Archive for the ‘biotech/medical’ category: Page 2316
Feb 22, 2018
Programming a DNA Clock
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, computing
Engineers have created a DNA-based chemical oscillator, opening the door to molecular computing.
- By Rachel Nuwer on February 21, 2018
Feb 22, 2018
How to build a human brain
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Organoids, made from human stem cells, are growing into brains and other miniorgans to help researchers study development.
Feb 22, 2018
Bioquark Inc. — Faces of Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Podcast — Ira Pastor
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: aging, biotech/medical, DNA, genetics, health, life extension, military, neuroscience, science, transhumanism
Feb 22, 2018
3D bioprinting center of excellence launched by AMBER and Johnson & Johnson
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical
Trinity College Dublin (TCD), in Ireland, is to be the recipient of a new specialist 3D bioprinting facility supported by a collaboration between multinational medical device and pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson, and the AMBER research center.
With preparations beginning in the first quarter of this year, the new 3D bioprinting laboratory is due to be opened by the close of 2018.
Professor Michael Morris, AMBER director, comments.
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Feb 22, 2018
These People Believe Death Is Only Temporary
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, cryonics, life extension, transhumanism
Waiting on research advances is the rationale behind cryopreservation, and more broadly, a worldview known as transhumanism. A person killed by cancer or heart disease could reasonably be revived in a future when such ailments no longer exist. “They believe in the advance of technology,” says Giuseppe Nucci, an Italian photographer who visited with transhumanists and toured the facilities of Russia-based cryonics company KrioRus. “They hope that someone will wake them up.”
This hope, that the future will vanquish the ills of the present, is as old as the first civilisations that realized that with each passing year life got a little better. The Russian philosopher Nikolai Fedorovich Fedorov helped create an early 20th-century movement known as cosmism that was rooted in the idea that, given enough time, humans could defeat evil and death. If the human life span was too short, then the simple solution was to extend it, even after death, and suspend its decomposition until the world caught up.
Employees of a liquid nitrogen and dry ice factory on the outskirts of Moscow are shrouded in fog while refilling their liquid nitrogen tanks. Founded by former KrioRus employees, the company now supplies them. PHOTOGRAPH BY GIUSEPPE NUCCI
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Feb 22, 2018
Scientists Just Made Sheep-Human Hybrids. Here’s What You Need to Know
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical
Researchers have achieved a new kind of chimeric first, producing sheep-human hybrid embryos that could one day represent the future of organ donation – by using body parts grown inside unnatural, engineered animals.
With that end goal in mind, scientists have created the first interspecies sheep-human chimera, introducing human stem cells into sheep embryos, resulting in a hybrid creature that’s more than 99 percent sheep – but also a tiny, little bit like you and me.
Admittedly, the human portion of the embryos created in the experiment – before they were destroyed after 28 days – is exceedingly small, but the fact it exists at all is what generates considerable controversy in this field of research.
Continue reading “Scientists Just Made Sheep-Human Hybrids. Here’s What You Need to Know” »
Feb 22, 2018
In the future we won’t edit genomes—we’ll just print out new ones
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, futurism
Feb 22, 2018
Masters of Our DNA: Designer Bodies Are Not Science Fiction
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, evolution
Entrepreneur Juan Enriquez describes a future in which we will be able to hack evolution and even alter our memories thanks to DNA manipulation.