Possible potato improvements, and a pill that gives you a jab in the gut

Possible potato improvements, and a pill that gives you a jab in the gut

Because of its genetic complexity, the potato didn’t undergo a “green revolution” like other staple crops. It can take more than 15 years to breed a new kind of potato that farmers can grow, and genetic engineering just won’t work for tackling complex traits such as increased yield or heat resistance. Host Sarah Crespi talks with Staff Writer Erik Stokstad about how researchers are trying to simplify the potato genome to make it easier to manipulate through breeding. Researchers and companies are racing to perfect an injector pill—a pill that you swallow, which then uses a tiny needle to shoot medicine into the body. Such an approach could help improve compliance for injected medications like insulin. Host Meagan Cantwell and Staff Writer Robert F. Service discuss a new kind of pill—one that flips itself over once it hits the bottom of the stomach and injects a dose of medication into the stomach lining. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download the transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Michael Eric Nickel/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook] Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(642)

Teaching robots to smile, and the effects of a rare mandolin on a scientist’s career

Teaching robots to smile, and the effects of a rare mandolin on a scientist’s career

Robots that can smile in synchrony with people, and what ends up in the letters section First on this week’s show, a robot that can predict your smile. Hod Lipson, a roboticist and professor at Colum...

28 Maalis 202430min

Hope in the fight against deadly prion diseases, and side effects of organic agriculture

Hope in the fight against deadly prion diseases, and side effects of organic agriculture

New clinical trials for treatments of an always fatal brain disease, and what happens with pests when a conventional and organic farm are neighbors   First up on this week’s show, a new treatment to s...

21 Maalis 202435min

Why babies forget, and how fear lingers in the brain

Why babies forget, and how fear lingers in the brain

Investigating “infantile amnesia,” and how generalized fear after acute stress reflects changes in the brain   This week we have two neuroscience stories. First up, freelance science journalist Sara R...

14 Maalis 202429min

A dive into the genetic history of India, and the role of vitamin A in skin repair

A dive into the genetic history of India, and the role of vitamin A in skin repair

What modern Indian genomes say about the region’s deep past, and how vitamin A influences stem cell plasticity First up this week, Online News Editor Michael Price and host Sarah Crespi talk about a l...

7 Maalis 202430min

The sci-fi future of medical robots is here, and dehydrating the stratosphere to stave off climate change

The sci-fi future of medical robots is here, and dehydrating the stratosphere to stave off climate change

Keeping water out of the stratosphere could be a low-risk geoengineering approach, and using magnets to drive medical robots inside the body   First up this week, a new approach to slowing climate cha...

29 Helmi 202429min

What makes snakes so special, and how space science can serve all

What makes snakes so special, and how space science can serve all

On this week’s show: Factors that pushed snakes to evolve so many different habitats and lifestyles, and news from the AAAS annual meeting   First up on the show this week, news from this year’s annua...

22 Helmi 202447min

What makes blueberries blue, and myth buster Adam Savage on science communication

What makes blueberries blue, and myth buster Adam Savage on science communication

Why squeezing a blueberry doesn’t get you blue juice, and a myth buster and a science editor walk into a bar   First up on the show this week, MythBusters’s Adam Savage chats with Science Editor-in-Ch...

15 Helmi 202446min

A new kind of magnetism, and how smelly pollution harms pollinators

A new kind of magnetism, and how smelly pollution harms pollinators

More than 200 materials could be “altermagnets,” and the impact of odiferous pollutants on nocturnal plant-pollinator interactions   First up on the show this week, researchers investigate a new kind ...

8 Helmi 202431min

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