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Genes come alive with the sound of music

Molecular geneticists riff with strings of protein-coding DNA.

Imagine humming along to horse haemoglobin or tapping your toes to transcription factors. Now you can, thanks to a pair of molecular biologists who have developed a way to turn such proteins into music.

Read the story here.

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Some readers of this article may find this piece that I wrote with Dr Uma Suthersanen of interest: "DNA Music: Intellectual Property & the Law of Unintended Consequences" [2005] 18(1) Science Studies 5-29, ISSN: 0786-3012. Pdf copies are available from myself upon request. Here is the abstract: "Patent regulation provides numerous examples of how policy decisions have consequences that run counter to what was intended. One reason that unintended consequences ensue arises from the fact that when powerful and organised business interests consider that a new reform inhibits their economic appropriation opportunities, they seek to make the perceived inadequacies of the law less harmful to their interests. They may achieve this through alternative legal means or by the adoption of new technologies. For certain reasons, regulating DNA patenting is especially vulnerable to unintended consequences. For businesses, one possible alternative to patents is to encode DNA sequences as music and use copyright and trade secrecy rather than patents. Of course, such alternative means of protection can have their own unintended consequences. If we are right in predicting that if molecular biology patenting is suppressed more and more, the legal and technological measures that lock up information will become increasingly attractive to industry, then one should tread very cautiously when reforming the patent system in this field."

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