Chapter 1
Introduction
Information is central to life. The principle enunciated by Crick, that information
flows from the gene (DNA) to the protein, occupies such a key place in modern
molecular biology that it is frequently referred to as the “central dogma”: DNA
acts as a template to replicate itself, DNA is transcribed into RNA, and RNA is
translated into protein. Genotype thus implies phenotype, seen as the ensemble of
proteins and germane structures constituting an organism. Nevertheless, since pro-
teins are required for the decoding of DNA into protein structures, the linear flow of
information implied by the central dogma is clearly only part of the story.
The mission of biology is to answer the question “What is life?” For many cen-
turies, the study of the living world proceeded by examination of its external charac-
teristics (i.e., of phenotype, including behaviour). This led to Linnaeus’ hierarchical
classification. A key advance was made about 150 years ago when Mendel established
the notion of an unseen heritable principle. Improvements in experimental techniques
lead to a steady acceleration in the gathering of facts about the components of living
matter, culminating in Watson and Crick’s discovery of the DNA double helix half a
century ago, which ushered in the modern era of molecular biology.
The mission of biology remained unchanged during these developments, but
knowledge about life became steadily more detailed. As Sommerhoff has remarked,
“To put it naïvely, the fundamental problem of theoretical biology is to discover
how the behaviour of myriads of blind, stupid, and by inclination chaotic, atoms can
obey the laws of physics and chemistry, and at the same time become integrated into
organic wholes and into activities of such purpose-like character”. Since he wrote
those words, experimental molecular biology has advanced far and fast, yet the most
important question of all, “what is life?” remains a riddle.
It is a curious fact that although “information” figures so prominently in the central
dogma, the concept of information has continued to receive rather cursory treatment
in molecular biology textbooks. Even today, the word “information” may not even
appear in the index. On the other hand, whole chapters are devoted to energetics
© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023
J. Ramsden, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-45607-8_1
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