THURSDAY, JANUARY 8 2009

Renee Zelnick's Post

Renee Zelnick's Post

Spooky Action at a Distance: DNA's "Impossible" Telepathic Properties

Renee Zelnick | 02.28.08 | 04:24 PM |
0
Not yet rated
Renee Zelnick's picture

DNA has been found to have a bizarre ability to put itself together, even at a distance, when according to known science it shouldn't be able to. Explanation: None, at least not yet.

Before i continue, i must credit this post to Rebecca Sato @ dailygalaxy.com-
let's continue, shall we?

Scientists are reporting evidence that contrary to our current beliefs about what is possible, intact double-stranded DNA has the “amazing” ability to recognize similarities in other DNA strands from a distance. Somehow they are able to identify one another, and the tiny bits of genetic material tend to congregate with similar DNA. The recognition of similar sequences in DNA’s chemical subunits, occurs in a way unrecognized by science. There is no known reason why the DNA is able to combine the way it does, and from a current theoretical standpoint this feat should be chemically impossible.

Even so, the research published in ACS’ Journal of Physical Chemistry B, shows very clearly that homology recognition between sequences of several hundred nucleotides occurs without physical contact or presence of proteins. Double helixes of DNA can recognize matching molecules from a distance and then gather together, all seemingly without help from any other molecules or chemical signals.

In the study, scientists observed the behavior of fluorescently tagged DNA strands placed in water that contained no proteins or other material that could interfere with the experiment. Strands with identical nucleotide sequences were about twice as likely to gather together as DNA strands with different sequences. No one knows how individual DNA strands could possibly be communicating in this way, yet somehow they do. The “telepathic” effect is a source of wonder and amazement for scientists.

“Amazingly, the forces responsible for the sequence recognition can reach across more than one nanometer of water separating the surfaces of the nearest neighbor DNA,” said the authors Geoff S. Baldwin, Sergey Leikin, John M. Seddon, and Alexei A. Kornyshev and colleagues.

This recognition effect may help increase the accuracy and efficiency of the homologous recombination of genes, which is a process responsible for DNA repair, evolution, and genetic diversity. The new findings may also shed light on ways to avoid recombination errors, which are factors in cancer, aging, and other health issues.


Member Comments:

Submitted by Jeffery DeCelles on February 29, 2008 - 7:22am.

Renee, you bring the tastiest morsels to our table.
What jumped out for me in this post is the "straight" scientific assumption that these molecules of DNA are separate, discrete, particular things, and must signal to co-ordinate behavior.
Much of the heretical rumination hereabouts involves unitive fields as a fundamental substrate of being, be they framed as Sheldrakian Morphogenetic Fields, Reichian Orgone manifestations, Zero-Point Field effects, Akashic emergence, etc.
Common thread, to my befuddled head, is the insight that the discretely particulate, only appears so, in a similar sense that my shadow on the wall appears discrete from me, and if the shadow is all that the setting makes visible, may be all that an observer would call "real". (oops, my Platonism is showing)
As paradigms go, the wave-mechanical, field-fundamental, chaotic-dynamic one which has been unfolding for a century now, fits the world-as-experienced better than our "orthodox" Newtonian/Cartesian one, at least in my funky neighborhood.
Maybe things ARE different in the Ivory Towers of academia, so cozy to the Citadels of Commerce.
The gist of my rant, dear Renee, is, from this dynamic field model, spontaneous homologous recombination is to be expected, as satisfaction of negentropic tropism implicit in metaspace. Complex stuff huddles together to maintain complexity. Maintenance and elaboration of complexity is, (HERESY!), the apparent teleologic vector in this phase-space we call home.

Call the guards! Prepare the gallows! Bring forth...the Comfy Chair!

Submitted by Jon Watts on March 1, 2008 - 10:59am.

Renee, a friend and I had a conversation on this exact subject a few days ago. The end thread was our joking about the inquisition and heresy, and that we should break out the comfy chair!! Ripples in the pond my friends. Jeffery, your posts burn as brightly as ever! I must e-mail you..

PB&J to you both,

Jon

Submitted by Ken Ebert on February 29, 2008 - 8:40am.

Hey, Renee and Jeffrey!

What you posted here remind me of the experiments of Poponin and Gariaev (as reported in Gregg Braden's The Divine Matrix), so I looked it up and read again. The experiments were revealing of the ordering nature/effect of DNA on photons.

Upon reading the passage in Gregg's book I flashed to Celtic mythology - to the Oran Mor - where the Great Song gives order to the universe.

The propensity of DNA of like kind to gather and "hang" could easily be explained by the fact that they are singing the same song. Or, in a more archaic mode - they are sung by the same song.

Just a side note - also from Celtic lore - tis a grand notion to consider The Longing as well. I can see it as a force which exemplifies the tendancy of like sequences to seek each other to enhance coherence of the song being sung.

Playful notions. Thanks to you both for stimulating me thusly!

~ Ken

Submitted by Bob Johnston on February 28, 2008 - 8:12pm.

Thank you, Renee, for passing this along. I'll be interested in any follow-up studies you may come across. Best, Bob

Share This Page

User login