Exact(2)
Assuming this isn't just some random mistake, Google has confirmed what nearly all of us expected their new update to be called, though there's sadly little other information to go on at this point.
Although this insertion could originate from a random mistake in the splicing process, the absence of stop codons or cysteine residues (which would destabilize the structure) and the fact that it keeps the translational phase are indicative that it could result in a new protein product.
Similar(58)
In January, two researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, (and the journalists who wrote about them) spurred a firestorm by writing in Science that much of cancer is due to "bad luck," or random mistakes that take place when cells divide.
The new work is "very exciting" says Bruce Eaton, a nucleic acid catalysis expert at NeXstar Pharmaceuticals in Boulder, Colorado, because researchers have already come up with ways to coax polymerases to make a few random mistakes in their copying efforts, in the process turning out trillions of DNA strands that all differ slightly from one another.
The new work offers the first estimate of what proportion of cancers are caused by these random mistakes.
Although most people know about the hereditary and environmental causes of cancer, such as smoking, few appreciate the risk from random mistakes that occur each time a normal cell divides and copies its DNA into two new cells, Tomasetti said.
Or were the president's words, reiterated and reinvigorated by his spokespersons, a random, earnest mistake on their part?
The lesson from the analyst's couch is that, far from being random, these mistakes are systematic and predictable:Over-optimism. Ask most people about the future, and they will see too much blue sky ahead, even if past experience suggests otherwise.
That study, by Vogelstein and mathematician Cristian Tomasetti, asserted that random DNA mistakes accounted for a lot more of the risk of developing cancer than previously thought.
One of the ways in which a cell becomes cancerous, however, is that through some random mutation or mistake it finds a way to turn the telomerase switch on, so that the cell has the ability to divide indefinitely without ever tripping the telomere timer.
What had happened to me freshman year wasn't something random or some mistake.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com