Don't miss the exciting next episode of connecting neurons to a computer here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/mV7TiJ-fqsuobLc We tested to see if neurons can grow in DMEM to see if our home made recipes stand a chance of working.
@eggmur5 ай бұрын
Yuh
@lithiumvalleyrocksprospect97924 ай бұрын
I'd love to see you start a project genetically engineer a mango tree to survive anywhere and it's fruit provide 100% human nutritional requirements.... Even if it's your cyborg future self that succeeds it would be a wonderful contribution to humanity 🙏
@Moonchild152253 ай бұрын
I doubt you will see this comment, but I do think you have even cheaper options for the drinks. Using powdered gatorade and buying it in bulk not only gives you the ability to customise your solution, but also makes things even cheaper, 1/2 to 1/4 of the price in fact. But then there are other alternatives you could test that are even cheaper, because this is the cheapest you get for HUMAN consumption, but horse electrolytes for example are a thing, and they can be as cheap as 1/2 of the price of powdered gatorade. So the cheapest possible? You could get down to a nice 8x cheaper than what you got in this video, and if you are able to make a deal wil a company for really large orders, you could go down as much as 10x cheaper, we are talking less than 50 cents per litre here. In fact, horse electrolytes when bought in big bulks, like hundreds of gallons, can be as cheap as 10 cents per litre! Ridiculous.
@vIntothewild2 ай бұрын
A quick tip, If you want JAPANESE drinks such as Pocari, you can ship from the Philippines Instead (where i live), It Is SUPER cheap here and I’m sure the shipping Isn’t as expensive either! Cheers!
@cheese256002 ай бұрын
Bro made the definition of a Mc donalds
@NICK....7 ай бұрын
future racism will be about if you were a red gatorade test tube baby or a blue gatorade test tube baby
@aegoni61767 ай бұрын
"You're one to talk! Mr came from egg juice"
@miskr32727 ай бұрын
Sounds an awful lot like someone out of blue would say.
@thomblueart84487 ай бұрын
well at least that makes more sense then the racism we have today!
@RedstonekPL7 ай бұрын
such a vitamin water thing to say 🙄🙄🙄🙄
@ViktorRzh7 ай бұрын
More like dark bear or white bear.
@robyngiesbrecht52067 ай бұрын
I do love that thought emporium is functionaly a crowd funded mad scientist
@hedgehog31807 ай бұрын
A new and more sustainable form of mad science.
@timothyhayes97247 ай бұрын
I should not have read that while eating b/c I nearly spat out my food cackling 😂
@AMPProf7 ай бұрын
He makin zombies for sure
@krash24307 ай бұрын
you've created him ! Is he Doctor Frankenstein or the Frankenstein Monster ?
@Teacup446 ай бұрын
@@krash2430 Both
@Fuzzycuffsqt3 ай бұрын
I lost my shit when he flawlessly segued into making meringues. Subbed
@processofelimination30993 ай бұрын
Same 😂😭
@emilyrln2 ай бұрын
Absolutely stunning transition 😂
@cfaithllewxamАй бұрын
same hahaha
@calamatica7 ай бұрын
As a cell biologist, I'm fascinated. It seems it’s time to seriously diversify the contents of the refrigerator in our laboratory.
@noanyobiseniss74627 ай бұрын
You can bring red gatoraid to work, dilute and have some left over for your own mad scientist creations!
@calamatica7 ай бұрын
Also...Our budgets are not unlimited((((
@NICK....7 ай бұрын
no sir tax-man these energy drinks are 100% for Science!
@Flesh_Wizard7 ай бұрын
Monster Energy meat next
@llearch7 ай бұрын
@@calamatica To be fair, it's not the labs that think the budgets are unlimited, it's the purveyors of the materials used. :-(
@TheLastPhoen1x7 ай бұрын
"Milk is just purified blood." I guess all mammals are purified vampires.
@deaddead6987 ай бұрын
I mean-
@jaythewolf72167 ай бұрын
just made me think of Dracula biting someone's booba . lady " help Dracula keeps biting my nips "
@quaxicron7 ай бұрын
bruh...
