1935
DOI: 10.1038/136835b0
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Induction of the Eye by a Specific Substance in the Amphibia

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1936
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“…The role of 'genes' in bacterial adaptation is as yet indefinable in practice: not because they lack self-reproducing or 'genelike' enzymes or even a nuclear apparatus (cf. Robinow, 1945), but because, lacking a sexual process, they have no known mechanism of genetic segregation (see Luria, 1947). Work on yeasts, to be discussed below, shows that the potentiality for certain specific adaptive changes is gene controlled, a fact which tends to belittle KarstrbIn's (1937) distinction between ' adaptive' and 'constitutive' enzymes.…”
Section: Adaptive Transformationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The role of 'genes' in bacterial adaptation is as yet indefinable in practice: not because they lack self-reproducing or 'genelike' enzymes or even a nuclear apparatus (cf. Robinow, 1945), but because, lacking a sexual process, they have no known mechanism of genetic segregation (see Luria, 1947). Work on yeasts, to be discussed below, shows that the potentiality for certain specific adaptive changes is gene controlled, a fact which tends to belittle KarstrbIn's (1937) distinction between ' adaptive' and 'constitutive' enzymes.…”
Section: Adaptive Transformationsmentioning
confidence: 99%