Interstellar visitor, Svante Paabo, Synthetic biology, Plight of the Axolotl
BBC Inside Science
BBC
4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 23 November 2017
⏱️ 34 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
On 19th October, a mysterious object sped through our solar system. It was first spotted by astronomers with a telescope in Hawaii. Its trajectory and speed told of its interstellar origins. It is the first body to be detected from outside our solar system. Scientists are now publishing their papers on the enigmatic visitor. They estimate that it was about 400 metres long and bizarrely elongated in shape. Adam Rutherford talks to astronomer Alan Fitzsimmons of Queens University in Belfast.
Twenty years ago, geneticist Svante Paabo began a revolution in human evolution science when he extracted fragments of DNA from the 40,000 year old bone of a Neanderthal. Among other first, he went onto sequence the entire genome sequence of Homo Neanderthalenisis. Professor Paabo was in the UK this week at a conference on DNA and human evolution at the Wellcome Genome Campus to mark the anniversary. He tells Adam about one of the new directions of research for him now.
What does the future hold for synthetic biology? Who will be the practitioners of this fast-growing branch of bioengineering and what will be its impact on the world - for good and possibly ill? Experts in the field have just published a horizon-scanning report in the journal eLife. One of its authors, Jenny Molloy of the University of Cambridge, talks to Adam about the nascent democratisation of the discipline and where this might lead the field and society.
The paradoxical plight of the axolotl: popular aquarium pet, laboratory animal and critically endangered species in the wild. This species of salamander is a wonder of nature. It's the amphibian that never grows out of its larval stage yet it's able to reproduce. Most remarkable is its ability to regrow limbs, which is of great potential interest to researchers developing regenerative medicine. There are many thousands of axolotls in labs and homes around the world. But in the wild, in their native Mexico, they are on the very edge of extinction. Inside Science talks to conservation biologist Richard Griffiths of the University of Kent and axolotl researcher Tatiana Sandoval Guzman of the Technical University in Dresden, Germany.
Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello you this is the podcast of Inside Science from BBC Radio 4 first broadcast on the 23rd of |
| 0:06.6 | November 2017 I'm Adam Rutherford today we've got the plight of the axle lot all the |
| 0:12.2 | ridiculously cute amphibian that can regrow its limbs, |
| 0:15.6 | but is on the brink of annihilation outside of pet shops and labs. |
| 0:20.2 | We've latest on synthetic biology, a technological revolution in engineering that might be installing |
| 0:25.4 | democracy into this emerging field, and it's 20 years since possibly the greatest comeback in |
| 0:30.9 | human history. We talk to the man who sequenced the genome of the Neanderthals, |
| 0:35.3 | who's now looking for the genetic differences between us and them. |
| 0:39.3 | We sort of think we know that among those changes hide some that made human history as we know it possible. |
| 0:46.0 | Made an extremely rapid technological culture revolution that allowed us to become millions and billions of people and spread across the planet, |
| 0:54.8 | made all that possible. |
| 0:56.4 | Svanti Perboe and our Neanderthal ancestors, that's coming up later. |
| 1:00.0 | But first, on the 19th of October, a large foreign object was cited in our solar system. |
| 1:06.0 | All attempts to contact the object have failed. It appears to be a long cigar-shaped solid entity, |
| 1:11.7 | reddish in colour, not an icy comet, probably made of rock. |
| 1:16.2 | Spotted from a Hawaiian observatory, the phenomenon passed in between Mercury's orbit and the sun, |
| 1:21.1 | looped round under the sun's gravitational pull and headed back into |
| 1:24.5 | interstellar space. It is the first object we have ever detected from outside our |
| 1:29.7 | solar system to visit us. Now there is a lot that we don't know about it and |
| 1:34.1 | scientists and observatories around the world are scrambling to understand what |
| 1:38.0 | this thing is, where it has come from and what it wants. The analysis is in full swing and papers have already been |
| 1:44.6 | published since this transient visit from beyond the solar system. For more than a |
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