Why striped tiger skin?

For the first time, scientists have found real evidence for the theory that the famous British mathematician Alan Turing introduced 60 years ago about the mechanism of making biological models like stripes on tiger or spotted fur. on the skin.

>>>Indonesia: Another Sumatra tiger was killed

Turing thinks that repeating patterns on skin and animal hair are made up of a pair of shaping compounds that combine together as an activator and an inhibitor.

Now, researchers at the Royal College of London have demonstrated that the famous cryptographer theory by experiments can contribute significantly to rehabilitation medicine.

Picture 1 of Why striped tiger skin?
The stripes on tiger skin are created by a pair of shaping.

To test this theory, scientists studied the development of ripple on the mouse nose.

When working on rat embryonic cells, the team of scientists discovered a pair of shaping patterns that work together to determine the location that makes up the ripple. These chemicals control each other's activity, activate and inhibit the creation and modeling of ripples.

Turing was the one who solved the secret codes of the German army created by the famous Enigma machine. This contribution has helped the British army win on the Pacific battlefield. Turing's work laid the foundation for the creation of modern computers, so he was included in Time magazine's list of the 100 most important people of the 20th century.

However, Turing was embarrassingly ignored by the British government, so he committed suicide in 1954 after being convicted of homosexuality and forced to use hormone therapy.

In 2009, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on behalf of the government formally gave a clear apology to Turing for the "terrifying" and "utterly unfair" accusations he suffered.