about transposable element
finally, after several weeks of choosing and tossing, i’ve settled on a title for this blog. so yes, despite the new title, it’s still me, ruth. if you need to update your links, might as well change it to my new url, too: http://www.about-ruth.com. will soon have everyone auto-directed over there. AnP’s promising me a spanking new lay-out that will match my virtual persona. but, like my opa neighbor always say when he sees us rushing up or down th staicase, “langsam, langsam… we’ll get there, one at a time…”
so, what is a transposable element, anyway?
also called transposons, or jumping genes, transposable elements are segments of DNA that can move around to different positions within a cell’s genome. the process of ‘transposition’ is simply removal from one place to be relocated to another. sounds familiar? well, if you’re an expat, you’ll know what it means to be relocated, or sometimes more aptly, dislocated, from one place to another.
that’s not where the analogy ends. in the process of transposition, these DNA segments can cause mutations, or change, both in the spots where it came from and where it transfers to. ultimately, it has an influence on the traits expressed by the cell. i’d like to think that i am making waves, confined though they may be to the little communities where i play a role. i may be just a statistic in studies outlining population migratory patterns, but in my own small world, i make a difference (nothing big, i guess, but not completely negligible either). not only in the place i left, and the place to where i go, but well, you know… they say when you drop a pebble in a pond, you’ll never know how far the ripples go…
transposable element. bow.
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4 Responses to “about transposable element”
October 16th, 2005 at
transposable element, I take a bow.
I am for sure that you are making a difference in their lives and in your life too.
Cheers!!!
October 17th, 2005 at
It suits you! Bow!
October 23rd, 2005 at
Nice analogy, especially for molecular geneticists. I hope you encode your own transposase though, just in case you get stuck somewhere inaccessable.
October 26th, 2005 at
Hi,
LOVE your analogy! I am professionally into memetics and therefore, as a side branch, dabble in “genetics for interested amateurs” :).
My wife is also an expat and would certainly love to have you visit her website at http://heissescheisse.blogspot.com