 in Books About DNA, DNA Quotes and Excerpts, DNA in General
The Century of the Gene by Evelyn Fox Keller
In a book that promises to change the way we think and talk about genes and genetic determinism, Evelyn Fox Keller, one of our most gifted historians and philosophers of science, provides a powerful, profound analysis of the achievements of genetics and molecular biology in the twentieth century, the century of the gene. Not just a chronicle of biology’s progress from gene to genome in one hundred years, The Century of the Gene also calls our attention to the surprising ways these advances challenge the familiar picture of the gene most of us still entertain.
In a CBC Radio interview, Dr. Evelyn Fox Keller talks more about genes and public perception. (HT: Women in Science)
For more discussion on what is a gene, see this Genome Research article - What is a gene, post-ENCODE? History and updated definition.
…we propose a tentative update to the definition of a gene: A gene is a union of genomic sequences encoding a coherent set of potentially overlapping functional products.
DNA Network member Sandra Porter at Discovering Biology in a Digital World gave her definition of a gene last year.

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