Saturday, June 26, 2010

mechanisms 883.mech.0221 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping


2. Prevention of translation of damaged mRNAs

MRNA can either (i) be incorrectly processed in the nucleus or (ii) be damaged in the cytosol. Because correct translation is critical, cells have several proofreading/correction mechanisms.

First, the recognition process looks for both the poly-a tail and the 5’cap (the absence of either is a clue that the mRNA is broken).

Second, cells have a “nonsense-mediated mRNA decay” system. This system allows the cell to assess that a given mRNA molecule has a stop (nonsense) codon (UAA, UAG, or UGA) in the wrong location; this mislocation can occur when an mRNA molecule is spliced incorrectly. The “nonsense-mediated mRNA decay” system expects to see the proper stop codon located within the last exon; if this is not the case, the mRNA molecule is destroyed. The net result of this system means that cells only produce proteins (a.k.a. “full-length proteins”). This system is a God-send for people who have one functional gene and one mutant gene as this systems sees to it that only functional proteins are produced.

purpose 339.p Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping

Title

Exodus: The Real Story



Topic


Even absent Extraordinary Interventions, and with only the application of common sense to the stories written thousands of years ago, the Exodus is still the quintessential saga of the escape from oppression to a life of freedom.



Specific Purpose

Although written well after the fact and thickly embellished, there are kernels of historical accuracy in the Biblical Exodus. Rather than being merely a fantastical myth, this widely shared – in Western Societies – epic can and should resonate with modern men and women in bringing to life the universal value of being willing to incur great risks and sacrifices so as to be able to live free from oppression.