Human development IV: The living cell has information-directed self-organization

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Abstract

In this paper, restricted to describing the ontogenesis of the cell, we discuss the processing of DNA through RNA to proteins and argue that this process is not able to transfer the information necessary to organize the proteins in the cell, but only to transfer the information necessary to form the shape of the proteins. We shortly describe the structure of the information-carrying field recruited by the cells that we think is responsible for building the organelles and other cellular structures. We use the cells superior control of its cytoskeleton as an example of how the cell is using an informational field to give the positional information that guides all the local chemical processes behind the cell movement. We describe the information-directed selforganization in cells and argue that this can explain the ontogenesis of the cell. We also suggest the existence of an undiscovered phenomenon behind the informationtransmitting cell interactions. We conclude that during evolution, the cell developed into an information-guided self-organizing structure. The mystery we want to solve is: What is the mechanical cause and nature of biological information? ©2006 with author.

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APA

Ventegodt, S., Hermansen, T. D., Flensborg-Madsen, T., Nielsen, M. L., Clausen, B., & Merrick, J. (2006, September 7). Human development IV: The living cell has information-directed self-organization. TheScientificWorldJournal. https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2006.177

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