Monday, August 6, 2012

DNA and RNA


DNA stands for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid while RNA stands for Ribose Nucleic Acid. Compounds of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and Phosphorus. Made up of Nucleotide Monomers (Polynucleotides). A nucleotide consists of a Nitrogenous base, a Pentose Sugar & Phosphate Group.

Nucleoside: Nitrogeous Base + Sugar.

5 Nitrogenous Bases are there :
  1. Cytosine
  2. Uracil
  3. Thymine
  4. Adenine
  5. Guanine
Cytosine, Uracil and Thymine are the Pyrimidine Derivatives with a single ring structure.
Adenine and Guanine are the Purine Derivatives with a double ring structure.
The pentose sugars are of 2 types:
  • Deoxyribose
  • Ribose
Thus, the Nitrogenous bases, combining with Pentose Sugars and a Phosphate Group, form 8 type of Nucleotide Molecules :
  • Cytosine + Ribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Cytosine + Deoxyribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Uracil + Ribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Thymine + Deoxyribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Adenine + Ribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Adenine + Deoxyribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Guanine + Ribose Sugar + Phosphate
  • Guanine + Deoxyribose Sugar + Phosphate

DNA Molecule
Long and highly complex, spirally twisted, right-handed double helix, Ladder like structure formed by 2 polynucleotides strands. Base thymine is present, but never uracil. Wilkins, Watson and Crick (1953) received Noble Prize for DNA Structure. Adenine links with Thymine by two hydrogen bonds. Guanine with cytosine by three hydrogen bonds. A single DNA molecule has millions of pairs of nucleotide monomers. DNA contains “Blue Print” of life. With RNA’s help, it directs the synthesis of all structural and functional proteins of Protoplasm.

Difference Table of DNA and RNA
DNARNA
It usually occurs inside nucleus and some cell organelles.Very little RNA occurs inside nucleus. Most of it is found in the cytoplasm.
DNA is the genetic material.RNA is not the genetic material except in certain viruses. e.g., TNIV, Reovirus.
It is double stranded with the exception of some viruses.RNA is single stranded with the exception of some viruses (e.g., double stranded in Reovirus).
DNA shows regular helical coiling.There is no regular coiling except in parts of RNA.
DNA forms chromosomes of similar structures.rRNA forms ribosomes.
DNA contains several million nucleotides.Depending upon the type, RNA contains 10-12000 nucleotides.
DNA is of only two types, nuclear and extra nuclear.There are at least three types of RNA-rRNA, mRNA and tRNA
It contains deoxyribose sugar.It contains ribose sugar.
Nitrogen base thymine occurs in DNA along with three other-adenine, cytosine and guanine.Thymine is replaced by uracil in RNA. The other three are adenine, cytosine and guanine.
Renaturation after melting is slow.It is quite fast.
Hydrogen bonds tire formed between complementary nitrogen bases of the opposite strands of DNA (A : T, C : G)Base pairing through hydrogen bonds occurs only in the coiled parts.
DNARNA
It replicates to form new DNA molecules.It cannot replicate itself except in RNA-RNA viruses.
DNA transcribes genetic information to RNA.RNA translates the transcribed message for forming polypeptides.
DNA controls heredity, evolution, metabolism, structure and differentiation.RNA controls only protein synthesis.
Its quantity is fixed for cell.The quantity of RNA of a cell is variable.
DNA controls metabolism and genetics including variations.It only controls metabolism under instructions from DNA.
Purine and pyrimidine bases are in equal number.There is no proportionality between number of purine and pyrimidine bases.
It can be hydrolyzed by enzyme DNA-ase.RNA is hydrolyzed by RNA-ase.

What is Cloud Computing?



