It was enjoyable, to say the least. A day of presentations on everything from pancreatic cancer to chaos , poster sessions with passionate people, and a sandwich - you can't beat that! There was this one presentation on bouncing droplets on a vertically vibrating fluid bath. Here is a video of bouncing droplets to give you can idea of what I am talking about:
There was another presentation on green fuel production, another on TCR recognition in T-cells, and I caught the end of one on "plasmods". It's "between a dielectric and metal", whatever that means. That is a subject for research at another time...
I can explain the T-cell freshness, though. TCR stands for "T-cell receptor". Recall that T-cells are lymphocytes - proponents in the body's immune system. They differ from other lymphocytes in that they have the aforementioned TCRs that are responsible for recognizing and binding to antigens. In TCR gene therapy, anti-tumor TCRs are placed in a patient. The goal is to induce the T-cells in the patient to attack a certain virus or cancer specified by the type of TCR they are "transduced" with. The problem is that, sometimes, the introduced TCR's "chains" sometimes "mispair" with the the endogenous - this means, original - TCR's "chains". The point is, the transduced TCR doesn't get to do its job and make the patient's T-cells attack the target virus or cancer, and, sometimes, the T-cells become autoreactive and attack the patient's tissues. The point of the research project presented was to develop a way to detect the extent to which this mispairing occurs.
Pretty cool.
my poster, and a very nice fish tank through that door over there |
One day, I will be one of these people, perhaps taking part in SCCUR next year or the year after - perhaps talking to a excited high school student during the last poster session of the day.
Coursera
The Coursera is going smoothly, though I've found that I much prefer in-person instruction. Dr. Redfield's optimism is contagious, though, even if she is all the way in eastern Canada. The making of life are unfolding theirs secrets to me with each lesson, and I've found another purpose in life: find the Romanesco cauliflower. It is a mutant of cauliflower, sometimes referred to as a broccoli, and featuring a partial fractal pattern that, according to Wikipedia, has been "modeled as a recursive helical arrangement of cones", whatever that means. I shall look that up some other time...
Dr. Redfield has attempted to procure one of these beauties at a farmers' market in her city, but to avail - motivating me to see one for myself!
Romanesco Cauliflower |
Dr. Redfield is a magical woman.
Last week |
This week |
My EQ is now "What is the most useful application for extremophile research in addressing global climate change." I have a few answers in mind. Judging from the google scholar alerts I get, quite a bit of extremophile research has been focused on biofuel production. Methanogens actually consume methane - a more severe green house gas than carbon dioxide and byproduct of cattle ranching and rice production. Perhaps methane can be used as a fuel source in the future. There's are oil spill clean-up by oil-degrading extremophiles. There's also the prospect of creating a better climate model by analyzing how deep-sea extremophiles cycle nutrients and produce nitrogen.
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