HOW THE TRINITY BUILT A UNIVERSE: 
ALL THINGS ARE TRIUNE, WITH BINARY INTERACTIVES.
SPACE/MATTER/ENERGY, BEGET LIFE AND CONSCIOUSNESS.
  Real World Experiences in Operating a Collaboratory: The Protein Data Bank Helen M. Berman Board of Governors Professor of Chemistry. - ppt download  
  • Organisms are extremely complex. A complex organism contains multiple organ systems with different functions. Multiple organisms of a single species may form a group called a population. Simple cells gave rise to complex ones just once in 4 billion years of evolution. The Event Originator’s blueprint for the origination of life forms did it.
  • Proteins are molecular machines. Examples of biological molecular machines include myosin, kinesin, dynein, and ribosomes. Kinesin is a protein that moves cargo within the cell. Dynein is a protein that is part of the flagella of motile cilia and handles the movement found in these proteins. Proteins are large molecules that are the workhorses of living cells. They facilitate many important functions through their interactions with other proteins, DNA, and small molecules, such as drugs. In a living cell, proteins are quite mobile and dynamic molecular machines.
  • An example of a protein: Lysozyme (Protein Data Bank code 1HEW). The... | Download Scientific Diagram
  • Amino acids are the building blocks of cells. There are 20 types of amino acids.
  • Proteins perform vital functions, they digest food and fight infections. They are, in fact, Nano-machines, each one of them designed to perform a specific task. They are, in fact, Nano-machines, each one of them designed to perform a specific task.
  • How did molecular machines evolve? Researchers resurrect lost proteins to find out | Ars Technica
  • DNA has built-in operating instructions.
  • Eukaryotic cells have developed extensive quality control processes that center on the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to protect against the accumulation of aberrant secretory and membrane proteins. Chaperonin is essential for cell viability in all growth conditions, because it requires them for the efficient folding of many proteins that mediate vital cellular functions.
  • In eukaryotes, there are only 21 proteinogenic amino acids, the 20 of the standard genetic code, plus selenocysteine. The essential amino acids are histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, and valine.  
    HOW THE TRINITY BUILT A UNIVERSE: 
    ALL THINGS ARE TRIUNE, WITH BINARY INTERACTIVES.
     SPACE/MATTER/ENERGY BEGET LIFE AND CONSCIOUSNESS.
    The genetic code comprises a sequence of three-letter words (sometimes called triplets, sometimes called codons), written one after another along the length of the DNA strand.
  • The genetic code includes 64 permutations, or combinations, of three-letter nucleotide sequences that can be made from the four nucleotides. Of the 64 codons, 61 represent amino acids, and three are stop signals. For example, the codon CAG represents the amino acid glutamine, and TAA is a stop codon. I can write amino acid sequences using either the three letter code or a one letter code. The exact formatting of sequences varies with the application; by convention, single letter codes are always capitalized.