I've spent a lot of time and energy on a project that I thought I'd made a most excellent discovery on that would help sick people get weller (is that a word?) and actually be useful. All weekend I was giddy, thinking of how I'd go over the results with one of my coworkers today and we'd have something useful to publish to actually make a difference in people's lives.
AND after spending the morning going over stuff...
It turns out although it is interesting, I've found a mutation in a non-specific uncoding intron region, that although novel, is not changing the amino acid sequence of my protein of interest.
Translation to non-geekspeak: I spent a lot of time and money learning what *isn't* the cause of an interesting mutation disease and am rather bummed out.
*sigh*
Just once I'd like to discover something interesting...I know a lot of science is learning what isn't causing something and slowly building a proper pathway of action and this really is a useful thing I've done by adding to the pool of knowledge on a particular disorder, but it still sucks.
I'd like to find, just once, something ON the pathway, not off it.
Just for me.
I'd make a cake and everything.
*sigh*
3 comments:
I'm sorry the folds in your protein didn't lead to a cure for the QVC Network (or whatever).
How long until NanoBots are useful and real?
Bummer.
Don't get discouraged, though. The Bag Lady thinks you are amazing anyway! :)
But it is really just as important as a positive discovery. Humans are silly for thinking otherwise.
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