@unbeatablegamer14037 ай бұрын
@@quaxicron no no, they have a point
@mygirldarby6 ай бұрын
That's why I don't drink it.
@SuperSharpBlue3 ай бұрын
I work for a college and one of my jobs is to order supplies for medical labs. The reason for ordering expensive supplies is because we are state funded and to remain compliant, everything has to have a justification. If we were ordering tons of Gatorade instead of DMEM it would be hard to justify that a sports drink is being used for a lab setting. Additionally, there is oversight bodies that come around to ensure things are being conducted properly, so if a lab has a bunch of Gatorade laying around where there isn't supposed to be food and drink the school can get penalized and fined. Also, many departments receive annual budgets that are adjusted based on usage, so if one department does not use their full budget, then their next yearly budget gets reduced and any remaining funds are taken away and redistributed across the organization. So, departments tend to buy premium supplies and equipment to use up their budget in hopes to have a larger budget the following year, or at least, maximize the usage of their budget.
@yungboy42163 ай бұрын
Damn this sounds just like how it is in the military, I was a cardholder and we had to deal with the same issue
@VeryPeevedАй бұрын
Imagine punishing people for staying underbudget and then wondering why there's so much wasteful governmental spending.
@tacticaltaco7481Ай бұрын
Why not just pour out the gatorades into a labeled container
@imscaredandconfusedАй бұрын
@@tacticaltaco7481 fraud edit: If you claim it's not gatorade
@lotus_flower2000Ай бұрын
@@tacticaltaco7481 or you know..get people to understand that its being used for lab.
@Vileplume877 ай бұрын
This is giving "how much sawdust can you put in a rice crispy treat before people notice?" And I love that.
@Meethejarate7 ай бұрын
Yeah, it’s just “how much green dekara and coconut water can you put in a Petri dish before cells notice?”
@agiliteka7 ай бұрын
although this is the opposite of the sawdust in a way, because adding more Green dakara makes it more tasty
@skunkjobb7 ай бұрын
A very bad analogy. This has nothing to do with thinning out a product, it's a new way of producing meat without killing animals.
@Vileplume877 ай бұрын
@@skunkjobb I wasn't making an analogy I was making a goofy comparision
@coryzilligen7907 ай бұрын
@@skunkjobb It's _LITERALLY_ thinning out a product. Did you not catch that they are using the Gatorade and other drinks as partial replacement for the cell media? Or all that various other stuff as partial or complete replacement for the serum?
@hlibushok7 ай бұрын
Ah, splendid, we're getting closer and closer to finally finishing the ages old task of creating a Homunculus.
@guts607 ай бұрын
The medieval alchemists would be proud!
@Flesh_Wizard7 ай бұрын
Let's not crush this one with a book
@arcalranem7 ай бұрын
homunculus is easy, though. Test tube babies already exist.
@cevatkokbudak64147 ай бұрын
That would be a fucking insane and I want to see it
@Tunkkis7 ай бұрын
@@Flesh_Wizard If it behaves, and doesn't spit acid at its creator.
@legovogel86567 ай бұрын
Since coconut water performed relatifly good as a FBS replacement, maybe try turning other sorts of nuts/seeds into some sort of seed juice. Combining animal and plant produce could also be a way to broaden the nutrient composition, like mixing eggs and coconut water.
@bensmith33047 ай бұрын
One important thing to keep in mind, these cell lines were started and maintained in DMEM with FBS. This means that cells that preferred DMEM and FBS thrived, while those that didn't died off. With rapidly multiplying cells, it would likely be quite feasible to gradually wean the cells entirely off of DMEM and FBS and onto a substitute. This may be much easier than trying to generate cocktails of growth factors. Another key point is that the cells themselves often make the hormones they want. This is why many cell lines prefer partial media changes rather than complete media changes. This way, the cells always get exposed to most of the hormones they've generated.
