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Hair Trigger: How a Cell's Primary Cilium Functions as a Molecular Antenna PDF Print Write e-mail
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Thursday, 01 July 2010 07:11, Written by

It turns out that not all the hairlike cilia projecting from the surfaces of many cells in the human body are equal--there are the myriad ones for sweeping, swimming and other functions, and then there is the until recently mysterious primary cilium.

Nearly all human cells contain these numerous microscopic projections. The more abundant variety of cilia are motile; they act like oars, paddling in coordinated waves to help propel cells through fluid, or to sweep material across cellular surfaces (as in the respiratory system, where millions of cilia lining the airways help to expel mucus, dead cells and other bodily debris). By contrast, cells also contain a single, nonmotile cilium known as the primary cilium. Its presence on cells has been known for more than a century, but many believed it was a functionless evolutionary remnant.

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Cell - Biology - Cell biology - Cilium - Human body

A genome story: 10th anniversary commentary by Francis Collins PDF Print Write e-mail
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Thursday, 01 July 2010 07:11, Written by

For those of you who like stories with simple plots and tidy endings, I must confess the tale of the Human Genome Project isn't one of those. The story didn't reach its conclusion when we unveiled the first draft of the human genetic blueprint at the White House on June 26, 2000. Nor did it end on April 14, 2003, with the completion of a finished, reference sequence. [More]

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Human Genome Project - White House - Biology - genetic - Francis Collins

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