Home Contact Login Sitemap
Videos | Photo Gallery
RSS
हिन्दी
 >
> Amritsar records 30-year high temperature at 48 degrees Celsius      > Ranbir Kapoor found it tougher playing himself in 'Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani'      > Why BCCI Chief Srinivasan is mum over son-in-law role in spot fixing?      > Delhi Police seek details of Sreesanth seizures      > Vishakha Singh dazzles at Cannes Red Carpet      
Homepage Sci & Tech
Previous News   Next News


Organism get computerized


Tags:

Technology

,

Science

,

Stanford University

,

Computer Model

,

Organism



Published by:
Published on: Sun, 22 Jul 2012 at 14:47 IST


Organism get computerized

Washington: In the latest achievement of science, scientists have claimed that they have made the worlds' first computer model of an organism.

A team led by Markus Covert, assistant professor of bioengineering at the Stanford University, used data from more than 900 scientific papers to account for every molecular interaction that takes place in the life cycle of Mycoplasma genitalium.

M genitalium, the world's smallest free-living bacterium, shows up uninvited in human urogenital and respiratory tracts. The pathogen also contains the smallest genome of any free-living organism, only 525 genes, as opposed to the 4,288 of E. coli, a more traditional lab bug.

Even at this small scale, the quantity of data that the Stanford researchers incorporated into the virtual cell's code was enormous. The final model made use of more than 1,900 experimentally determined parameters, according to a statement. "Comprehensive computer models of entire cells have the potential to advance our understanding of cellular function and, ultimately, to inform new approaches for the diagnosis and treatment of disease," said James M. Anderson, director of the National Institutes of Health Division of Programme Coordination, Planning and Strategic Initiatives, which had part funded the research.

Most biological experiments, however, still take a reductionist approach to this vast array of data: knocking out a single gene and seeing what happens. "Many of the issues we're interested in aren't single-gene problems," said Covert. "They're the complex result of hundreds or thousands of genes interacting."

"You don't really understand how something works until you can reproduce it yourself," said Jayodita Sanghvi, Stanford bioengineering graduate student and study co-author. "The goal hasn't only been to understand M. genitalium better. It's to understand biology generally," said study co-author and Stanford biophysics graduate student Jonathan Karr.
Death follows injury for Usher's stepson
Save water: Aamir Khan teaches in penultimate episode

Related Stories:-


Opinion Polls
Who will lift the IPL 6 trophy?
Chennai Super Kings
Mumbai Indians
Rajasthan Royals
Tag Related Stories:-
Featured Blogs

Advertise with Us || Legal || Disclaimer || Privacy Policy || About Us || Our Editors || Contact Us || Feedback || Jobs
Pardaphash name, logo and all associated elements ® and © 2011 Mahakaal News Management Pvt. Ltd.
All rights reserved. Pardaphash and the Pardaphash logo are registered marks of Mahakaal News management Pvt. Ltd.
Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional