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    The Gene

    Page 74
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      radiation and rate of, 115–16, 301

      risk for a disease linked to, 455n

      schizophrenia with, 299, 443–44, 445n, 445

      as statistical concept, 264

      variation generated by, 105–06, 110, 181, 261, 264

      myc gene, in humans, 405

      Myers, Richard, 336

      Myriad Genetics, 439

      Nagasaki Japan, atomic bombing (1945) of, 301

      Nägeli, Carl von, 54–55, 59

      Napoléon, 35

      National Academy of Sciences (NAS), 227, 238, 298

      National Cancer Institute, 371, 438

      National Institutes of Health (NIH), 168, 275

      ADA deficiency gene therapy and, 423–25

      AIDS-focused research and, 375

      conference on genetic research by, 197–98

      Human Genome Project under, 404, 304–05, 306, 308, 309, 310

      recombinant DNA guidelines from, 231, 236, 243

      natural ambiguity, 194

      natural history

      belief in divine role in, 29, 30, 35, 42

      Darwin’s interest in, 28–30, 31

      Herschel on cause-and-effect mechanisms in, 29–30

      Paley’s approach to, 29

      parson-naturalists and, 30–31

      Natural Science Society, Brno, 53

      natural selection

      Darwin’s use of, 37–38, 37n, 39–40, 61, 104

      de Vries on spontaneous mutants in, 61

      evolution and, 40–41, 104–05, 331

      Galton’s use of selective breeding to influence, 64, 73

      Malthus’s theory of, 37

      mutation transmission and, 421

      natural variation needed for, 104–05

      temperature as factor in, 106

      Wallace on evolution and, 39

      Natural Theology (Paley), 29

      Nature (journal), 158, 218, 228, 286, 320, 321

      nature, immutability of, 292

      nature versus nurture, 8, 67, 128, 292, 297, 346–47, 364, 403, 481

      Nazi Germany, 119–25

      applied biology (applied genetics) in, 119, 120

      eugenics programs in, 13, 76, 109, 124, 138

      euthanasia program for genetic defectives in, 13, 122–24

      Hitler’s rise in, 119–20

      Hongerwinter (Hunger Winter) in Netherlands and, 393–94

      racial cleansing laws in, 76–77, 121–22

      racial extermination programs in, 124–25

      racial hygiene beliefs in, 76–77, 120–21, 502

      renunciation of eugenics use by, 138

      scientists leaving Germany as reaction to, 130, 131, 146

      sterilization programs in, 120, 121–22, 123, 124, 125, 129

      twin studies used by, 128, 129–30, 129n, 380

      Neanderthals, 332–33, 339, 340

      negative eugenics

      preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and, 456

      prenatal testing and selective abortion as aspects of, 273

      selective sterilization in, 75, 76

      sexual selection for male children as, 456–57

      Negrette, Américo, 285

      Neimöller, Martin, 125

      nematodes (C. elegans), genome sequencing of, 191, 194, 313, 315

      neo-eugenics (newgenetics), 272–77

      criticism of, 273–74, 275–76

      genes as units of selection in, 273

      genetic screening and, 272–73

      older eugenics differentiated from, 272–73, 275

      selecting against genetic disorders using, 273–74

      support for, 274–75

      technologies for identifying genes in, 276–77

      Netherlands, Hongerwinter (Hunger Winter) in, 393–94, 395, 405–06

      neuromuscular disease, genetic diagnosis of, 450–52, 453

      neutrons, 140

      New England Journal of Medicine, 260, 466

      new species formation

      Darwin’s research on bird population evolution and, 37–38, 45n

      Dobzhansky’s genetic variant experiments and, 105–08

      geographic factors affecting isolation and interbreeding and, 45n, 108–09

      Herschel’s speculations on, 29–30

      as “mystery of mysteries,” 30

      New York Times, 237, 259, 300, 343, 460, 465, 479, 491

      New Yorker (magazine), 348

      Newsweek (magazine), 237, 300

      Newton, Isaac, 44, 74, 172, 449

      next-generation DNA sequencing, 443, 445

      Nicholas II, Czar of Russia, 98, 100

      NIH. See National Institutes of Health

      Nikolaevich, Alexei, czarevitch of Russia, 99, 100, 465

      Nirenberg, Marshall, 168, 259, 426

      nitrogen, oxygen transformed from, 140

      Nixon, Richard, 232

      Nobel Prizes, 24, 97, 130, 139, 143, 145, 159, 163, 217, 221–22, 236, 241, 259, 274, 398

      Noel, Walter, 170, 173, 178

      noncoding genes, 314, 455n

      Non-Invasive Prenatal Testing (NIPT), 490n

      normalcy

      biological imperatives for diversity balanced against human desire for, 481

      eugenic sterilizations to maintain, 81–82

      gene-environment interaction and, 258

      moral issues in focus on, 331, 349, 458

      parents and social engineering choices for, 461

      shift in genetics from pathology focus to being science of normalcy, 330

      normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), 256–57

      Not in Our Genes: Biology, Ideology, and Human Nature (Lewontin), 372–73

      nuclear transfer, 396–98, 398n, 402, 489

      nucleic acids, 134–35, 137, 146, 180, 413

      nuclein, 135

      Nuremberg Laws for the Protection of the Hereditary Health of the German People (Germany), 121–22

      nurse cells, in ES cell cultivation, 468

      Nüsslein-Volhard, Christiane, 188–89

      Obama, Barack, 476

      Obesity, 261, 262, 394, 406, 487, 491

      Ochoa, Severo, 168

      Office of Science and Technology, 232

      Olson, Maynard, 312

      Olympia (film), 121

      On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (Darwin)

      Agassiz’s theory of multiple origins challenged by, 331–32

      Galton’s study of, 65

      human descent mentioned in, 332, 372

      publication of, 39–40, 502

      reviews of, 40, 44, 53, 332

      operons, 176, 176n, 177

      Orestes myth, 21

      organelles, 293, 337, 398n

      original sin, in Christian inheritance theory, 25

      origin theories

      Agassiz’s theory of multiple origins and, 331–32

      Christian belief in divine involvement in, 30, 35–36

      Herschel on cause-and-effect mechanisms in, 29–30

      Laplace on natural forces in, 35

      as “mystery of mysteries,” 30

      Paley’s approach to, 29

      parson-naturalists and, 30–31

      study of genes for, 331–33

      ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, 429–36

      criticisms of approach to trials with, 433–34, 435–36, 465

      death in trial of, 432–33, 434–35, 465

      gene therapy for, 429–34

      scientific lessons of trial with, 434–35

      transmission of, 429

      Orwell, George, 12, 131

      Osler, William, 76

      osteogenesis imperfecta, 261

      Out of Africa theory, 336

      Owen, Richard, 34, 40

      oxygen

      blood carrier for, 141, 170, 171

      nitrogen transformed into, 140

      Page, David, 361, 362

      Paley, William, 29

      pancreas, insulin in, 216, 239–40, 243n

      pancreatic cancer, 405

      pangenesis, 44, 57, 58, 71

      pangenesis, Darwin’s theory of,
    44, 46, 57, 71

      pangenetics, de Vries’s theory of, 62, 71

      Paracelsus, 25

      Paradise Lost (Milton), 32

      Pardee, Arthur, 175, 176n, 177

      Park, Hetty, 270–71

      Park, Laura, 270

      parson-naturalists, 30–31

      Partition of Bengal, 4–5, 493

      Patent Act (US), 245

      patent and patent applications, 14n

      for Amgen’s isolation of erythropoietin, 308

      for BRCA1 gene sequence, 439

      for gene-fragment technology, 309

      for Genentech’s insulin created in a test tube, 245

      for genes, 308–09, 312

      for recombinant DNA techniques, 237, 245, 308

      Patrinos, Ari, 317–18

      Patterson, Orlando, 348

      Pauling, Linus, 164, 333n

      DNA structure research of, 148, 152–53

      hemoglobin variants and, 170

      protein structure research of, 143, 148

      pea plant-breeding experiments of Mendel, 48–52, 51n, 55

      Pearson, Karl, 68–70, 73, 76, 116

      PEG-ADA, 423, 427, 428

      penicillin, 145, 229

      People (magazine), 371

      personality archetypes, 385

      Perutz, Max, 131

      Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, 260

      phenotypes, 72

      effects of variant genes on traits and, 104

      environmental triggers affecting, 107

      eugenics and manipulation of, 74

      genes predictive of risk in, 447

      genotypes as determinants of, 106–07

      interactions between heredity, chance, environment, variation, and evolution in shaping, 107–08