@codiserville5937 ай бұрын
Huh... I don't what you're saying but I kinda wish I understood more of what you are talking about now
@goo8947 ай бұрын
@@codiserville593 I think they're saying that we could get the cells to evolve so they could survive in pure gatorade
@jacobwiens6597 ай бұрын
They should definitely try and see if there’s a way to fully transition a cell line to a cheaper medium.
@PhycoKrusk7 ай бұрын
@@jacobwiens659 For sure. The cost involved in obtaining the growth media are one of the biggest obstacles to bringing down the cost of production. (The cost of electricity is another, but we already have a lot of information on how to solve that)
@codiserville5937 ай бұрын
@@goo894 well alright thanks for this possible translation. It's helpful
@4RILDIGITAL7 ай бұрын
It's crazy to think that common grocery store items could potentially replace some of the most expensive elements in the lab. Very eager to see where this leads to, and how it could potentially revolutionize lab grown meat.
@dakaodo7 ай бұрын
Not entirely. There's almost always going to be minor or major compromises. You might be able to filter or separate out some of the undesirable elements, but every bit of that effort eats into the cost/time savings of using the retail alternative in the first place. But if something along that cheaper price point spectrum works "good enough" with 99.8% or whatever effective substitution, then yeah. For example, Thought Emporium mentioned two differences: the sports drinks significantly dropped pH balance out of the optimal cell survival range, and some trace elements in DMEM are situationally important for stuff like growing bones. I'm no cell biologist, but I'd imagine there are more nuances like these that they didn't mention. Another big one is quality control and precision to prevent variation. Two units of the same sports drink from different bottling plants or batches in the same plant could have a huge 0.2% variation in concentration of some elements. Not enough for a consumer to taste more or less salty, but could be enough to throw a precise lab process out of whack. A lot of the extra $100s of cost is for processes that ensure these error margins are orders of magnitude smaller. So the discount sports drink doping might be good enough for growing boneless McRibs or chicken nugget paste, but not for pseudo pork chops or beef ribeyes that need more realism. Good budget tier alternative for producing off-brand or generic synthetic meat, while the top quality synthetic meat will cost 2X more just to add the necessary 0.2% trace elements or whatever. Just like current consumer product price tiers. Or the discount stuff could work great for pumping out lower cost protein feedstock to feed to actual animal livestock that's raised for real meat. Not as environmentally or cost optimal as directly growing a high quality vat steak, but maybe it would be an interim technology that cuts cost inputs and greenhouse gas emissions by 10% or something, per pound of real beef produced. That's basically what industrial agriculture has been doing at a lower tech level for the past century -- grinding up undesired wild caught fish bycatch and waste parts from farmed fish to make fish meal, which they then mix into feedstock for more farmed fish or other livestock. Same for waste parts from butchered cows, pigs, chickens, etc that are fed back into the system to feed new animals. (and yes, this has been a source of increased system vulnerability to contamination, disease, and things like growth hormones recirculating back into the system as it approaches both higher efficiency and a slightly more closed loop of production)
@pukvandepettoflat70827 ай бұрын
Lab grown meat ..? Dont you mean DIY grown meat ? 😁😆
@Kiddio7 ай бұрын
The reasoning is because those expensive mediums are specifically tested and the ratio of contents confirmed to not have anything additional in there to not throw off experiments. It’s the same reason anything “aircraft grade” is expensive. It’s also the same reason NIST sells peanut butter for like $400. You’re not paying for the item but for the paper trail to validate your results. This is especially important in healthcare research in the case of any kind of side effects or other issues later on. Stuff like this is definitely great to know, especially if you’re just doing some preliminary research into a topic, but if you’re publishing a paper then you should be using standardised ingredients/processes.
@tynj41737 ай бұрын
you can't make me eat it
@greycat53837 ай бұрын
Wouldn't be the first time something like that happened. A while back a lab tested using the old Shrinky Dinks toy to create patterns for use in microfluidics. It worked.
