Review: Wetware by Dennis Bray

June 30, 2009 | Source: New Scientist Opinion

Living cells are chemical computers.

(Volker Steger/Christian Barpelle/SPL)

(Volker Steger/Christian Barpelle/SPL)

They take information from the environment and process it to produce behavioral “outputs.” The processing units are proteins, which perform all the same operations as the logic gates of a computer. Inputs from the environment cause the proteins to flip shape, to aggregate, and to chemically modify other proteins in a cascade of information processing that sweeps through the cell until it reaches effector proteins that make the cell move or change shape.