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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

More ‘junk DNA’ that actually does something
This is not a screed, or it shouldn’t be. However, the next time you read something about ‘junk DNA’ – check its provenance. It’s true that for years researchers have looked at the huge tracts of genetic material that doesn’t appear to do anything vital (that is, coding for proteins) – which is about 98% of the total DNA – and for lack of any better knowledge called it ‘junk DNA.’ Slowly (and I’m obliged to say) but surely, that pejorative seems to be falling away. The reasons are new studies, such as the one just published in Nature conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, which has identified a segment of ‘junk DNA’ where variances increase the risk of coronary artery disease.
The new study builds on previous work showing that a variant (gene or genes) in an interval of DNA (a length of base pairs) on chromosome 9p21 indicates a person has an increased chance of developing coronary artery disease. Explaining the link more precisely was the goal for the new study. They found that the sequence of DNA in this interval regulates a pair of genes that inhibit cell division. When there are bad copies of this sequence (for example, missing some base pairs), the genes’ expression is inhibited. The researchers speculate that without adequate control from these genes, vascular cells proliferate more than normal and eventually narrow the coronary arteries.
The researchers in this study have taken to calling junk DNA ‘non-coding DNA,’ which seems almost as non-informative but may have to do for now. While it should have been dubious that so much DNA would follow the simplistic formula: non-coding DNA = junk DNA, research is just beginning to find ‘other links’ and is a long way from an accurate molecular explanation of the various roles of non-coding DNA.
This one example may have considerable impact on research for heart disease. It will be worth following similar discoveries in the coming years.