@mkultragaming69396 ай бұрын
"Sprayed down with alcohol before going into the hood" is a terrifyingly close statement to myself
@DoctorOctogonopusАй бұрын
hahahah
@stone980228 күн бұрын
LMFAO
@simoncleret7 ай бұрын
"After several hours, Joe finally gave up on logic and reason and simply told the cabinet that he could talk to cells and that they wanted Brawndo"
@thefrenchgunsmith64887 ай бұрын
Dude did not grew meat, he grew a pure gamer
@NICK....7 ай бұрын
can't wait to have a gamer burger one day
@Somedude202827 ай бұрын
Gamer nuggets
@aeriumsoft7 ай бұрын
I made a gamer grape????
@celestinemachuca23397 ай бұрын
Ew
@ValeBridges7 ай бұрын
Perfect for the Doom Brain Bot
@barmetler7 ай бұрын
I think mcnuggets are already made like this
@Cyclopeantreegiant2 ай бұрын
🦘
@OfficialAbjeer2 ай бұрын
Rat meat
@drakologarnus7248Ай бұрын
Nah they are mixed meat ground up
@CyclopeantreegiantАй бұрын
@@drakologarnus7248 Swan foot and crawfish toes
@Seclusion687 ай бұрын
“A cow is just a machine that turns grass into milk.” The design. Its very human.
@cyberious.6 ай бұрын
it's very human,and it's going to ask you to go skatebord
@DanTDMJace6 ай бұрын
@@cyberious.asdfmovie refrence?
@cyberious.6 ай бұрын
@@DanTDMJace very much so
@davivasconcelos76326 ай бұрын
The design is very cow
@electronstudios14114 ай бұрын
same with every other animal. they are all just automated machines.
@nikushim66657 ай бұрын
Pocari sweat can be found at most Asian markets both in the US and Canada, with many online retailers also shipping it from local warehouses. No real need to have it imported. Also it comes in its original powder form if you're worried about shipping weights. But all in all its effectively a Japanese clone of Gatorade made by Otsuka Pharma.
@Yadobler7 ай бұрын
Me rn in Singapore chugging the $1.50 (usd1) bottle of PS
@Yadobler7 ай бұрын
Also yes I wanted to mention they come in power form. I remember being in police cadet corps and our outfield ration included the powder. We mixed it into our water bottles that were brewing in the hot sun, and chugged it - horrible but delicious. Also had to make lunch using some cheap off-brand instant noodles, and I think some folks forgot to pour out water into the mestin for the noodles before mixing the PS powder. But anyways we opened a tin of sardines in tomato and threw that into the mestin of noodles and honestly, pretty good!
@theendoftheworldhasbeenqui24857 ай бұрын
I wondered why he imported it when I can get a bottle of pocari from a local asian store in London for a few pounds. I'd be surprised if you couldn't also in Canada
@ztheo22807 ай бұрын
@@theendoftheworldhasbeenqui2485 honestly it was probably just because its the best way to make sure you get the exact same product. yes its almost guaranteed to be the same locally but it might not be. Also i wonder if the powder might not be better because you could adjust the concentration if need be
@llearch7 ай бұрын
@@ztheo2280 In hindsight (yay, I can see clearly now!) the powder form probably would have been better. Still... next cycle?
@Strategy_gameR-bm3hb6 ай бұрын
“What do you get when you mix eggs,milk,Gatorade,and nutritional paste” school lunch
@sjamesparsonsjr7 ай бұрын
Please call it "Brawndo Serum, it has what cells crave"
@Goodgu39637 ай бұрын
This is amazing and absolutely what it should be called.
@victoriouspancake7 ай бұрын
Clicked on this video expecting the Idiocracy references...did not disappoint
@thethoughtemporium7 ай бұрын
The plan was always to call it "brawndo: the cell growth mutilator, custard flavored"
@sjamesparsonsjr7 ай бұрын
@@thethoughtemporium Perfect, let me know if you want me to design the shirt :)
@c1v1c2v27 ай бұрын
@@thethoughtemporium the neuron optimized version can be Braindo
@GammaRayven7 ай бұрын
Using Gatorade of all things to grow meat, just amazing. It just feels like an april fools joke or onion article "Mad scientist makes breakthrough cost reduction in artificial meat production, Sponsored by Gatorade".
