Threads by latest replies - Page 3315

(5 replies)

biopunk 2037 incoming

No.13423988 ViewReplyOriginalReport
>Highly accurate protein structure prediction
for the human proteome
oh boy, can predict the shape of 98.5% of human proteins
(26 replies)

Out of Africa Theory

No.13420587 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Is it true that humans left Africa because they got tired of Africans and their behavior?
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(5 replies)

Exercise on Mars

No.13424204 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Will water sports such as underwater rugby feel exactly the same on Mars? What other types of exercise will work well on Mars?
(5 replies)
No.13424323 ViewReplyOriginalReport
can you figure this out or are you bad at math?
(27 replies)
No.13422416 ViewReplyOriginalReport
>Nothing can go faster than the speed of light
But..have we tried yet?
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(5 replies)

New tech potentially making penis enlargement a reality

No.13424349 ViewReplyOriginalReport
So every one of our cells has the full genome, but our epigenome is responsible for which genes are turned off and on in a given cell. This gives the specific cell it's identity. For example the epigenetic profile of a ?-cell in the pancreas makes it so it's insulin gene is turned on, while the insulin gene in a skin cell is turned off. The epigenome determines what functions a cell has.

Let's say we have the penis of a 15 year old male and the penis of a 25 year old male. They will probably look similar in structure but the 15 year old penis will have a couple of other functions, most importantly in this case: it can grow when stimulated by the right hormones. It grows because the epigenetic profile it has has the genes that result in growth turned on (whichever those genes are).

So can you make cells return to a younger epigenetic profile? It has been done in rat optic neurons by insterting 3 genes that produce yamanaka factors. The epigenome of these rats was observably younger (We can measure this with great accuracy, see Horvath's clock) AND they regained various functions in that they could regenerate like neurons of a young rat (adult nerve cells regenerate VERY slowly, this is true in humans too which is why nerve damage almost always is near permanent). The rat neurons were rejuvenated, essentially. This is recent tech from like december 2019. Human trials of this technology are beginning in 2022.

Now the idea is this:
>Use yamanaka factors to make tissues in the penis regain their growth function
>Treat the subject with the correct hormones to stimulate growth of the penis
>Repeat until satisfactory results are had

There is a lot of money to be made here, so it is most likely coming quite soon.
(12 replies)
No.13423413 ViewReplyOriginalReport
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.sciencenews.org/article/covid-coronavirus-vaccine-development-speed/amp

FOR ALL YOU INBREDS WHO KEEP SAYING THAT THIS IS THE FIRST TIME MRNA VACCINES HAVE BEEN TESTED ON HUMANS ITS CALLED READING YOU DUMB SONS OF BITCHES
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(5 replies)

Black liquid came out of expired salad

No.13424292 ViewReplyOriginalReport
I bought a salad that tasted disgusting and put it in a bag intending to throw it away a few months ago, and when I took the bag away today it had left this black liquid on the floor. What the fuck is it and how do I get rid of it? Ignore the gay bag
(16 replies)
No.13420025 ViewReplyOriginalReport
Where is math and /sci/ going in the future? What should I study to not get left behind? Is it going to be quantum computing and AI? Seems like the ticket is to study something in math and physics and then join Fintech like Sam bankman fried... I just wanna make it in my old age of 27 bros. I don't have as much time as these young 18 year old whippersnappers to change what I focus on.
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(6 replies)
No.13422814 ViewReplyOriginalReport
mfw a maskcuck globetard says anything
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