Synthetic Biology

Synthetic Biology

We explore synthetic biology in this Naked Scientists Show, finding out how to learn from, and improve on, the structures and systems we find in nature. We'll meet the team of students who designed a biological sensor to win the international genetically engineered machine competition, or iGEM, and find out how to build bespoke proteins. In Kitchen Science, we feed an egg to some enzymes to find out how biological washing powder works. Plus, what the brain does when it sees a familiar face, genetically modified crops boost resistant bug numbers, how to create hair cells, essential for hearing,... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

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Eradicating polio

Eradicating polio

This week, we're exploring polio: a highly infectious viral disease that can attack the nervous system and cause paralysis, mainly in young children. Polio has been pushed to the brink of elimination ...

10 Mars 31min

Immune reprogramming for cancer, and squeaky shoe science

Immune reprogramming for cancer, and squeaky shoe science

Coming up, we explore how CAR-T cell therapy is revolutionising personalised cancer treatment. Plus, how NASA's DART mission tested Earth's asteroid defence, what we are learning about the benefits of...

6 Mars 31min

Titans of Science: Mike Wooldridge

Titans of Science: Mike Wooldridge

Our Titans of Science series continues with Mike Wooldridge, Ashall Professor of Foundations of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Oxford. He has conducted extensive work in the field of age...

3 Mars 32min

Brain fats cleared during sleep, and bird poo powered Peru

Brain fats cleared during sleep, and bird poo powered Peru

Today, how the brain harnesses immune cells to clear burned out fats during sleep: does this protect from Alzheimer's disease? Also, the nutrient-rich guano of seabirds that shaped society in ancient ...

27 Feb 33min

Titans of Science: Jane Carlton

Titans of Science: Jane Carlton

Our Titan of Science this week is leading light in the field of malaria, Jane Carlton. The first to sequence the genome of malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax, she also helped sequence the deadlier Plas...

24 Feb 30min

Navalny's dart frog poisoning, and cat cancer genomics

Navalny's dart frog poisoning, and cat cancer genomics

This week, we look into the science behind Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny's death, caused by dart frog poison, and why Russia resorted to such an exotic means of dispatch at all. Also, how c...

20 Feb 29min

Heart failure: can you mend a broken heart?

Heart failure: can you mend a broken heart?

This week, in partnership with British Heart Foundation, we explore heart failure. Leading experts from the UK's largest independent funder of cardiovascular research tell us about the condition, the ...

17 Feb 28min

A nasal spray for flu, and is this how life began on Earth?

A nasal spray for flu, and is this how life began on Earth?

This week, we discuss a new antibody-based nasal spray that protects against the flu: how does it work? Plus, the tiny self-replicating molecule that may give clues to the origins of life on Earth, wh...

13 Feb 30min

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