@terohannula305 ай бұрын
Idiocracy was up to something, but it was not the plants but meat which craves electrolytes 😂
@LocusNevernight3 ай бұрын
BRAUNDO, IT HAS WHAT MEAT NEEDS, IT HAS ELECTROLYTES
@GammaRayven3 ай бұрын
@@LocusNevernight WHAT ARE ELECTROLYTES, DO YOU EVEN KNOW.
@LocusNevernight3 ай бұрын
@@GammaRayven 😟
@gregoryallen000110 күн бұрын
@@LocusNevernightthank you
@Diamondfire51252 ай бұрын
OMG i love this channel. This is my first video but I'm instantly in love. How have i not found this sooner.
@HawkTeevs7 ай бұрын
Scientists around the world: Let’s use animal cells to develop treatments for patients Thought Emporium: *GATORADE MEAT*
@cola987657 ай бұрын
Thought Emporium is the mad scientist the world needs more of.
@porteal89867 ай бұрын
honestly the high cost seems to be one of the big barriers to practical lab grown meat, not to mention any other lab grown cells, so pretty useful
@NoAIStudios7 ай бұрын
@@porteal8986 Exactly. An imagine being able to supply all your meat at the cost of some gatorade and an egg (so about $2 instead of the normal $15)
@duelviper98717 ай бұрын
@@NoAIStudios we re about 50 years away from every home having their own meat synthesizer in the basement that you just need to fill the vats with gatorade and eggs every month
@brokenleftearbuglord91066 ай бұрын
Imagine being the Gatorade sales rep making the massive sale to a laboratory to find out they’re using the drinks to generate meat lmao
@nekomakhea94407 ай бұрын
The missing ingredients are obviously Sugar, Spice, And Everything Nice, and *_CHEMICAL X_*
@darthplagueis137 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure sugar is already included.
@teoeigi7 ай бұрын
And then the perfect little girl was born
@rose.isnotavailable7 ай бұрын
@@darthplagueis13I can’t imagine being satisfied with the sweetness of a Gatorade, tbf. they’d be majority spice and chemicals which is something but isn’t the ratio to be power puff girly enough (according to my own conjecture let’s be real for a sec lmfao-)
@knrz25627 ай бұрын
@@rose.isnotavailableerm huh uh ok 🫤 🤔 🙄 👍
@jeffsmith93847 ай бұрын
we're trying to make something to eat, not give it the right to vote
@patrickstribling5 ай бұрын
Hey all, this just popped up on my home feed, so i decided to watch the video, well you have a new subscriber, this was pretty cool, and peole in the comments seem really nice, and i really love learning new things,can't wait to check out your other videos, never to old to learn new things..
@BiologicalEngineer7 ай бұрын
A few friends in my department (USU Biological Engineering) are working on creating an FBS substitute using subcritical water hydrolysis. They take algae and put it under high pressure and temperature to break down the algae into metabolites cells can use. The goal was to produce a vegan media that Upside Foods could use for cultured chicken. Pretty neat!
@CaleGuthrie7 ай бұрын
That's amazing
@andresmorera64267 ай бұрын
Hopefully it can be used for all sorts of cell culturing applications beyond the private sector... And that the recipe and protocol is open source
@Blimsky7 ай бұрын
so a pressure cook it to a paste then feed it to vegans, sounds like the pink sludge in fallout
@andresmorera64267 ай бұрын
@@Blimsky I am a vegan, and I approve of this message.
@f-106deltadartАй бұрын
Show them this video. Chaos as they realize gatorade works
@PrebleStreetRecords7 ай бұрын
For processing the eggs, take a look at what was used for “albumen print” photographic processes. The literature is not the easiest to find, it’s mostly in century old photographic journals. The goal was to have a clean and optically clear protein gel into which silver nitrate grains would be suspended.
@rahulsharmajammu7 ай бұрын
Prep for albumen print is basically what was done here. Take albumen, whisk till stiff, leave overnight, and filter out solids, 🤷🏾
@Caenef7 ай бұрын
@@rahulsharmajammu Ah, glair! Seems to be pretty useful stuff for more than just illuminating manuscripts and gluing books.
