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Life Invents Ever New Levels of Language
Abstract
Life keeps inventing new levels of language: DNA, neurons, human language, com
puter code, Internet. Finally, the Internet makes bioinformatics software and biological
knowledge (PubMed, open access publications), among other things, accessible world
wide. For this purpose, a Domain Name Server (DNS) is used to rewrite the Internet
Protocol (IP) address into easily readable addresses. Synthetic biology uses all col
lected knowledge on biological processes for technical applications, e.g. classical bio
technology (microorganisms produce citric acid, erythropoietin or insulin), more
modern are whole circuits (MIT parts list or Biobricks, IGEM competition). Such pro
cesses are described in the GoSynthetic database and the MIT BioBricks. Drug design
using in silico screens and molecular dynamics simulations also noticeably shortens
drug development. Natural and analog computing, for example, use slime molds for
complex calculations. The nanocellulose chip is potentially superior to today’s com
puter chips. It uses DNA for storage and light-controlled polymerases and exonucleases
for reading in and out the stored information. Modulating proteins and processes act
electronically across the nanocellulose membrane. New combinations of molecular
biology, nanotechnology and modern electronics have huge future technology potential.
Apart from the genetic “language of life“, another aspect is very fascinating: Life is always
inventing new levels of language (see Sect. 12.1).
© Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2023
T. Dandekar, M. Kunz, Bioinformatics,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-65036-3_13