DNA backup
Jun. 9th, 2010 10:49 pmSo, DNA - it sort of degrades as you age, and that's mostly why you get old and die, and is a cause of cancer and stuff.
So... how difficult is it to make a copy of it, like 'right now' for the sake of say - future organ cloning?
If you could replace failing body parts with 'you aged 20' would you have a substantial improvement on quality of life?
And give that, does it make sense to take backups _now_ despite not necessarily being able to make use of them? Such as exhaustive DNA sequencing, and saving a copy in an archive somewhere, in the hope that in 30 years time, you'll be able to 'load' it, and grow a heart transplant or similar.
And even if this is utter hokey nonsense, does it sound plausible enough that someone is already running it as a scam?
So... how difficult is it to make a copy of it, like 'right now' for the sake of say - future organ cloning?
If you could replace failing body parts with 'you aged 20' would you have a substantial improvement on quality of life?
And give that, does it make sense to take backups _now_ despite not necessarily being able to make use of them? Such as exhaustive DNA sequencing, and saving a copy in an archive somewhere, in the hope that in 30 years time, you'll be able to 'load' it, and grow a heart transplant or similar.
And even if this is utter hokey nonsense, does it sound plausible enough that someone is already running it as a scam?
no subject
Date: 2010-06-10 06:53 am (UTC)Does sequencing it, storing it as an electronic copy, in the hope of future recreating as-was make sense?
Or if we're ever in that position, it's irrelevant anyway, as your actual DNA is probably more useful anyway?
no subject
Date: 2010-06-10 07:26 am (UTC)My biology training ended over a decade ago, so I'm not an expert.
no subject
Date: 2010-06-10 07:56 am (UTC)