Shooting the messenger
A new way to detect the jobs done by individual genes works in mammals
JUST occasionally, nature gives you something for nothing. In 1968 Hamilton Smith and his colleagues at Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, found that certain bacteria produce molecules called restriction enzymes. These cut strands of DNA in particular, predictable places. That led to a lot of useful technology, the most familiar, perhaps, being the genetic “fingerprints” used to identify criminals from DNA left at the scenes of their crimes.
This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Shooting the messenger”
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