On Earth, all living things have a molecular machinery of carbon compounds.
The earlier questions were answered in part by pointing to the working molecular machinery of cells.
Biologists have since learned in increasing detail how the self-replicating molecular machinery of the cell works.
Getting these from food lets them survive with less molecular machinery than they would need to make everything from scratch.
Cells considered as a whole may seem less mechanical, yet biologists find it useful to describe them in terms of molecular machinery.
Medical research is leading us, step by step, along a path toward molecular machinery.
The idea that molecular machinery might be a step toward a smaller "nuclear machinery" seems natural enough.
Stone-age villagers lacking modern education wouldn't understand molecular machinery, but this matters little.
These in turn make up much of the molecular machinery of the cell.
This standard textbook is an excellent source of information on the molecular machinery of life.