Cloud computing is a general term for anything that involves delivering hosted services over the Internet. These services are broadly divided into three categories: Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS), Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS). The name cloud computing was inspired by the cloud symbol that's often used to represent the Internet in flowcharts and diagrams.
A cloud service has three distinct characteristics that differentiate it from traditional hosting. It is sold on demand, typically by the minute or the hour; it is elastic -- a user can have as much or as little of a service as they want at any given time; and the service is fully managed by the provider (the consumer needs nothing but a personal computer and Internet access). Significant innovations in virtualization and distributed computing, as well as improved access to high-speed Internet and a weak economy, have accelerated interest in cloud computing.
A cloud can be private or public. A public cloud sells services to anyone on the Internet. (Currently, Amazon Web Services is the largest public cloud provider.) A private cloud is a proprietary network or a data center that supplies hosted services to a limited number of people. When a service provider uses public cloud resources to create their private cloud, the result is called a virtual private cloud. Private or public, the goal of cloud computing is to provide easy, scalable access to computing resources and IT services.
Infrastructure-as-a-Service like Amazon Web Services provides virtual server instanceAPI) to start, stop, access and configure their virtual servers and storage. In the enterprise, cloud computing allows a company to pay for only as much capacity as is needed, and bring more online as soon as required. Because this pay-for-what-you-use model resembles the way electricity, fuel and water are consumed, it's sometimes referred to as utility computing.
Platform-as-a-service in the cloud is defined as a set of software and product development tools hosted on the provider's infrastructure. Developers create applications on the provider's platform over the Internet. PaaS providers may use APIs, website portals or gateway software installed on the customer's computer. Force.com, (an outgrowth of Salesforce.com) and GoogleApps are examples of PaaS. Developers need to know that currently, there are not standards for interoperability or data portability in the cloud. Some providers will not allow software created by their customers to be moved off the provider's platform.
In the software-as-a-service cloud model, the vendor supplies the hardware infrastructure, the software product and interacts with the user through a front-end portal. SaaS is a very broad market. Services can be anything from Web-based email to inventory control and database processing. Because the service provider hosts both the application and the data, the end user is free to use the service from anywhere. (Source: Tech Target)

Ecology and Environment


Ecology is the study of environmental systems, or as it is sometimes called, the economy of nature. "Environmental" usually means relating to the natural, versus human-made world; the "systems" means that ecology is, by its very nature, not interested in just the components of nature individually but especially in how the parts interact.

The subject matter of ecology is normally divided into following broad categories:
  1. Physiological ecology- It deals with the response of single species to environmental conditions such as temperature or light;
  2. Population ecology- It usually focuses on the abundance and distribution of individual species and the factors that cause such distribution;
  3. Community ecology- It deals with the number of species found at a given location and their interactions; and
  4. Ecosystems ecology- deals with the structure and function of the entire suite of microbes, plants, and animals, and their abiotic environment, and how the parts interact to generate the whole. This branch of ecology often focuses on the energy and nutrient flows of ecosystems, and when this approach is combined with computer analysis and simulation we often call it systems ecology.
  5. Evolutionary ecology- It operate at the physiological or population level, is a rich and dynamic area of ecology focusing on attempting to understand how natural selection developed the structure and function of the organisms and ecosystems at any of these levels.

Ecology is usually considered from the perspective of the specific geographic environment that is being studied a moment: tropical rain forest, temperate grassland, arctic tundra, benthic marine, the entire biosphere, and so on. The subject matter of ecology is the entire natural world, including both the living and the non-living parts.

Biogeography focuses on the observed distribution of plants and animals and the reasons behind it. More recently ecology has included increasingly the human-dominated world of agriculture, grazing lands for domestic animals, cities, and even industrial parks.

Industrial ecology is a discipline that has recently been developed, especially in Europe, where the objective is to follow the energy and material use throughout the process of, e.g., making an automobile with the objective of attempting to improve the material and energy efficiency of manufacturing. For any of these levels or approaches there are some scientists that focus on theoretical ecology, which attempts to derive or apply theoretical or sometimes mathematical reasons and generalities for what is observed in nature, and empirical ecology, which is concerned principally with measurement. Applied ecology takes what is found from one or both of these approaches and uses it to protect or manage nature in some way. Related to this discipline is conservation biology. Plant ecology, animal ecology, and microbial ecology have obvious foci.

