Wired, Issue 15.02 - February 2007
Imagine that you place
a 1-inch-wide black cube in an empty field.
Suddenly the cube
makes copies of itself
- two, four, eight, 16.
The proliferating cubes
begin to form structures
- enclosures, arches, walls, tubes.
Some of the tubes turn into wires,
PVC pipes, structural steel, wooden studs.
Sheets of cubes
become wallboard and wood paneling,
carpet and plate-glass windows.
The wires begin connecting themselves
into a network of immense complexity.
Eventually,
a 100-story skyscraper
stands in the field.
That’s basically the process
a fertilized cell undergoes
beginning with the moment of conception.
How did that cube know
how to make a skyscraper?
How does a cell know
how to make a human
(or any other mammal)?
Biologists used to think
that the cellular proteins
somehow carried the instructions.
But now proteins
look more like
pieces of brick and stone
- useless without
a building plan and a mason.
The instructions
for how to build an organism
must be written in a cell’s DNA,
but no one has figured out
exactly how to read them.
- Steve Olson, author of Mapping Human History
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