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what do you guys think of when you think
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of a scientist is it this or this or
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maybe it's something more like this okay
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probably not that one but the truth is
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as much as STEM careers are pushed and
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encouraged nowadays there is a serious
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disconnect between future stem majors
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and the people who are actually working
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in these fields
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I mean engineers aren't all just a bunch
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of blokes and hardhat standing on a
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cliff pointing out into the distance as
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lucky as I am to go to a school that
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exposes me to these career options as
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early as possible we can't possibly
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cover everything and we can't start
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addressing the big questions without
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first gaining some rudimentary knowledge
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that's why today I've decided to talk to
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you about some of the big questions in
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biomedical engineering without any
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rudimentary knowledge so here I go here
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we are looking at this slide and
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thinking I know what these words mean
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separately but what do they mean
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together so don't worry I won't
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completely skip out on the rudimentary
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knowledge part here's a very disgusting
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and textbook II looking picture of our
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cells membrane here I go explaining it
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on the top over there in blue you see
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the outside of the cell and on the
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bottom here in orange you see the inside
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of the cell
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starting at the bottom of the picture
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you'll see these orange fragments
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they're called microfilaments and they
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make up the internal skeleton of our
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cell and hold all of our cell organelles
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into place examples of organelles would
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include the nucleus and the mitochondria
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if you follow these up to the membrane
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you'll see they are connected to
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proteins which in turn are connected to
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this fibrous material known as the
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extracellular matrix what it boils down
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to is that there is a physical indirect
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path between the organelles of our cell
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and the outside of our self this is
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important because it allows cell to cell
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communication between cells which are in
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close proximity to one another without a
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convoluted and energy inefficient method
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such as hormone transport however this
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system can also be taken advantage of
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for new biomedical research research has
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shown
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vibrations can be detected by these
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fibrous materials in the extracellular
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matrix and follow the chain of command
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in this diagram all the way down to the
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cell's nucleus where we hold our DNA
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there these vibrations can be
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interpreted and be used to sir turn
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certain genes on or off but what does
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that even tell us before we answer that
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question let's take a moment to talk
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about stem cells stem cells are
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unspecialized cells that exist in our
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body they can either replicate and form
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or stem cells as in the top of this
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diagram or they can specialized to
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become any of the over 200 different
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types of cell in our body they
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specialized by reacting to environmental
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stimuli which tells them which genes to
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code for to turn on or off in order to
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become a specific cell so here's what we
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know we know that vibrations can be
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detected outside of the cell and be used
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to turn certain genes on or off we also
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know that stem cells specialize in
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response to environmental conditions
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which tell them which genes to turn on
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or off therefore theoretically it can be
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derived that finely tuned vibrations
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that occur outside of the cell may be
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used to deliberately specialized stem
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cells now these stem cells can be used
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for a variety of different reasons for a
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variety of different applications the
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most common of which nowadays is
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regenerative tissues so if an organ is
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damaged we can regenerate the part of
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the organism that is damaged ambitious
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research has shown that we might even be
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able to replicate entire organs from
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scratch other applications include
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treating degenerative cardio vascular
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and neurological conditions such as
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Alzheimer's or Parkinson's
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now stem cell research is a buzzword
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that gets thrown around a lot nowadays
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but it can sound a little bit gimmicky
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especially when the implications of such
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research are so often unexplored rest
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assured there are actually great
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achievements happening in this field
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another such achievement refers to the
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in Korea oh you always think it'll never
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happen to you
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another such achievement refers to the
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inquiry of what are called cancer stem
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cells or CSCS now I should clarify
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cancer stem cells are not the same as
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the stem cells I just mentioned they're
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simply cancer cells which behave in a
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similar manner to stem cells okay going
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on one of the reasons why it's so
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difficult to treat cancer is because one
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single cancer cell can spawn a variety
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variety of different cancer cells any of
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which can mutate to resist current
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treatment an example of such a cancer is
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glioblastoma multiforme which is an
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aggressive brain tumor glioblastoma can
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have up to six variants of these sub
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clones or different cancer species in a
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single patient any one of these any one
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of these sub clones could somehow resist
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the current treatment or spread to an
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area where it is no longer manageable or
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worth the risk to treat so how is the
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biomedical community responding to this
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issue new targeted treatment aims to
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seek out the origin CSC and target that
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single cell without that cells presence
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the rest of the tumor will not be able
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to survive and will naturally degenerate
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and while previous treatment what may
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have been able to remove the majority of
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a tumor if the cancer stem cell gets
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left behind the tumor can regenerate and
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form new sub clones for an organ for a
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cancer in an organ as vulnerable as the
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brain this is huge news radiotherapy and
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chemotherapy can often have adverse
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effects on the brain an operation is
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strictly limited by which area of the
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brain the cancer is localized to well
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that's pretty scary right your body is
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made up of over 30 trillion cells yet
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somehow one single cell on a yellow
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circle can wreak havoc over your entire
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body and turn your life upside down
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so moving on oh I'm so sorry
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all right
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okay acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a
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different type of cancer which affects
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your blood cells one of the reasons why
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it's so difficult to combat cancer is
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because the cancer cell receptors are so
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similar to the receptors on your normal
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body cells because they are derived from
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your own DNA car t-cell therapy is a new
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form of targeted therapy which aims to
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improve upon your immune cells and make
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them recognize the receptors on cancer
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cells T cell T cell samples are taken
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from the patient and then the DNA from
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the T cells is reprogrammed to code for
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new protein receptors which are able to
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recognize the receptors on cancer cells
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and as simple as mate as that may sound
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your DNA can only code for 20 different
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amino acids and while these amino acids
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are able to combine and orient
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themselves to form millions of different
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proteins there is only there's still no
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guarantee that the exact shape can be
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exactly and precisely matched by the
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proteins coded for by our own DNA the
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only way to guarantee the production of
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a receptor that matches the protein
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receptor on a cancer cell is by
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bioengineering new amino acids and
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increasing the amount of proteins that
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we can make our alphabet has 26 letters
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with these 26 letters we were able to
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create the 2,000 page oxford dictionary
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and while while the dictionary is
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incredibly long and complex there are
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still some sounds and words that will
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never exist in English despite being
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able to exist in other languages the
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only way to guarantee the existence of
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such words is by adding new letters to
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the alphabet the amino acid alphabet has
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20 letters scientists have added 300
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letters to the alphabet they simulate
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these new amino acids on supercomputers
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and then they use DNA printers to print
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them out this new DNA is then
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incorporated back into the host cells
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and translated into new proteins which
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are able to recognize the receptors on
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cancer cells
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thanks to car t-cell therapy five-year
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survival rates for acute lymphoblastic
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leukemia have gone up drastically and
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nearly all patients for similar blood
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cancers go into remission it was this
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drive to discover how to say
00:08:48
large swaths of lives that initially
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drew me towards biomechanical
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engineering at the end of the day though
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it's not the answers to these questions
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that matter it's the questions that we
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ask next it's why we asked them I
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present these examples to you not as an
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expert on the subject but simply as
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someone who can't wait to see what we
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discover next it's that spirit of
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inquiry that we should all embody about
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science it's the cashion to learn about
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new science and technology and discover
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how to better humanity because at the
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end of the day when we like my science
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education won't end when I get a 5 on
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the AP exam or an A in my classes it'll
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end when we run out of questions so keep
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asking questions because the more
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questions we ask and the more we wonder
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the more we realize how much we have
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left to learn all that and that this is
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definitely not science