      natural selection of fittest, 108

      random chance as factor in, 107

      phiX virus, 294

      physiology, 142

      Plague, The (Camus), 479

      plant-breeding experiments

      Correns’s use of, 59–60

      de Vries’s use of, 58–59, 60–61

      Mendel’s use of, 46, 48–52, 51n, 54–55

      Plato, 22, 23, 69, 74

      Ploetz, Alfred, 76–77, 120–21, 129

      pneumococcus, research for vaccine against, 112–14

      Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), 246

      pneumonia, 2, 112, 113, 246, 289, 309, 422, 428

      pneumococcal pneumonia, 112

      Pollack, Robert, 209, 210

      polycystic kidney disease (PKD), 270

      polygenic syndromes, 295

      classification of, 262

      Down syndrome as, 262, 262n, 267, 455

      inheritance of, 481–82

      mathematical models for genes in, 302

      multiple genes at multiple locations and, 262–63, 295

      negative selection in, 276

      schizophrenia as, 276, 300

      polymerase chain reaction (PCR), 302, 430, 439

      polymorphisms, 280–81, 280n, 301, 303

      Popular Science Monthly, 332

      population growth, Malthus on, 37, 38, 39

      positional cloning, 288–91

      positive eugenics

      gene therapy and rebirth of, 464

      genotype selection in, 274

      Muller’s interest in, 116

      neo-eugenics and, 274

      preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and, 456

      support for, 75, 274

      post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 459, 491, 497n

      preformation, 25–26, 27

      preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), 456–57, 464, 477, 490

      Preliminary Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy, A (Herschel), 29

