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BBC Inside Science

Personal genetics kits; Persister cells; Earthquake mapping; Scorpions

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Technology, Science

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 16 January 2014

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For a couple of hundred quid, one of many companies will send you a kit for sampling your own genome, and most will tell you your genetic risk for some diseases. In December the US Food and Drug Administration imposed a ban on one of these companies, 23andme. The reasoning was that if the organisation is offering medical advice, it needs to be medically regulated. Geneticist Professor Robert Green from Harvard Medical School argues that people can cope responsibly with their genetic information and that the FDA is being over-cautious.

Most people are familiar with recurrent infections caused by bacteria such as tonsillitis and bladder infections, where you pick up an infection, get treated with antibiotics and then after a few weeks or months the infection reappears and you need another course of antibiotics; this is a problem that can go on for many years, and is a major healthcare burden world-wide. Marnie Chesterton met a team from Imperial College studying the elusive persister cells responsible for these relapses.

Earthquakes usually occur in subduction zones, where one tectonic plate plunges beneath another. Now a team at University of Aberdeen has analysed a large earthquake database and developed a global map giving clues to which areas could be capable of causing giant earthquakes. Professor Nicholas Rawlinson explains the difficulties of predicting.

The venom of scorpions contains neurotoxins, which attack the nervous system of animals - it's one of the reasons why it's not a good idea to be stung by a scorpion. The structure of these toxins very closely resembles the structure of a group of proteins with a completely different purpose, called defensins. Professor Jan Tytgat from KU Leauven suggests that venom evolved from these defensins.

Transcript

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Lovely. Off the telly with me Joanna Paige.

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And me, Natalie Cassidy, so your evenings can be a little less searching

0:25.7

and a lot more watching. Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:29.2

Hello you, I'm Adam Rutherford and this is the BBC Inside Science Podcast first broadcast on the

0:34.2

16th of January. On this day in 1632 armed robber Aris Kint was hanged to death

0:39.2

in Amsterdam and then immortalized in Rembrandt's painting the anatomy lesson of Dr Tulp.

0:43.7

That's nothing to do with the program, just a fun fact.

0:46.4

Terms and conditions are at BBC.co.

0:49.2

UK slash Radio 4.

0:50.6

Infection, Venom, and earthquakes.

0:53.0

Harbagers of the apocalypse?

0:54.0

No, it's just your weekly dose of science.

0:57.0

You know when you've had a bit of a chest infection and you think you've shaken it,

1:00.0

but then it comes back with a vengeance,

1:01.0

we're taking a look at the specialist cells that hide

1:03.8

in your body's undergrowth only to strike just when you're not expecting it. We'll be finding

1:08.4

out how the scorpion got its venomous sting, and the crystal ball of earthquake predictions gets a little bit clearer with a

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