domingo, 30 de setembro de 2012

Documentários: PBS: DNA



Voltando aos posts normais do blog..... mais um documentário.

Dados:


Audio:Inglês
Codec:avi
Tamanho: ~700mb
Duração: ~60min
Legendas >>> AQUI


Specifically, it was a race between two teams of young scientists working in Britain, as well as the esteemed chemist Linus Pauling, based in California. Already a Nobel laureate, Pauling may have been the favorite, but the discovery would ultimately be made by his British counterparts. Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins were trying to identify the structure by studying X-ray diffractions of the DNA molecule. But Jim Watson and Francis Crick studied a little bit of everything -- including, to the consternation of some, the work of their competitors. A few have gone so far as to accuse Watson of stealing Franklin's X-ray work.
In any case, Waston and Crick's inquisitive working style ultimately allowed them to determine the DNA structure first, in 1953 -- an achievement that led to their Nobel Prize in 1962. Meanwhile, Franklin passed away in 1958 from cancer.


http://rapidshare.com/files/22322158/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/22332923/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/22341318/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part3.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/22354711/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part4.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/22660880/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part5.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/22652954/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part6.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/22614697/DNA.1of5.The.Secret.of.Life.part7.rar



Biotechnology would soon transform the pharmaceutical industry and genetically modified food was to herald the biggest revolution in agriculture since the industrialization of farming. Yet the public was skeptical, and so were certain scientists. Some feared that a cancer-causing gene stitched into the DNA of a bacterium might be accidentally absorbed in the human gut, enabling cancer to be passed on like an infectious disease. Biologists from all over the world were called to a meeting in California to draw up a strict set of safety guidelines.
When the panic subsided the stage was set for a biotechnology bonanza. A race began to produce genetically engineered insulin. A couple of years later a young researcher called Rob Horsch, who worked for the chemical giant Monsanto, produced the first genetically engineered plant. The biotech revolutions had arrived.



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The story begins in 1990, when the Human Genome Project was launched to decipher the complete instruction manual of the human being. This epic endeavour took over a decade to complete and cost billions of dollars. Eight years after its launch, a rival private bid was announced in an attempt to shut the public project down. A personal feud erupted between Craig Venter, who ran Celera's privately funded Genome Project, and Sir John Sulston, who oversaw Britain's share of the public Human Genome Project. Craig Venter believed he could finish the Human Genome several years before the public project.
The fighting became so intense that President Clinton stepped in to try to unite the two sides. Clinton asked a go-between to sort out the two warring groups. Over pizza and beer in a basement, the two sides agreed to a cease-fire. They would announce their draft results -- together -- in a joint celebration hosted by The White House in June 2000.



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The article described the work of a local doctor, Brian Druker, who was testing a new kind of cancer drug. In 1997, months away from death, Bud Romine became the first patient ever to take Gleevec. Within 17 days, Bud had returned to perfect health. Indeed, the drug seems to cure everyone with Bud's disease -- Chronic Myeloid Leukemia -- by fixing the DNA that causes it. Today, the prospect of more drugs that work at the level of DNA is a real one. In 1990, Gleevec was the only one in development. There are currently hundreds of drugs in development that might work in the same revolutionary way on different kinds of cancer.
The final work for the DNA scientists is identifying all the damaged genes that cause cancer. But with the Human Genome Project finished, a single lab will be able to do this in just five years. Fifty years after Crick and Watson discovered the double helix, the secret of life may finally be living up to its name.

http://rapidshare.com/files/23305096/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/23317971/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/23580895/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part3.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/23592134/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part4.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/23601558/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part5.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/23609266/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part6.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/24358958/DNA.4of5.Curing.Cancer.part7.rar





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