by Diadem » Fri Apr 06, 2012 7:16 am UTC
Ulc wrote:Diadem wrote:Chemists? Really? What does RuBisCO have to do with chemistry?
As a protein chemist, I really have to beg to differ.
Proteins role in cells might be a biological field of study, but the study of protein behavior and characteristics very much falls under chemistry - the methods, and what we're looking for has nothing in common with the field of biology, even if our subject might be part of a biological system.
Well, perhaps. But you're only studying Rubisco as a chemist because of its importance in biology. I mean multiplication is the domain of mathematics, but that doesn't mean that any time you perform a multiplication you're no longer doing physics, or biology, or chemistry, or whatever other field you were working in while performing that multiplication.
If you're studying Rubisco as a chemist, you're a chemist working on a biological problem.
I'm also pretty sure Rubisco is more familiar to the average biologist than the average chemist. Most people using RibuloseBisphosphtecarboxylaseoxygenase as a safe word are probably biologists. And not just because real chemists would insist on using Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphtecarboxylaseoxygenase

It's one of those irregular verbs, isn't it? I have an independent mind, you are an eccentric, he is round the twist
- Bernard Woolley in Yes, Prime Minister