@KingMB_XJ_Official6 ай бұрын
13:24 I don't know why, but I like the casual swearing in such an educational video.
@markopolo12717 ай бұрын
If this channel has taught me anything it's that biochemists absolutely fkn love E.coli and use it a lot more than the average Joe not in the know would ever expect
@benjaminlamothe20937 ай бұрын
That's because they reproduce every 30 minutes, they are crazy efficient.
@benmcreynolds85817 ай бұрын
Yep from what I've seen is since they reproduce so fast, they can quickly see any effects, changes & then go from there.. But I'm no certified scientist
@am5297 ай бұрын
there are a plethora of different strains, some of which naturally live in the human digestive system. Only a handful are harmful to people.
@markopolo12717 ай бұрын
@@am529 I know I'm more so just commenting on how E.coli is used far more in biochemistry than anyone not in the know would ever expect. I for one didn't know until I stumbled on this channel just how much it's used in this field of work.
@littlegrabbiZZ9PZA7 ай бұрын
They're just overall pretty chill dudes. Very relaxed growth requirements, readily uptake DNA if zapped and/or sauna-ed a bit, don't stink to high heaven, they even come in nonopthogenic!
@ironmanta04227 ай бұрын
When will you grow the doom playing brain in Gatorade
@Peppermynt.7 ай бұрын
ultimate gamer brain
@eragonawesome7 ай бұрын
I'm gonna guess "as soon as we figure out how to make it actually work" In fact, i would assume there's already at least some footage recorded of testing and such
@AageV7 ай бұрын
If you grow it in Gfuel it will be esports ready.
@Peppermynt.7 ай бұрын
@@AageV PERFECT
@tinkerduck13737 ай бұрын
It's got electrolytes! It's got what brains crave for.
@LtDan-fy7lc2 ай бұрын
"Feed me, Seymour" unlocked a DEEP memory with that cut lol
@specificsetter7 ай бұрын
new alchemy video just dropped
@adengoldstein51307 ай бұрын
Next project turning lead to gold
@crimsonqueen7517 ай бұрын
@@adengoldstein5130 ...using mushrooms and baby cow juice
If they whip out a large metal armor, we better be very worried
@_marshP7 ай бұрын
Next project combining a dog and a little girl
@smash_hamster7 ай бұрын
About 25 years ago when I was a student, I was chatting to a biochemist about food and they mentioned that they'd never eat a custard-filled doughnut, because egg custard is a great growth medium and she'd seen how well it works for bacterial cultures.
@Steelkicker2 ай бұрын
So who's the winner? Myself, who has got to enjoy custard filled donuts many times with out negative consequences? Or the person that cut themselves off from experience that cos fear of bacteria
@Unknown_unidentified5 ай бұрын
0:08 YOU GET A VERY DISGUSTING CAKE!!! 🎉
@turzinslifiter3184 ай бұрын
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@dragonheart53493 ай бұрын
Yeah. Meat cake. Disgusting meat cake.
@jakoblarok7 ай бұрын
Haha! Around 13:00 I was like, "Wow, adding sugar... ha, it's like he's making a meringue" [puts into piping bag] "Oh..."
@theilluminatimember88962 ай бұрын
This had me lol
@noob190877 ай бұрын
Wow, that felt like 6 minutes. I was wondering "wait that's it??" as the video ended. You sure made it entertaining!
@nyyppa79567 ай бұрын
The comment count is already nearing a thousand so I don't know if anyone reads this, but wouldn't it have been more beneficial to use carbon dioxide or some acid that you could later precipitate out, to separate the whey from milk? Vinegar (mostly acetic acid) is a weak acid with small molecular sizes that can pass cell membranes, so even after neutralizing the pH, it would keep reacting inside and outside the cells and mess up things. At least that's why one should never adjust aquarium water's pH with weak acids. Doing so could easily end up killing the fishes. Only use strong acids (nitric, sulfuric, muriatic) for that, which leave chemically more inert acid residues. Not sure if any of the aforementioned ones would be suitable for this purpose though. That's why I suggested either carbon dioxide (at least it's the easiest to obtain and apply with sodastream, not sure if there are other acid forming gasses that have high vapor pressure) that could be mostly evaporated from whey by bubbling the solution with nitrogen gas (pumping just air would remove the CO2 as well, but it might also oxidize something important), or maybe there's some suitable acid that would precipitate during the neutralizing process, like oxalic acid + calcium hydroxide. Just the first few ideas that came to my mind.
