Craig Mello 82 gives biology keynote

Posted: March 10, 2015 at 3:41 am

Gene expression is really simple. Everyone should know it and feel comfortable thinking about it, said Nobel laureate Craig Mello 82, professor of molecular medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, at a lecture Saturday morning in a packed Salomon 101.

Mellos keynote lecture, entitled RNA memories: Secrets of inheritance and immortality, kicked off Day of Biology, a day-long event commemorating life sciences at Brown. His lecture was followed by colloquia on a variety of topics in biology as well as current relevant University research. Mello provided an introduction to genetics before delving into his own research on RNA interference, which won him the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

He began by discussing germ lines, the cells used for sexual reproduction. Germ lines exist on a cosmic time scale. Every animal on this planet is related to each other were all related to each other.

The germ lines of humans and nematodes also known as roundworms have journeyed together on this planet for three million years, he said, adding that a wide range of animal biology can inform the study of human anatomy and physiology.

Mello discussed the relationship between DNA, RNA, ribosomes the part of the cell that creates proteins and gene expression. DNA encodes information that is transformed into messenger RNA, which brings the genetic information to the ribosomes, linking amino acids in ordered pairs to create an organisms proteins.

Mello said there are four building block nucleotides that combine to form codons, which code for the twenty amino acids the precursor molecules of proteins.

Four letters in the alphabet make 20 different words, which are the amino acids, Mello said, adding that RNA is really simple, but proteins are really diverse.

Mello also discussed his research on RNA interference, for which he and his collaborator Andrew Fire, professor of pathology and genetics at the Stanford University School of Medicine, shared their Nobel Prize. RNA interference can turn genes off, preventing their expression in the organism and its offspring.

We discovered that cells need a search engine, Mello said. Theyre dealing with information in much the same way that we all do on the (Internet). The precise chemical information allows a query to precisely identify a matching RNA cell.

By targeting messenger RNA, Mello and Fire learned how to enter search queries inside of cells. We can find genes and regulate them. This is really transforming what we can do in the laboratory.

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Craig Mello 82 gives biology keynote

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