Page 205 - Darwinism Refuted
P. 205

Harun Yahya (Adnan Oktar)





















                      L - Left-handed amino acid   D - Right-handed amino acid

                   The same protein's left- (L) and right- (D) handed isomers. The proteins in
                   living creatures consist only of left-handed amino acids.



             but approach them from a superficial viewpoint and assume protein
             formation to be a simple chemical reaction, they may make unrealistic
             deductions such as "amino acids combine by way of reaction and then
             form proteins." However, accidental chemical reactions taking place in a
             nonliving structure can only bring about simple compounds. The number
             of these is predetermined and limited. For a somewhat more complex
             chemical material, huge factories, chemical plants, and laboratories have
             to be involved. Medicines and many other chemical materials that we use
             in our daily life are made in just this way. Proteins have much more
             complex structures than these chemicals produced by industry. Therefore,
             it is impossible for proteins, each of which is a wonder of creation and
             engineering, in which every part takes its place in a fixed order, to
             originate as a result of haphazard chemical reactions.
                 To summarize the subject of proteins;
                 • Around 100 special proteins are needed for a single protein to
             form.
                 • Protein cannot form if even one of these enzymes (proteins)
             required for protein synthesis is missing.
                 • It is not enough for these 100 enzymes to be present at the same
             time; they must all also be present in a special region inside the cell (a
             specific region inside the nucleus).


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