Jacob's Ladder: The History of the Human Genome

Front Cover
W. W. Norton & Company, 2004 - 272 pages
Jacob's Ladder delivers a remarkably lucid explanation of what the sequencing of the human genome really tells us. Decoding the sequence, evolutionary biologist Henry Gee shows, is just the beginning: seeing the letters and words. The next frontier is in understanding snatches of conversation between genes--how they interact to direct the growth of an organism. Gee takes us into the heart of that conversation, illuminating how genes govern a single egg cell's miraculous transformation into a human being, and how they continue to direct that person's day-by-day development throughout a lifetime.

Gee tells the story of what we know about the genome today and what we are likely to discover tomorrow. As our knowledge advances, we will be able to direct with increasing authority the conversations between genes: not only performing medical interventions but also creating whole scripts directing birth, ancestry, and diversity in a brave new world.

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Contents

Birth
3
Ex Ovo Omnia
20
Unfolding
33
Revolution
48
Evolution
66
Monsters
91
Genetics
104
PART TWO
129
Operon
156
Monsters reloaded
173
Scars of evolution
200
My travels history
227
Jacobs ladder
238
Notes
253
Index
265
Copyright

It has not escaped our notice
131

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About the author (2004)

Henry Gee, former Regents Professor at UCLA, is a science writer for Nature. He lives in London.

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