Bacteria

From: Reed Konsler (konslerr@mail.weston.org)
Date: Tue 11 Mar 2003 - 12:27:31 GMT

  • Next message: Lawrence DeBivort: "Instance of Memetic dissemination"

    Bacteria are prokaryotes; they don't have internal organells like a nucleus or mitochondria. You are thinking of a eukaryote like yeast.

    Best,

    Reed

    "Date: Mon, 10 Mar 2003 00:03:44 -0500 From: Keith Henson <hkhenson@rogers.com> Subject: Re: memetics-digest V1 #1303

    At 08:43 PM 09/03/03 -0500, Scott wrote:

    >Hmmmm..., where does a gene become active in a bacterium? A nucleus? Where
    >do mitochondiral genes in eukaryotes become active? In the cell's nucleus?

    Sorry. I should have included all places where genes are transcribed and duplicated.

    Keith Henson"

    =============================================================== This was distributed via the memetics list associated with the Journal of Memetics - Evolutionary Models of Information Transmission For information about the journal and the list (e.g. unsubscribing) see: http://www.cpm.mmu.ac.uk/jom-emit



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Tue 11 Mar 2003 - 12:24:55 GMT