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02. Alternative Energy
03. Computer Power
04. Nanotechnology
05. Stem Cells
06. Communications
07. Hydrocarbon Use
08. Clean Transportation
09. Online Information
10. DNA Decoding
11. Cell Biology
12. Photonics
13. Proteomics
14. Quantum Physics
15. Genetic Modification
16. Degrading Oceans
17. Robotics
18. Nanomedicine
19. Neuroscience
20. Extending Lifespan
21. Overpopulation
22. Scientific Instruments
23. Synthetic Biology
24. Nuclear Physics
25. Artificial Intelligence
26. Body Implants
27. Major Disease Cures
28. Water Shortage
29. Species Loss
30. Brain Enhancement
31. Origin of Life
32. Sensor Technology
33. Pandemics
34. Exogenous Life
35. Dark Matters
36. Cosmology
37. Energy Storage
38. Virtual/Augmented Reality
39. Space Exploration
40. Impact Event
Impact Areas listed in order of ranking

In the helix grooves – how proteins find the DNA
This is one of those stories in science that is a little difficult to visualize. Let’s start with the shape of a DNA chromosome – a double helix, right? It looks a bit like a spiral staircase, with the rails being nucleotides and the steps being the bases. Now imagine descending a spiral staircase looking for a specific step on which to stop. As it turns out, that’s what DNA replicating proteins do. They literally slide up and down the ‘grooves’ between the nucleotide rails until they reach a place where the chemical configuration (molecular chemistry and shape) find exactly the right bases.
Until recently scientists didn’t know for sure that’s how proteins found their DNA. There were other models, for example, one that supposed the protein moved down the outside of a DNA strand in a more or less straight line. Some rather clever research (clever in this case meaning finding indirect evidence) by a team of scientists from the U.S. and India has provided the confirmation of the spiral model.
There are two grooves in a DNA strand, a major (22 Ångstroms wide) and a minor (12 Ångstroms wide). Most proteins (typically, transcription proteins) move along the major groove because it provides more contact surface with the bases. This is a kind of guided search mechanism that makes it possible for proteins to do their work much faster than might be expected if they just freely floated around the cell and only occasionally contacted the DNA strands.
This is one of those nitty-gritty pieces of science. It’s the inner workings kind of stuff that might not seem terribly relevant to the big picture. In a way, that’s true. But if we’re ever going to get a practical handle on how our genetic machinery works – and therefore how life works – this is where it’s at. Knowing that replication proteins slide down the helix grooves not only explains how the complex matching of molecular configuration works, but it may also make it possible to manipulate it. What if, for example, we could stop the spread of a viral infection by preventing its replication proteins from efficiently finding the right ‘step’ in the DNA strand?