nightbat wrote
Double-A wrote:
nightbat wrote in message ...
nightbat wrote
The nightbat first life candidate the Halo Bacterium may
protect space astronauts from the dangers of outer deep space cosmic
radiation.
See:
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2...htm?list100231
As I long ago pointed out on these newsgroups this little microbe is my
research pointing best choice for first Earth life living organism. It
has the amazing ability to live in salt solid crystal without water,
air, or oxygen, and has potential to even live and survive in the
extremes of outer space itself. High thermal or very cold temps doesn't
phase it, and can generate its own further more diversified complex food
and gases from its original pure salt crystal embedded environment. It
can repair its own DNA structure even when damaged and can break down
any other element and turn it into food. It is self regulating and not
dependent on planetary existing life providing support local
environmental systems but actually helps create higher evolved necessary
conditions for more complex life dependent ones. It is one amazing
little bug.
the nightbat
Being able to repair ones own DNA is quite a trick. They must have
some sort of parity checking such as we use to repair data damaged in
transmission. Crawdads and salamanders can grow new legs when
necessary. There is a lot we have genetically forgotten in out
headlong race for the largest brain.
Double-A
nightbat
True Double-A, we and many other complex life forms have evolved
lost ability to DNA particular cellular repair or regrow lost limbs. The
resolution to that would lead to possible regeneration of not only limbs
but greater cellular host or species longevity ability altogether. And a
dominant factor or collection of factors resultantly triggers the
downward aging cellular body cycle. Perhaps group species environment
induced damaged DNA strand sequencing is the cause and once understood
it can be corrected or altered and lead to extension of life cell and
organ rejuvenation. The Halo bacterium DNA shows promise for allowing us
to gain insight into its self repairing DNA sequencing versus other sub
micro organisms whose structure is not now self regenerating or damaged.
And these research findings may lead to further human DNA sequencing
limits understanding and possible strand repair or improvement. The
promise is there for elimination and possible cure of negative effects
of disease and its life threatening damage via research understood
complete self DNA strand reproducing modality and cellular and system
rejuvenation repair.
the nightbat