Reasons to study ecology
There are usually four basic reasons given to study and as to why we might want to understand ecology:
1.      first, since all of us live to some degree in a natural or at least partly natural ecosystem, then considerable pleasure can be derived by studying the environment around us. Just as one might learn to appreciate art better through an art history course so too might one appreciate more the nature around us with a better understanding of ecology.
  1. Second, human economies are in large part based on the exploitation and management of nature. Applied ecology is used every day in forestry, fisheries, range management, agriculture, and so on to provide us with the food and fiber we need.
  2. Third, human societies can often be understood very clearly from ecological perspectives as we study, for example, the population dynamics (demography) of our own species, the food and fossil energy flowing through our society.
  3. Fourth, humans appear to be changing aspects of the global environment in many ways.

Ecology can be very useful to help us understand what these changes are, what the implications might be for various ecosystems, and how we might intervene in either human economies or in nature to try to mitigate or otherwise alter these changes. There are many professional ecologists, who believe that these apparent changes from human activities have the potential to generate enormous harm to both natural ecosystems and human economies. Understanding, predicting and adapting to these issues could be the most important of all possible issue for humans to deal with. In this case ecology and environmentalism can be the same.

Ecosystem
An ecosystem consists of the biological community that occurs in some locale, and the physical and chemical factors that make up its non-living or abiotic environment. There are many examples of ecosystems -- a pond, a forest, an estuary, a grassland. The boundaries are not fixed in any objective way, although sometimes they seem obvious, as with the shoreline of a small pond. Usually the boundaries of an ecosystem are chosen for practical reasons having to do with the goals of the particular study.

Components of an Ecosystem

The parts of an ecosystem can be listed under the headings "abiotic" and "biotic".   
Abiotic components:
Sunlight, Temperature, Precipitation, Water or moisture, Soil or water chemistry (e.g., P, NH4+)

Biotic Components
Primary producers, Herbivores, Carnivores, Omnivores, Detritivores

All of these vary over space/time

By and large, this set of environmental factors is important almost everywhere, in all ecosystems. Usually, biological communities include the "functional groupings". A functional group is a biological category composed of organisms that perform mostly the same kind of function in the system; for example, all the photosynthetic plants or primary producers form a functional group. Membership in the functional group does not depend very much on who the actual players (species) happen to be; only on what function they perform in the ecosystem.
 
Processes of Ecosystems
This figure with the plants, zebra, lion, and so forth illustrates the two main ideas about how ecosystems function: ecosystems have energy flows and ecosystems cycle materials. These two processes are linked, but they are not quite the same (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. Energy flows and material cycles.

Energy enters the biological system as light energy, or photons, is transformed into chemical energy in organic molecules by cellular processes including photosynthesis and respiration, and ultimately is converted to heat energy. This energy is dissipated, meaning it is lost to the system as heat; once it is lost it cannot be recycled.  Without the continued input of solar energy, biological systems would quickly shut down. Thus the earth is an open system with respect to energy.

Elements such as carbon, nitrogen, or phosphorus enter living organisms in a variety of ways. Plants obtain elements from the surrounding atmosphere, water, or soils. Animals may also obtain elements directly from the physical environment, but usually they obtain these mainly as a consequence of consuming other organisms. These materials are transformed biochemically within the bodies of organisms, but sooner or later, due to excretion or decomposition, they are returned to an inorganic state. Often bacteria complete this process, through the process called decomposition or mineralization

During decomposition these materials are not destroyed or lost, so the earth is a closed system with respect to elements (with the exception of a meteorite entering the system now and then). The elements are cycled endlessly between their biotic and abiotic states within ecosystems. Those elements whose supply tends to limit biological activity are called nutrients.
 
The Transformation of Energy
The transformations of energy in an ecosystem begin first with the input of energy from the sun. The process of photosynthesis captures energy from the sun. Carbon dioxide is combined with hydrogen to produce carbohydrates (CHO). Energy is stored in the high-energy bonds of adenosine triphosphate, or ATP.

The prophet Isaah said "all flesh is grass", earning him the title of first ecologist, because virtually all energy available to organisms originates in plants. Because it is the first step in the production of energy for living things, it is called primary production. Herbivores obtain their energy by consuming plants or plant products, carnivores eat herbivores, and detritivores consume the droppings and carcasses of us all.
  
