Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2008/02/25/Joining_3_5_Billion_Years_of_Microbial_Invention
Celebrity geneticist Craig Venter examines possible long-term implications of antibiotics and antiseptics.
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Joining 3.5 Billion Years of Microbial Invention featuring biologist J. Craig Venter.
Biologist, author and businessman Craig Venter discusses his work mapping and synthesizing genomes. Venter recalls his work mapping the human genome and expands on his current work which includes categorizing new genes and species of microbes from ocean water. Venter also explains how microbial research can be used for metabolic engineering and alternative energy sources.
J. Craig Venter, PH.D. is regarded as one of the leading scientists of the 21st century for his contributions to genomic research and is one of the countrys most frequently cited scientists. He is Founder and President of the J. Craig Venter Institute and J. Craig Venter Science Foundation, not-for-profit research and support organizations dedicated to human genomic research, exploration of social and ethical issues in genomics, and alternative energy solutions through microbial sources. He is also the Founder and Chairman of the Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR).
Dr. Venter began his formal education after serving as a Navy Corpsman in Danang, Vietnam from 1967 to 1968. After earning a bachelors degree in biochemistry and a Ph.D. in physiology and pharmacology, both from the University of California at San Diego and both in three years, he was appointed professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo and the Roswell Park Cancer Institute. In 1984, he moved to the National Institutes of Health, where he developed expressed-sequence tags (ESTs), a revolutionary strategy for gene discovery. In 1992, he founded TIGR, where he and his team decoded the genome of the first free-living organism, the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae, using an original whole-genome shotgun technique. Since then, TIGR has sequenced more than 50 genomes using Dr. Venter's techniques.
Dr. Venter is the author of more than 200 articles and the recipient of numerous honorary degrees, public honors, and scientific awards, including the Financial Times Man of the Year Award, TIME Magazine Man of the Year (runner up), 2002 Gairdner Foundation International Award, and the 2001 Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize. Dr. Venter is a member of numerous prestigious scientific organizations including, including the National Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and American Society for Microbiology. He was also one of the first 38 people to be selected by Desmond Tutu as part of the "Hands That Shape Humanity" world exhibition.
Dr. Venter's autobiography A Life Decoded was published in October of 2007.
@locouk I agree. Not only to mention making US more prone to minor ailments, but over long periods of time, multiple generations that is, it weakens the ancestor's ability to fight infection permanently.
chilledkirby 1 year ago
We need bactiria to give our immune systems a kick up the jacksie every now and then. A sterile world would leave us open to minor ailments doing more dammage to us.
I try to ride out an infection, thus making m immune system stronger..
locouk 1 year ago
Is that a joke to laugh.....
it really indicates the lack of awareness among the masses.. They live in a fallacy that there is no danger at all....
Maybe they need two more pandemics like swine flu to get their 'ass on fire'.
Whole civilisations and species are eradicated due to lack of resistance to microbes.
I wish that Mr Brand is good at questions that 'circumvent'.
vsktube 2 years ago
I totally agree. For quite some time I thought people have gone way overboard with the antibiotics. 1) I believe people don't build up a resistance. 2) It leaves the more resistant bacteria to survive, then by natural selection bacteria become more and more resistant.
A4AgnstcFndmntlst 3 years ago