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Episode Guide

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35

October 28th, 2008

Futures in Biotech 35: The Brain Machine Interface

Dr. Justin Sanchez discusses technologies that enable direct brain to computer interfacing, just think…

34

September 12th, 2008

Futures in Biotech 34: A Great Historical Document - The Human Genome

Mark Gerstein endeavors to make sense our genome on its past and present course.

33

July 23rd, 2008

Futures in Biotech 33: Dr. Milner’s Explorations Into The Human Mind

Dr. Brenda Milner describes the experiments that led to a revolution in modern neuroscience.

32

June 7th, 2008

Futures in Biotech 32: Controlling HIV Evolution

Dr. Ronald Collman talks about exciting new discoveries on HIV, the virus that has taken 25 million lives.

31

May 3rd, 2008

Futures in Biotech 31: The Eensy-Weensy Teenie Weenie Big Bang

Dr. Michio Kaku, co-founder of String Field Theory.

30

March 26th, 2008

Futures in Biotech 30: Aubrey de Grey on the Thousand Year Lifespan

Guest: Aubrey de Grey; Chairman and Chief Science Officer, the Methuselah Foundation.

29

February 9th, 2008

Futures in Biotech 29: From Human Genome Project to Your Genome Project (Part II)

Dr. Church describes both the underlying DNA technologies and societal implications of personal genomics

Futures in Biotech

Futures in Biotech with Marc Pelletier
Running time: 55:35
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September 12th, 2008

Futures in Biotech 34: A Great Historical Document - The Human Genome

Host: Marc Pelletier

Mark Gerstein endeavors to make sense our genome on its past and present course.

Guest: Mark Gerstein, the Albert L. Williams Professor of Biomedical Informatics, a professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry and professor of Computer Science at Yale University Gerstein Lab.

In past shows, we've had Lee hood, the inventor of the DNA sequencer, and George Church who was among those personally involved in initiating the Human project. But getting the code and really understanding these human blueprints are entirely different problems. Our guest today, Mark Gerstein, is trying to make sense of it all, and his work amoung other things has revealed that the genome is more than just a blueprint, or list of parts, but a rich historical text about our past.

BLAST this sequence: atgttcc tgtccttccc caccaccaag acctacttcc cgcacttcga cctgagccac ggctctgccc aggttaaggg ccacggcaag aaggtggccg acgcgctgac caacgccgtg gcgcacgtgg acgacatgcc caacgcgctg tccgccctga gcgacctgca cgcgcacaag cttcgggtgg acccggtcaa cttcaagctc ctaa

Instructions: Copy and Paste the DNA sequence into the query window, and hit the blast button. What does this encode? Interesting: Try again selecting the NON-HUMAN database. What organism is the exact same gene found in? Why?

Audible pick of the week: Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA, Unabridged, By Tim Weiner, Narrated by Stefan Rudnicki. For your free audio book visit Audible.com/biotech.

TWiT T-Shirts from Lori LeBeau Walsh.

Transcripts to the shows are now available on the FiB Blog thanks to the kind folks at PodsinPrint.

Also thanks to Philippe Pelletier and Will Hall for the great themes.

Thanks to Cachefly for providing the bandwidth for this netcast.

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