Figure portrays a simple food chain, in which energy from the sun, captured by plant photosynthesis, flows from trophic level to trophic level via the food chain. A trophic level is composed of organisms that make a living in the same way, that is they are all primary producers (plants), primary consumers (herbivores) or secondary consumers (carnivores).

Dead tissue and waste products are produced at all levels. Scavengers, detritivores, and decomposers collectively account for the use of all such "waste" -- consumers of carcasses and fallen leaves may be other animals, such as crows and beetles, but ultimately it is the microbes that finish the job of decomposition. Not surprisingly, the amount of primary production varies a great deal from place to place, due to differences in the amount of solar radiation and the availability of nutrients and water.

Energy transfer through the food chain is inefficient. This means that less energy is available at the herbivore level than at the primary producer level, less yet at the carnivore level, and so on. The result is a pyramid of energy, with important implications for understanding the quantity of life that can be supported.

Food chains with green plants, herbivores, and so on are referred to as grazer food chains, because living plants are directly consumed. In many circumstances the principal energy input is not green plants but dead organic matter. These are called detritus food chains. Examples include the forest floor or a woodland stream in a forested area, a salt marsh, and most obviously, the ocean floor in very deep areas where all sunlight is extinguished 1000's of meters above. In subsequent lectures we shall return to these important issues concerning energy flow.

There are many food links and chains in an ecosystem, and all of these linkages can be referred as a food web. Food webs can be very complicated, where it appears that "everything is connected to everything else", and it is important to understand what are the most important linkages in any particular food web.
 
Biogeochemistry
The term Biogeochemistry is defined as the study of how living systems influence, and are controlled by, the geology and chemistry of the earth. Thus biogeochemistry encompasses many aspects of the abiotic and biotic world that we live in.

There are several main principles and tools that are used to study earth systems. Most of the major environmental problems can be analyzed using biogeochemical principles and tools. These problems include global warming, acid rain, we environmental pollution, and increasing greenhouse gases. The principles and tools can be broken down into 3 major components: element ratios, mass balance, and element cycling.

1. Element ratios
In biological systems, important elements are referred as "conservative". These elements are often nutrients. By "conservative" it means that an organism can change only slightly the amount of these elements in their tissues if they are to remain in good health. For example, in healthy algae the elements C, N, P, and Fe have the following ratio, called the Redfield ratio after the oceanographer that discovered it:

C : N : P : Fe = 106 : 16 : 1 : 0.01
Once these ratios are known, one can compare them to the ratios that one measure in a sample of algae to determine if the algae are lacking in one of these limiting nutrients.
 
2. Mass Balance
Another important tool that is used is a simple mass balance equation to describe the state of a system. The system could be a snake, a tree, a lake, or the entire globe. Using a mass balance approach whether the system is changing and how fast it is changing can be determined. The equation is:

NET CHANGE = INPUT + OUTPUT + INTERNAL CHANGE

In this equation the net change in the system from one time period to another is determined by what the inputs are, what the outputs are, and what the internal change in the system was. The example given in class is of the acidification of a lake, considering the inputs and outputs and internal change of acid in the lake.
 
3. Element Cycling
Element cycling describes where and how fast elements move in a system. There are two general classes of systems that we can analyze, as mentioned above: closed and open systems.

A closed system refers to a system where the inputs and outputs are negligible compared to the internal changes. Examples of such systems would include a bottle, or our entire globe. There are two ways the cycling of materials within this closed system can be described, either by looking at the rate of movement or at the pathways of movement.

Rate = number of cycles / time, as rate increases, productivity increases
Pathways-important because of different reactions that may occur

In an open system there are inputs and outputs as well as the internal cycling. Thus the rates of movement and the pathways can be described, just as the closed system, but a new concept called the residence time can also be defined. The residence time indicates how long on average an element remains within the system before leaving the system.

1. Rate
2. Pathways
3. Residence time, Rt

Rt = total amount of matter / output rate of matter

Controls on Ecosystem Function
There are two dominant theories of the control of ecosystems.

The first, called bottom-up control, states that it is the nutrient supply to the primary producers that ultimately controls how ecosystems function. If the nutrient supply is increased, the resulting increase in production of autotrophs is propagated through the food web and all of the other trophic levels will respond to the increased availability of food (energy and materials will cycle faster). 

