on the way to LP 4

06/10/2010 Distance: ~100 NM “29:21N
13:17W” We are making very slow progress, in spite of our huge spinnaker and
good size main. It is so frustrating! With not much fuel left, like all sailors
before the discovery of the combustion engine, we had to rely exclusively on wind.
Except that there was none. In the light of all this I now understand the
addiction of seafaring nations to galley slaves up to modern times. The only
mean to get out of a windless location was the strength of the human muscle.
Believe it or not Roman galleys could reach 12knts of speed! By now we should
have reached the windy zone according to all forecasts, Grib files and
Commander’s reports. So sitting in the middle of nowhere and going
nowhere it is time for a little grumbling about science. Take the reliability of weather forecasts. It is all about
probabilities. The meteorologists are pretty good at predicting a storm and its
course but they are much less precise about the occurrence of a weather
occurring at a certain point of time at a certain location. It is the same
problem that I face in my profession as a geneticist. We can tell with high
accuracy what percentage of the population will develop a certain disease. But
when the logical questions are asked - “Am I going to be sick? When? How
bad?” - with the exception of family history of diseases where there is a
case-cause relationship between a genetic mutation and a disease - the good
doctor’s answer is usually evasive. As for the majority of diseases the
relationship between mutations and disease is not case-cause. The problems are
similar to those of the weathermen. People want to have precise answers not probabilities. With the availability of full genome sequencing, $ 15,000/person, more
and more people will have a big file in their computers containing their
genetic make up. It is all good. But, what does it all mean? After 50 years of
toiling, geneticists could only put together a miniscule amount of data, far
from covering all diseases suffered by humans. Companies offering genetic
counseling on the basis of full genome sequence have been strongly discouraged
not to make unrealistic claims about telling whether their clients will get
cancer, diabetes, Parkinson’s disease etc. or not. Thus, all their
clients get are more or less meaningless percentages, probabilities. Some of us working in the field suspect that the redundancy in the
genetic system is much bigger than we originally thought and that the number of
mutations in the human genome is much larger than originally believed. We
predict that up to 10% of mutations found in humans (pls note I am talking
about real mutations ie. aminoacid changes not polymorphisms) will not cause
any disease. My project in Barcelona was to use computational modeling based on
3D structures and complex formation and make calculations to predict whether a
previously unseen mutation will cause a disease or not. We hope to set up a
website first for eye diseases and later perhaps for other conditions too. Still
a long way to go, though. Liz |