Letters
By Science News
- More than 2 years ago
The liver’s  carbon fixation
  The possibility that insects can harness  solar energy (SN: 1/15/11, p. 8) is no less fascinating than the ability  of the mammalian liver to do the light-independent part of photosynthesis:  carbon fixation. When concentrations of the amino acid methionine rise after a  high-protein meal, the liver shifts gears to get rid of the excess via  activation of a specific transmethylation pathway requiring the amino acid  glycine as a methyl acceptor. This also sets in motion what I call the “glycine  generator” — a short cycle involving two reversible  folate-requiring enzymes cranking out two moles of glycine for each mole of  serine, ammonia and carbon dioxide. Copying this aspect of nature on an  industrial scale might enable the re-cycling of substantial amounts of carbon  dioxide.
Joel Brind, New York, N.Y. 
Brind is a professor of biology at Baruch  College, the City University of New    York.
Light on genetic  dark matter
  “Genetic dark matter” (SN: 12/18/10, p. 18) might be hiding in  plain sight. For over two decades, abundant variation in the number of tandemly  repeated units in microsatellite and minisatellite DNA has been used for  genetic fingerprinting. For years, this variation has been widely regarded as  functionally meaningless. For much of that time, several biologists (including  myself) have hypothesized that such repeat-number variation might help account  for heritable variation in certain traits.
Most such repeats are indeed found in  genomic regions that lack known function. But among the hundreds of thousands  of repeats scattered throughout the human genome are many that are closely  associated with genes. Lots of genes, perhaps most, include at least one  variable tandem repeat sequence at sites where the number of repeat units can  influence gene function. Nevertheless, most attention (and most research  investment) remains focused on single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for the  very simple reason that collecting vast data sets on SNPs has become cheap and  easy. Although surveying repeat number variation and linking this variation  with phenotypic differences are technically challenging, biologists should not  lose sight of this very visible source of heritable variation. 
Science News has covered some of  the relevant studies in past articles (SN: 12/18/04, p. 387; SN: 1/31/09, p. 26). The subject of  repeat number variation might be suitable for an article that could shed light  on many inter-related topics — triplet repeat diseases, evolutionary  facilitation, molecular genetics, genomic diversity, etc.
David G. King, Carbondale, Ill. 
King is an associate professor of zoology  at Southern Illinois University.
Heartburn drugs’  pros and cons
  Nathan Seppa’s article (“It’s enough to  give you heartburn,” SN: 12/4/10, p. 30) edges toward tabloid in tone. Proton  pump inhibitors and the like have saved many lives and reduced nearly to  vanishing the need for peptic-ulcer surgery, and, as Seppa points out, are  important in the control of common and dangerous gastroesophageal reflux  disease. PPIs have proved remarkably well tolerated in general. Obviously, like  all drugs, they should be used prudently.
That said, in addition to the unusual  untoward effects of PPIs listed in the article, two more might be mentioned.  Because hydrochloric acid is a first-line defender against gastrointestinal  infection, the risks of other gastro-intestinal infections besides C. difficile are likely  increased. PPIs may also cause tubulointerstitial nephritis.
Harvey E.  Finkel, Brookline, Mass. 
Finkel is a physician.
Showing that overuse of drugs can be  injurious to your health is not only important from the standpoint of an  individual’s risk, but also for the overwhelming bill for these drugs, paid  sometimes by the individual and at other times by the insurer. There is always  a risk-benefit ratio for drugs. Added to the equation should be the cost of  profligate use of expensive drugs.
Nelson Marans, Silver Spring, Md. 
One cat not  lapping
  One of my cats does not lap. She puts her  paw in the water dish and then licks her paw. I have left your December 4 issue  (“Cats lap liquids with a flick of the tongue and fluid dynamics,” SN: 12/4/10, p. 5) open to the  pictures of the cat drinking, so perhaps she will get the idea.
Emily Johnston, Westminster, Md. 
Shell-less  snails
  In “Snails shed shells in one fell swoop”  (SN: 11/6/10, p. 9), you describe an experiment in which baby snails  exposed to the metal platinum develop without external shells. This is  hypothesized as a rapid evolutionary mechanism that could explain such events  as the transition from snails to slugs.
However, one must inquire whether the  creatures’ DNA was modified. If these newly shell-less snails were allowed to  mature and procreate, would their progeny (in the absence of platinum) still  develop shells? If so, then what we are observing is more akin to a birth  defect, not evolution.
Irwin F. Kraus, Attleboro, Mass.
The scientists didn’t demonstrate that the changes in snail body plan after exposure to platinum were heritable, and we don’t know if the next generation would have had shells or not. What the study did show is that a drastic change in body plan doesn’t necessarily result from slow, incremental changes—big shifts in development, however induced, can happen quickly. The work suggests that it’s possible that some ancient snail could have acquired genetic mutations similar to those induced by the platinum that may have had a large effect on body plan and perhaps on snail and slug evolution. —Rachel Ehrenberg