The second theory, called top-down control, states that predation and grazing by higher trophic levels on lower trophic levels ultimately controls ecosystem function. For example, if there is an increase in predators, that increase will result in fewer grazers, and that decrease in grazers will result in turn in more primary producers because fewer of them are being eaten by the grazers. Thus the control of population numbers and overall productivity "cascades" from the top levels of the food chain down to the bottom trophic levels.

There is evidence from many ecosystem studies that both controls are operating to some degree, but that neither control is complete. For example, the "top-down" effect is often very strong at trophic levels near to the top predators, but the control weakens as one move further down the food chain. Similarly, the "bottom-up" effect of adding nutrients usually stimulates primary production, but the stimulation of secondary production further up the food chain is less strong or is absent.

The Geography of Ecosystems
There are many different ecosystems: rain forests and tundra, coral reefs and ponds, grasslands and deserts. Climate differences from place to place largely determine the types of ecosystems we see. Mainly the dominant vegetation influences how terrestrial ecosystems appear to us.

The word "biome" is used to describe a major vegetation type such as tropical rain forest, grassland, tundra, etc., extending over a large geographic area (Figure 3). It is never used for aquatic systems, such as ponds or coral reefs. It always refers to a vegetation category that is dominant over a very large geographic scale, and so is somewhat broader than an ecosystem.
Figure 3: The distribution of biomes.

Temperature and rainfall patterns for a region are distinctive. Every place on earth gets the same total number of hours of sunlight each year, but not the same amount of heat. The sun's rays strike low latitudes directly but high latitudes obliquely. This uneven distribution of heat sets up not just temperature differences, but global wind and ocean currents that in turn have a great deal to do with where rainfall occurs.

A schematic view of the earth shows that, complicated though climate may be; many aspects are predictable (Figure 4). High solar energy striking near the equator ensures nearly constant high temperatures and high rates of evaporation and plant transpiration. Warm air rises, cools, and sheds its moisture, creating just the conditions for a tropical rain forest. Every location has a rainfall- temperature graph that is typical of a broader region.

Figure 4. Climate patterns affect biome distributions.

Certain plants are distinctive of certain climates, creating the vegetation appearance that is called biomes. High precipitation is not possible at low temperatures -- there is not enough solar energy to power the water cycle, and most water is frozen and thus biologically unavailable throughout the year. The high tundra is as much a desert as is the Sahara.
 

Figure 5. The distribution of biomass related to temperature and precipitation.

Registrar of Newspaper for India (RNI)


The office of the Registrar of Newspapers for India (RNI) came into being on 1 July 1956, on the recommendation of first Press Commission in 1953 and by amending the Press and Registration of Books Act, 1867. 
The Registrar of Newspapers for India, commonly known as Press Registrar, was required, inter alia to submit an Annual report to the Government by 31 December every year on the status of newspapers. The period for which an annual report was to be submitted, was changed from calendar year to financial year in 2002. An on 31 March 2009 the total number of registered newspaper/periodical was 73,146. 
These were 8,475 dailies, 383 bi/tri weeklies, 9,458 fortnightlies, 22,124 monthlies, 4,864 quarterlies, 653 annuals, and 2,645 of other periodicity. These figures were for year 2008-09.
Newspaper periodicals were published in English and 21 main languages listed in Eighth Schedule of the Constitution of India. Newspapers/periodicals were also published in 127 other languages including dialects and few foreign languages. Odisha has the distinction of publishing newspapers/periodicals in 21 major languages. Delhi, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra came next with 14, 13 and 11 major languages.
Out of the 73,146 newspapers/periodicals registered as on 31 March 2009, only 11,752 submitted their Annual Statements during 2008-09. The total circulation of these 11,752 newspapers/periodicals were 25,79,53,373 copies per publishing day. The largest numbers of newspapers/periodicals registered in any Indian language is in Hindi (29,094). The second largest number of Newspapers/periodicals registered in any language is in English (10,530). The state with the largest number of newspapers/periodicals is Uttar Pradesh with 11,543. The state with second largest number of newspapers/periodicals is Delhi with 9,961.