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This Podcast Will Kill You

Ep 50 Antibiotics: We owe it all to chemistry!

This Podcast Will Kill You

Exactly Right and iHeartPodcasts

Health & Fitness, Science

4.817.7K Ratings

🗓️ 12 May 2020

⏱️ 121 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Fifty episodes. That’s fifty (sometimes) deadly viruses, bacteria, protozoa, parasites, and poisons. And don’t forget the fifty quarantinis to accompany each! What better way to celebrate this momentous occasion than talking about something that may actually save you: antibiotics. In this, our golden anniversary episode, our ambition tempts us to tackle the massive world of these bacteria-fighting drugs. We explore the various ways that antibiotics duel with their bacterial enemies to deliver us from infection, and we trace their history, from the early years of Fleming and Florey to the drama-laden labs of some soil microbiologists. Finally, we end, as we always do, with discussing where we stand with antibiotics today. Dr. Jonathan Stokes (@ItsJonStokes), postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Jim Collins’ lab at MIT, joins us to talk about some of his lab’s amazing research on using machine learning to discover new antibiotics, which prompts us to repeat “that is SO COOL” and “we are truly living in the future.” We think you’ll agree.   To read more about using machine learning to uncover antibiotic compounds, head to the Collins’ lab website, the Audacious Project site, or check out Dr. Stokes’ paper:  Stokes, Jonathan M., et al. "A deep learning approach to antibiotic discovery." Cell 180.4 (2020): 688-702.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is exactly right.

0:06.4

I don't think it was a moment of madness.

0:08.4

I think it was almost like a business transaction.

0:11.0

The thing that made my sense to him was to get rid of him.

0:14.8

Season 9 of 10 Fold More Wicked is now available on exactly right.

0:19.2

New episodes every Monday.

0:21.4

Follow the show on Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts,

0:24.5

or wherever you get your podcasts.

0:26.4

This is Justin from The Generation Y,

0:28.2

and we're doing a four-part series

0:30.2

unraveling the story of Khalif Browder,

0:32.5

a young boy falsely accused of stealing a backpack

0:35.2

and held at Rikers Island for three years without trial.

0:38.6

This story is about a young life caught in the middle of the justice system.

0:42.6

Listen to Generation Y on Amazon Music,

0:44.7

or wherever you get your podcasts.

0:47.6

I remember the astonishment when the first cases of pneumococcal

0:50.7

and streptococcal septicemia were treated in Boston in 1937.

0:55.4

The phenomenon was almost beyond belief.

0:58.2

Here were more abund patients

1:00.3

who would surely have died without treatment,

1:02.5

improving in their appearance within a matter of hours

...

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