@sneediumminer7 ай бұрын
yeah acetate ion in humans is toxic so i cant imagine having a bunch of it floating around is good for the cells
@Suriel-e5g7 ай бұрын
Now i want to see what happens if i soda streamed some milk xD
@nyyppa79567 ай бұрын
@@Suriel-e5g You'd get lots of foam, and coagulated proteins separating from whey. More importantly, I'm looking forward for your taste report, which is the, erm.. more interesting part 🙃
@usingthecharlim7 ай бұрын
Dilute sodium acetate is extremely benign. It's used in blood transfusions and neonatal care, so it's probably close to harmless to cells.
@BobMcBobJr7 ай бұрын
Could use dilute HCL. Make some more salt.
@OldShatterham7 ай бұрын
really would not have expected beer to do so well...
@dr.spudies15557 ай бұрын
Much like your average dad over 40, cells just love beer
@MattRose300007 ай бұрын
it's what secretly keeps humanity alive for millennia
@dr.spudies15557 ай бұрын
I mean historically speaking wine, beer, and spirits are some of our oldest inventions.
@hammerth14217 ай бұрын
It's basically yeast broth, especially since the way they used it massively dilutes the alcohol.
@bernard8327 ай бұрын
Brewing beer is cell culture. The main difference is that the spent media is the desired product.
@Battlejunky10023 ай бұрын
Imagine in 30 year when you have to explain to your mom that she doesnt have to buy a thanks giving turkey but instead just mix some Japanese Gatorade and egg with some cells and wait for a month
@wincentywilk75117 ай бұрын
Fun fact: you can actually buy pocari sweat as a powder for dillution, I'm pretty sure that would cut down a little on shipping.
@thehuntermikipl11707 ай бұрын
A little?
@_Circus_Clapped_7 ай бұрын
@@thehuntermikipl1170 just dilute the powder in your medium, the powder is way stronger than whatever they put in the bottle
@thehuntermikipl11707 ай бұрын
@@_Circus_Clapped_ don't troll
@blu12gaming447 ай бұрын
I'm happy that you looked into this as most organisms aren't too picky about what they ingest to survive and most of what we consume is either organic or derived from something that is. Like you said in the video: the biotech supply industry intentionally runs up the prices of otherwise inexpensive compounds simply because they know they can due to the grant money flowing into universities and other institutions. Without people working to innovate outside the current system: very little progress will ever be made on things that major corporations aren't interested in. Just the same as how the home computer hobbyists brought about the innovations needed for a truly digital age: biotech enthusiasts will need to learn how to progress outside of the (mostly closed-off) mainstream in order to make real progress in things.
@nerdygem86207 ай бұрын
I used to work in pharma, and we said that companies slap an extra 0 on the price tag for the industry. A sterile pack of 15 IPA wipes cost $50.
@gakulon6 ай бұрын
Yup, very often in the economy the most profitable solutions aren't the most innovative ones but rather the most stagnant ones. No need to waste money developing a new solution (in multiple meanings of the word) if you can just keep forcing people to buy the current one.
@YoutubeAccount40935 ай бұрын
This guy is the modern equivalent of a medieval alchemist at this point. Do lead to gold next
@marjon17037 ай бұрын
Why are academically interesting videos being demonetised whilst Scamverts are STILL being pumped into my home by KZbin?
@DarthVader-ch4um7 ай бұрын
Because KZbin makes more money off of them, so of course they allow it.They are both scammers after all.
