In Nature: Cells have “secret conversations”

structure of an animal cell/royroydeb (CC BY-SA 4.0)



And they are “transforming biology”:





Close to three decades later, Vance’s paper is seen as a landmark — one that has come to transform scientists’ understanding of how cells maintain order and function in their crowded interiors, which buzz with various types of organelles, including mitochondria, nuclei and the ER. Researchers now recognize that interactions between organelles are ubiquitous, with almost every type coming into close conversation with every other type. Probing those connections is also leading biologists to discover proteins that are responsible for holding the organelles together and maintaining a healthy cell.

The updated view of organelle crosstalk is forcing a dramatic rethink of cell biology. “There’s a whole other layer of communication that’s going on within these organelles,” says Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, a cell biologist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Janelia Research Campus in Ashburn, Virginia, whose team has been recording dazzling video footage of these affairs.Elie Dolgin, “How secret conversations inside cells are transforming biology” at Nature





We say this a lot: That’s a lot of information to have simply come into being by natural selection acting on random mutation (Darwinism). It’s getting not only ridiculous but obviously ridiculous.





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Before you go: Researchers: Helpful gut microbes send messages to their hosts If the strategy is clearly identified, they should look for non-helpful microbes that have found a way to copy it (horizontal gene transfer?)





Cells and proteins use sugars to talk to one another Cells are like Neanderthal man. They get smarter every time we run into them. And just think, it all just tumbled into existence by natural selection acting on random mutations (Darwinism) too…





Researchers: First animal cell was not simple; it could “transdifferentiate” From the paper: “… these analyses offer no support for the homology of sponge choanocytes and choanoflagellates, nor for the view that the first multicellular animals were simple balls of cells with limited capacity to differentiate.”





“Interspecies communication” strategy between gut bacteria and mammalian hosts’ genes described





Researchers: Cells Have A Repair Crew That Fixes Local Leaks





Researchers: How The Immune System “Thinks”





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Researcher: Mathematics Sheds Light On “Unfathomably Complex” Cellular Thinking





How do cells in the body know where they are supposed to be?





Researchers A Kill Cancer Code Is Embedded in Every Cell








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Published on March 12, 2019 16:36
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