Debunking myths on genetics and DNA

Sunday, March 11, 2012

GP 120!


I took the above photo yesterday. As I was processing it, I suddenly froze and thought, "GP 120!"

Check it out:


GP120 is the protein that sits on the outer shell (envelope) of HIV and binds to target cells. A trimer of three gp120 (together with three gp41, another protein) bound together forms the "spike" you see in the above picture.

Something tells me I've been working too hard if I suddenly see gp120 in tulips.
Fascinating, though, how these trimeric structures come up in nature, don't you think?

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