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.  Lincoln and Joyce (2009).
15
.  Yarus (2010), p. 97.
16
.  Noller (2012).
17
.  Yarus (2010), p. 179.
18
.  There is a massive literature on this topic. What follows is based mainly on Koonin and Novozhilov (2009), Yarus (2010) and Rutherford (2013).
19
.  See, for example, Woese (1965).
20
.  Polyanski
et al.
(2013).
21
.  Crick (1968).
22
.  Freeland and Hurst (1998), Freeland
et al.
(2000).
23
.  Yarus
et al.
(2005).
24
.  Koonin and Novozhilov (2009), p. 108. See the special issue of
Journal of Molecular Evolution
in 2013, which contained four papers, each outlining a different explanation (Di Giulio, 2013b).
25
.  Behura and Severson (2013).
26
.  Cannarozzi
et al.
(2010).
27
.  Bernardi (2000).
28
.  Eyre-Walker and Hurst (2001).
29
.  Romiguier
et al.
(2010), Katzman
et al.
(2011).
30
.  Stergachis
et al.
(2013).
31
.
http://www.washington.edu/news/2013/12/12/scientists-discover-double-meaning-in-genetic-code/
.
32
.  For example, Birnbaum
et al.
(2012) and Lin
et al.
(2011).
33
.  People were also annoyed by the use of the neologism ‘duon’ to describe the codons that have both coding and transcription factor binding functions (I predict this coinage will not have a long life). For examples of spontaneous and more considered responses, see
https://twitter.com/edyong209/status/411283930294534144
and
http://pasteursquadrant.wordpress.com/2013/12/14/on-duons-and-cargo-cult-science/
.
34
.  Itzkovitz
et al.
(2010).
35
.  Mignone
et al.
(2002).
36
.  Yáñez-Cuna
et al.
(2013).
37
.  Maraia and Iben (2014).
38
.  Apter and Wolpert (1965). For a discussion of the role of metaphor in science in general, with a particular emphasis on chemistry, see Brown (2003).
39
.  For example, Fabris (2009), Gatlin (1966, 1968, 1972), Holzmüller (1984), Lean (2014), Longo
et al.
(2012), Schneider
et al.
(1986), Spetner (1968), Yockey (1992).
40
.  Maynard Smith and Szathmáry (1997).
41
.  Maynard Smith (1999, 2000a, b). Other contributors to the debates include: Bergstrom and Rosvall (2011a, b), Collier (2008), GarcÌa-Sancho (2007) Godfrey-Smith (2000a, b, 2007, 2011), Griffiths (2001), Kjosavik (2014), Kogge (2012), Levy (2011), Maclaurin (2011), Sarkar (1996a, b, 2000, 2013), Shea (2011), Stegmann (2004, 2005, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014a, b), Šustar (2007). I am grateful to Ulrich Stegmann for his comments on this section on the philosophy of genetic information; however, grumpy philosophers and others should address their criticisms to me, not him.
42
.  Maynard Smith (2000a), p. 190. This point was first made by Kimura (1961).
43
.  Maynard Smith (2000a), p. 190.
44
.  For example, Jablonka (2002).
45
.  Maynard Smith (2000a), p. 193.
46
.  Griffiths (2001), Stegmann (2014b).
47
.  For a critique of the idea of the gene as a program, see Planer (2014).
48
.  Sarkar (1996a), p. 107.
49
.  Sarkar (2000).
50
.  Godfrey-Smith (2011), p. 180.
51
.  Sarkar (1996b), p. 863.
52
.  Dudai
et al.
(1976).
53
.
http://flybase.org/reports/FBgn0000479.html
.
54
.  For example, Sarkar (1996a), Keller (1995, 2000, 2002)
55
.  Crick (1958), p. 144, pp. 138–9.
56
.  For example, Oyama (2000). For a clear introduction to this view, and to other aspects of philosophy and genetics, see Griffiths and Stotz (2013).
57
.  For example, Commoner (1968), de Lorenzo (2014), Noble (2013), Shapiro (2009).
58
.  Walker (2007).
59
.  Crabbe
et al.
(1999).
60
.  Wahlsten
et al.
(2006).
61
.  Rietveld
et al.
(2014).
62
.  Maynard Smith (2000a, b).
63
.  Noble (2002), Newman (2003).
64
.  For example, Cosentino and Bates (2012).
65
.  Cobb (2011). For the fate of the British branch of cybernetics, see Pickering (2010). Medina (2011) provides a fascinating exploration of how in the early 1970s applied cybernetics was used in the doomed attempt to peacefully transform the Chilean economy under the socialist President, Salvador Allende.
Conclusion
1
.  Pickstone (2001).
2
.  Gilbert (1991).
3
.  Wood
et al.
(2014).