      prenatal tests, 491

      amniocentesis and, 267, 268, 291

      for cystic fibrosis, 291

      feeblemindedness diagnosis for sterilization using, 79, 81–82

      genetic. See genetic screening

      lawsuits over medical advice received after, 270–71

      neo-eugenics (newgenetics) and, 272–73

      non-invasive (NIPT), 490n

      parental right to choose not to have a child after, 271

      right to be born and, 269, 270, 272

      therapeutic abortion and, 267–68, 273

      previvors

      available information and choices made by, 453–54, 455, 457, 492

      coining of phrase, 441

      Priddy, Albert, 80–82, 83, 116, 120, 273

      Principles of Geology (Lyell), 32

      Proceedings of the Brno Science Society, 53

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 228

      promoters, 307n

      Prospects for Designed Genetic Change conference (1971), Chicago, 198

      Protein + Cell (journal), 478

      proteins

      amino acids in structure of, 163

      cell functions executed by, 163–64

      flow of biological information with, 410

      genes in configuration of molecules of, 163

      X-ray diffraction of structure of, 143

      protein receptors, and smell, 323

      proteomes, 487n

      protons, 140

      pseudogenes, 324–25

      psychotic fugues, 8, 298

      Ptashne, Mark, 176n, 247, 403n

      PTSD, 459, 491, 497n

      Pythagoras

      Aristotle’s criticism of, 23

      Darwin’s use of homunculus concept from, 43

      Galton’s borrowing from, 69

      inheritance theory of, 21–22, 25, 27, 53, 356

      Lamarck’s theory similar to ideas of, 42

      preformation as restatement of theory of, 27

      Pythagorean theorem, 22, 24

      Quake, Stephen, 450, 452

      Quayle, Dan, 371

      Quetelet, Adolphe, 66, 103

      race

      Agassiz’s theory of multiple origins and, 331–32

      eugenics and fear of degeneration of, 75

      intelligence and, 14, 341, 343, 345, 346, 348

      Racial Biology of Jews, The (Verschuer), 124

      racial cleansing

      Nazi approach to, 121–22, 124

      Ploetz’s theory of, 76–77

      racial hygiene, 76–77, 120–21, 129, 502

      radiation

      mutant rate changes in fruit flies from, 115–16, 131, 220

      mutations induced by, after Hiroshima/Nagasaki bombings, 301

      stem mutations from, 469–70

      radium, Curie’s research on, 145

      Randall, J. T., 143–44, 149

      random chance. See chance

      Rasputin, Grigory, 99

      Rau, Mary, 123

      Recent Out of Africa model (ROAM), 336

      recessive traits, Mendel’s plant-breeding experiments, 51–52

      recombinant DNA

      Advisory Committee for experiments using, 425

      “Berg letter” on benefits and hazards of, 228

      Berg’s initial creation of, 206–08, 210–11, 212–13, 214, 291, 503

      creation of, as beginning of a new era, 226, 291

      first creation of, 291

      “future’s future” discussion at Erice with students on, 225–26, 417–18, 437

      implication of technology of, 206–07, 209, 210, 417

      Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee (RAC), 425, 426, 430, 434

      recombinant factor VIII therapy, 249

      recombinant TPA, 251

      recombination, 181–82, 184, 208, 227, 229, 231, 278, 360n

      Reimer, David, 363–65, 366

      Reimers, Niels, 237

      replication

      of DNA, 179–80, 180n, 182, 218, 288, 296

      of genes, 184, 205, 224, 302

      of plasmids, 209

      Repository for Germinal Choice (genius bank), Escondido, California, 274, 276

      Republic, The (Plato), 22, 23

      resilience gene, in humans, 460

      retroviruses, 223, 410, 423–24, 427

      reverse transcriptase, 223, 248

     
    ; rhesus monkeys, ES cells derived from embryos of, 468

      rhinoceros fossils, 32–33

      ribonucleic acid. See RNA

      ribose, in RNA, 135n

      ribosomes, 337

      identification of, 165–66

      noncoding genes and, 314

      protein synthesis by, 165, 314

      Ridley, Matt, 330

      Riefenstahl, Leni, 121

      Riggs, Art, 241–42, 243

      right to be born, 269, 270, 272

      right to choose not to have a child, 271

      Riordan, Jack, 289–90

      risk

      BRCA1 breast cancer gene and, 439–41, 446, 453

      genetic diagnosis and, 438

      interpretation of predictive aspects of, 447, 449, 455

      mutations in schizophrenia and, 444, 446, 461

      region of a gene tied to, 455n

      RNA (ribonucleic acid)

      chemical composition of, 135, 135n

      flow of biological information with, 410

      gene regulation influenced by, 410

      information theory on formation of, 413

      Miller’s “primordial soup” experiments to form, 411

      noncoding genes and, 314

      Szostak’s experiment using micelles to generate self-replicating forms of, 411–12

      RNA splicing, 219

      RNA Tie Club, 164, 165

      Roberts, Richard, 219, 307, 318

      Roblin, Richard, 230, 231

      Rockefeller University, 133, 135, 400, 400n

      Roe v. Wade, 268–69

      Roosevelt, Franklin D., 232

      Rubin, Gerry, 315, 316–17

      Russian Revolution, 98, 99, 109

      Rutherford, Ernest, 140, 221n

      Sabin, Alfred, 282

      Sabin, Jessie, 282

      Sabin, Paul, 282

      Sabin, Seymour, 282

      San Francisco Chronicle, 236

      Sanger, Frederick, 216–18, 222, 240, 241, 294, 302, 310, 315

      Sarler, Carol, 371

      Sayre, Wallace, 340

      scale shifts, in science breakthroughs, 293, 294

      Scarr, Sandra, 348

      Scheller, Richard, 241n

      schizophrenia, 73, 79, 441–50

      bipolar disease and, 8, 442, 443, 444, 447

      Bleuler’s early description of, 441–42

      breast cancer compared with, 446

      coining of word, 442

      “crazy genius” portrayal of, 448

      creativity in, 448–49, 453

      criminal behavior linked to, 300–301

      familial form of, 8, 442, 444–45, 446n, 461

      family’s concern about inheriting, 7–8

      genetic diagnosis of, 446–47, 449–50, 453, 455, 492

      genetic diversity in, 298

      genetic links in, 8, 129, 261, 262, 276, 298–300, 303, 442, 445n, 449, 453, 503

      genetic maps and sequencing for, 97, 302, 443–44, 461

      intergenerational histories of, 8

      molecular receptor changes in, 388

      mutations linked to, 299, 443–44, 445, 445n

      Nazi programs for, 121

      pattern of inheritance as clue to genetic influences in, 298–300

     


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