Science Journal
We’ve heard the politicians and the eco-activists’ views on the Šumava – but what do the scientists say? And by the way, how do cells read DNA? That’s what we’ll be trying to get our heads around this month on Science Journal.
Where do the trillions of cells in the human body (or other bodies for that
matter) get their instructions from? They read the book of DNA. But how? No
one has yet been able to quite figure that out apparently. Scientists from
the Molecular genetics Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences though
have taken a good step in the right direction, helping to explain how
histones – special proteins that help protect DNA in the cell nucleus –
can change certain molecules of RNA if they are modified only slightly.
Meanwhile, it’s incorrect changes to RNA splices that cause a number of
diseases, so learning to properly modify the histones could be a step
towards curing certain timorous or neurodegenerative diseases. But why try
to explain it poorly myself when I can get an expert explanation from Dr
David Staňek of the Molecular genetics Institute, whose team made the
discovery…
Photo: Rafal Konieczny, Creative Commons 3.0
What’s fuzzy and brown, about five millimetres long and can devour a
forest? None other than Ips typographus, better known as the bark beetle
– which has done untold damage to one of the most important natural
preserves in the Czech Republic, the Šumava, or Bohemian Forest. Part of
the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, and one of the most beautiful places in the
country for hiking or skiing, when a tree falls in the forest - whether at
the hands of loggers or the mandibles of the bark beetle -everyone hears
it. The ongoing debate that we have followed for years is whether to combat
the infestation by logging the infested areas - as the current park
management wants to do - or to leave mother nature to clean up after
herself. We hear from the politicians and environmental groups on a regular
basis, but less so what the natural scientists have to say on the matter.
To that end, I called Dr. Jan Frouz of Charles University’s Institute for
Environmental Studies, who I asked for a judgement on the polarised
positions…
Jan Frouz the Institute for Environmental Studies there, ending this month’s edition of Science Journal, we’ll be with you again with more science news in roughly 27 days, 23 hours and 45 minutes.