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
1
Erwin Schrödinger, President Hyde and Prime Minster De Valera, Dublin 1943 © Ewald Collection/American Institute of Physics/Science Photo Library
2
Norbert Wiener © Emilio Segre Visual Archives/American Institute of Physics/Science Photo Library
3
Oswald Avery © The Oswald T. Avery Collection/US National Library of Medicine /Courtesy of Maclyn McCarty
4
Claude Shannon © Alfred Eisenstaedt/Getty Images
5
Harriett Ephrussi-Taylor, Boris Ephrussi and Leo Szilárd, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
6
Alfred Mirsky with Masson Gulland, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
7
André Boivin with Joshua Lederberg, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
8
Salvador Luria with Max Delbrück © The Salvador E. Luria Papers/US National Library of Medicine/Courtesy of Daniel D. Luria
9
Leo Szilárd with Al Hershey, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
10
Team photo of Al Hershey’s laboratory, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
11
Rosalind Franklin © The Rosalind Franklin Papers /US National Library of Medicine /Courtesy of Vittorio Luzzati
12
Maurice Wilkins © Keystone/Getty Images
13
James D. Watson, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
14
Watson and Crick © A. Barrington Brown/Science Photo Library
15
Letter by George Gamow © Courtesy estate of George Gamow. Original item held in the Ava Helen and Linus Pauling Papers, Oregon State University Libraries and George Gamow Papers, collection MS0252, Special Collections Research Center, The George Washington University, Washington, DC
16
George Gamow © Emilio Segre Visual Archives/American Institute of Physics/Science Photo Library
17
Crick, Rich, Orgel and Watson. Image courtesy of Alexander Rich
18
Heinrich Matthaei with Marshall Nirenberg © National Library of Medicine/Science Photo Library
19
Crick, Benzer and Jacob attending Moscow Biochemistry Congress, 1961, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
20
Crick’s annotated programme © Francis Crick Papers/Wellcome Library, London
21
François Jacob with his wife, Lise, on the beach, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
22
Jacques Monod with Sydney Brenner, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives.
23
François Jacob with Jacques Monod © AFP/Getty Images
24
Francis Crick speaking in 1963, courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
25
Francis Crick at a house party, mid 1960s © Guy Selby-Lowndes/ Science Photo Library
26
Jacques Monod with Leo Szilárd ©Photograph by Esther Bubley. Copyright Jean Bubley
27
Crick with Benzer, courtesy of Wellcome Library, London
28
Letters between Seymour Benzer and Francois Jacob © Institut Pasteur
29
Banner in Marshall Nirenberg’s laboratory © The Marshall W. Nirenberg Papers /US National Library of Medicine /Courtesy of Marshall W. Nirenberg
30
Asilomar conference © The Maxine Singer Papers/US National Library of Medicine /Courtesy of the National Library of Medicine
While every effort has been made to contact copyright-holders of illustrations, the author and publishers would be grateful for information about any illustrations where they have been unable to trace them, and would be glad to make amendments in further editions.
INDEX
Note
The index covers the main text and glossary only; page references beyond 315 are glossary entries. The suffixes f and n indicate treatment in a figure and a footnote respectively on the pages indicated.
A
acquired characteristics, inheritance
138
,
260
adaptations
enzymatic (later induction)
152–3
and Lamarckian inheritance
261
adaptive hypothesis (genetic code)
293–4
adaptor hypothesis (tRNA)
121
,
135
,
209
adenine
see
purines
Adrian, Edgar
82n
alien life forms
275
alkaptonuria
11
Allison, Tony
126
α-helix structure
95
,
97
,
100
,
105
alternative splicing
223
,
242
Altman, Sidney
288
Alu sequences
245
amino acids
acidity and codon structure
292
code(s) for phenylalanine
174
,
182
,
184–6
,
198–9
,
206
,
208–9
defined
316
encoding by DNA base sequence
124–6
,
133
genetic code specification of x,
114
,
116–17
,
199
Miller-Urey experiments yielding
286
nature of RNA link to
292–4
need for DNA to code twenty
71–2
,
117
,
179
occurrence in comets
286
patterns, as clues to the genetic code
120
,
122–3
physical template model
72
RNA Tie Club names
118
in the RNA world
291
sequence changes in A and S haemoglobin
127–8
,
165
sequence determining protein function
133
,
263–4
synthetic RNA triplets and
210
unnatural amino acids
225
,
277–8
,
284
Anderson, Thomas
67
André, Christian
2
Anfinsen, Christian
264
anthrax
37
anti-aircraft systems
21–4
anti-sense RNA
243
anticodons
211–12
,
293
,
316
Apter, Michael
85
,
298
,
300
Arabidopsis,
heritable gene silencing
259
Archaea, discovery of
238–9
Arkwright, Joseph
36–7
arsenic-based life
276
Asilomar Conference, 1975
280–1
,
285
Astbury, William
at the Cambridge SEB meeting
53–4
early DNA X-ray work
54
,
91–4
early structure for DNA
102–4
atomic bomb (Manhattan Project)
genetic code project compared to
217
George Gamow and
BOOK: Life's Greatest Secret
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