Chinese Scientists Discover Structural Basis of Pre-mRNA Splicing 48
hackingbear writes: On August 21st, the research team led by Prof. Yigong Shi from School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University in China published two side-by-side research articles in Science, reporting the long-sought-after structure of a yeast spliceosome at 3.6 angstrom resolution determined by single particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), and the molecular mechanism of pre-messenger RNA splicing. Until now, decades of genetic and biochemical experiments have identified almost all proteins in spliceosome and uncovered some functions. Yet, the structure remained a mystery for a long time. The works, primarily performed by Dr. Chuangye Yan, and Ph.D students Jing Hang and Ruixue Wan under Prof. Yigong Shi's supervision, settled this Holy Grail question and established the structural basis for the related area. This work was supported by funds from the Ministry of Science and Technology and the National Natural Science Foundation of China.
Re: impact? (Score:1)
They spliced the monosodium together. Its now DSG.
Can one do science without racism ? (Score:1, Insightful)
Is it so hard to do science without having to mixing in all the racist remarks?
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If it were American scientists and some Chinese made hamburger jokes, would it be "racist"? I don't know what the exact algorithm/formula is for determining "racism".
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Would adding Chris Christie into that joke increase or decrease the racism score?
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If you read a food joke as a racist comment, then you're a SJW dumbass. Can you cite a genetic connection between ethnicity and cuisine?
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Dark meat is juicier?
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I would call that "culturally insensitive" perhaps, but NOT "racism". The R word is used too often. That joke is not demeaning in any definitive or clear sense. If I had implied that kind of food was dangerous or foul, I could see a real reason to complain.
I don't see associating the USA with hamburgers or cowboys offensive in any way to USA citizens unless negative traits were implied to be associated with them, such as obesity (burger) or excess bravado (cowboy).
I see 3 possible levels of association:
1.
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I'm not sure it's racist, but it's certainly a *stupid* joke. (As opposed to a "stupid *joke*".)
Remember when America had science? (Score:3, Insightful)
Those were good years.
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At least we don't cover up our history like they do.
+1 agree. quality of lies much better here
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Instead, we outsource Fox News and Rush L. to rewrite it. Those with money/power always find a way to tilt history.
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We still do. It's just that many of those scientists end up going back to their home country to be back with family.
Yigong Shi was in fact a tenured professor at Princeton until a few years ago. I think the Chinese gov't. basically threw gobs of money at him to move to Tsinghua. Before, he was just one of many excellent structural biologists in the US; now, he's arguably the foremost Chinese structural biologist. (Downside: exchanging Princeton faculty meetings for CCP oversight; I'm not sure which sound
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And remember when we could apply science, American or otherwise, to the problems we face without the default reaction being total gibbering fear?
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Those were good years.
But you can compensate for it by making racist jokes.
Seriously though, you mean when only America had science. It is a good thing that a country with a billion people are doing scientific achievements. We should be ecstatic that China is in the game and the rate of scientific progress for humanity will increase by multiple factors. The science performed by a Chinese scientist versus an American one doesn't matter, everyone can benefit.
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Perhaps we should be happy that global economic growth is allowing hundreds of thousands of new biologists to study the science?
As Julian Simone noted [wikipedia.org], the ultimate resource is not something like oil, or copper, or water, but instead the ultimate resource is the power of the human mind - and the more human minds that we can bring online to solving problems, the better off the world will be.
Anyway there is plenty of science in the US. In 2013, two Americans and one America-based scientist won the nobel priz [nobelprize.org]
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This is just nonsensical. The vast majority of articles like this still come from the US/EU/Japan, and most of the technology was developed outside China. In fact, the only reason they're able to do this kind of research is that the last few years have seen exceptional improvements in molecular EM due to a combination of better software and direct electron detectors. In fact, I looked through their methods, and they're using a microscope made by a US/international company, a detector from Japan, and soft
Re: In English Please (Score:1)
Go back to CNN and let us literate folks enjoy science.
In english, why is this a holy grail: (Score:5, Informative)
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Not saying the western medical community doesn't.
But we keep seeing these big, game-changing announcements out of "eastern" medical researchers. Only to have them turn out to be massive frauds.
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But we keep seeing these big, game-changing announcements out of "eastern" medical researchers. Only to have them turn out to be massive frauds.
This isn't a "game-changing" announcement, not the way (for instance) various stem-cell-related discoveries were. It's an impressive technical accomplishment, and it certainly expands our understanding of this system, but it's nothing revolutionary or unforseen, and it's also really "basic" in the sense of "basic research" - foundational, not applied.
Wut? (Score:1)
This has nothing to do with politics. It should be on some nerd Web site! >:-(
Before you down mod me, go review the front page.