cell Type post Author David Coppedge Date February 23, 2024 CategoriesBiochemistryEvolutionIntelligent Design Tagged , aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, Caltech, cell biology, cells, condensates, DNA, droplets, endoplasmic reticulum, eukaryotes, evolution, intelligent design, membrane lipids, membranes, mitochondria, molecular biology, molecular machines, organelles, paradigm shift, peroxisomes, PLOS Biology, proteins, speckles, TIM, tom, transfer RNA, tRNA Getting It Together: Tethers, Handshakes, and Multitaskers in the Cell David Coppedge February 23, 2024 Biochemistry, Evolution, Intelligent Design 6 Running a cell requires coordination. How do molecules moving in the dark interior of a cell know how and when to connect? Protein tethers offer new clues. Read More ›
Mitochondrion_cristae_tomogram Type post Date June 11, 2019 CategoriesIntelligent Design Tagged , __k-review, ATP synthase, autism, cancer, chimpanzees, Drosophila, evolutionists, genome, heart disease, human uniqueness, humans, intelligent design, junk DNA, mitochondria, Nature (journal), Nature Genetics, non-coding DNA, proteins, science stopper, TIM, tom, transcription factors, University of Toronto Genetic Surprises Support Intelligent Design Claims Science and Culture June 11, 2019 Intelligent Design 7 Several news items reinforce ideas advanced by ID advocates regarding junk DNA, irreducible complexity, and human uniqueness. Read More ›