Cells and Genomes

Cells and Genomes

The surface of our planet is populated by living things curious, intricately
organized chemical factories that take in matter from their surroundings and
use these raw materials to generate copies of themselves. The living organisms
appear extraordinarily diverse in almost every way. What could be more
different than a tiger and a piece of seaweed, or a bacterium and a tree? Yet
our ancestors, knowing nothing of cells or DNA, saw that all these things had
something in common. They called that something "life," marveled at it,
struggled to define it, and despaired of explaining what it was or how it
worked in terms that relate to nonliving matter.
The discoveries of the twentieth century have not diminished the
marvel quite the contrary. But they have lifted away the mystery
surrounding the nature of life. We can now see that all living things are made
of cells, and that these units of living matter all share the same machinery for
their most basic functions. Living things, though infinitely varied when viewed
from the outside, are fundamentally similar inside. The whole of biology is a
counterpoint between the two themes: astonishing variety in individual
particulars; astonishing constancy in fundamental mechanisms. In this first
chapter we begin by outlining the features that are universal to all living
things. We then survey, briefly, the diversity of cells. And we see how, thanks
to the common code in which the specifications for all living organisms are
written, it is possible to read, measure, and decipher these specifications to
achieve a coherent understanding of all the forms of life, from the smallest to
the greatest.
The Universal Features of Cells on Earth

The Universal Features of Cells on Earth

It is estimated that there are more than 10 million perhaps 100
million living species on Earth today. Each species is different, and each
reproduces itself faithfully, yielding progeny that belong to the same species:
the parent organism hands down information specifying, in extraordinary
detail, the characteristics that the offspring shall have. This phenomenon of
heredity
processes, such as the growth of a crystal, or the burning of a candle, or the
formation of waves on water, in which orderly structures are generated but
without the same type of link between the peculiarities of parents and the
peculiarities of offspring. Like the candle flame, the living organism must
consume free energy to create and maintain its organization; but the free
energy drives a hugely complex system of chemical processes that is specified
by the hereditary information.
Most living organisms are single cells; others, such as ourselves, are vast
multicellular cities in which groups of cells perform specialized functions and
are linked by intricate systems of communication. But in all cases, whether we
discuss the solitary bacterium or the aggregate of more than 10
form a human body, the whole organism has been generated by cell divisions
from a single cell. The single cell, therefore, is the vehicle for the hereditary
information that defines the species (Figure 1-1). And specified by this
information, the cell includes the machinery to gather raw materials from the
environment, and to construct out of them a new cell in its own image,
complete with a new copy of the hereditary information. Nothing less than a
cell has this capability.
is a central part of the definition of life: it distinguishes life from other13 cells that

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