@LowQualityShitposts7 ай бұрын
So true
@mlgsamantha58637 ай бұрын
The more educated people are, the less likely they are to click on scam advertisements
@NineSun0016 ай бұрын
Idiots click on adds and generate revenue. KZbin has no interesst in actual humans. That's why channels aimed at children make 100x more money then channels aimed at adults. Adults have ad- and/or sponsorblocks and mostly don't click on ads. Kids do.
@thecandlemaker13296 ай бұрын
Can't sympathise with AI art users, sorry.
@owenkegg56087 ай бұрын
Hearing the phrase "meat laser" shook my entire world in a way previously not imaginable
@JustADiamondBlock7 ай бұрын
"No John, your not allowed to be making meat out of Gatorade in the garage"
@lenardEkko2 ай бұрын
11:23 yeah that sentence just ruined cereal for me for the rest of my life...
@blar21127 ай бұрын
The joke is on you, providers have been using 70% gatorade on the medium they sell for ages to increase the profit margin.
@chyza20127 ай бұрын
that'd the make final mix 91% gatorade, and it still works well, you could probably get away with homeopathic concentrations of medium at that rate
@blar21127 ай бұрын
@@chyza2012 Homeopathy is a profitable business, expanding to grow mediums.
@lucky-segfault7 ай бұрын
Now we need the reverse study: how much Gatorade can you replace with dmem before gamers stop seeing advantages Will dmem become the sports drink of top athletes?
@abyssstrider25477 ай бұрын
Lol
@Pinnacle_Of_Stupidity12 күн бұрын
Leveled up. Mastered: Chemistry, Biology
@Dylan-ln6qt7 ай бұрын
Great video, but I also wanted to add some information about university research, for anyone interested 1. When getting grants Universities first take a portion for the use of facilities, this can go up to 50% but I believe 20-30% is standard 2. Assuming your lab isn't big enough for some major lab equipment like an NMR the university often has a communal one...that you must pay to use 3. The lab also needs to pay for graduate student tuition and wages 4. Now that the majority of the money has probably disappeared you now have to deal with whatever miscellaneous costs appear, maintenance of equipment, purchasing chemicals, traveling to scientific conventions Academia is basically a black hole that devours money
@ritishify7 ай бұрын
Such a shame. But it is the world we live in, and money seems to be the best tool we could've come up with. It's both one of my favorite and most hated inventions, haha.
@Dylan-ln6qt7 ай бұрын
Yeah it can be a pain, my advisor basically doesn't have free time with the constant grant applications he has to file, granted it is a fairly large lab
@jinmushui1soul6 ай бұрын
@@ritishifyThis is not an issue of money itself, but of equitable relations. Universities consistently choose to exploit their facility, staff, and students because they can and are incentivized to do so.
@ritishify6 ай бұрын
@@jinmushui1soul I see. Although I still think that more money would probably radically change things, I guess the issue is more about the management side of things as well... I hope the situation gets better soon
@GabrielleduVent5 ай бұрын
@Dylan-ln6qt 1. When getting grants Universities first take a portion for the use of facilities, this can go up to 50% but I believe 20-30% is standard HAHAHA, it's over 60 at R1s. I think Duke is ~60, MIT is around ~65, my university is also around 60-70.
@Pwn3dbyth3n00b7 ай бұрын
8:49 I'm pretty sure the lab supplier sells them like that for consistency across experiments for being able to replicate experiments from papers. It's like how the ISO standard tea is like 500 dollars for a very bad and bland tea.
@DemsW7 ай бұрын
That's 100% it, they pay to remove any variation factors. Same goes for most lab stuff.
@skorp56777 ай бұрын
Have no clue but tend to agree. Not required for exploratory stuff like on this channel though :)
@jonhinman24717 ай бұрын
Not sure who came up with removing all variations in order to 'baseline' ; it's a monocultural bland paradigm and actually eliminates any spice which extends life and expands consciousness. We need to understand and implement the interaction between rosemary, cell growth and antibacterial properties for instance as this among others can play a vital part in organic growth overall
@DemsW7 ай бұрын
@@jonhinman2471 Removing variation is the only way to be sure your results are the the product of the experiment and not some outside force. I've never seen anyone argue against that. Then in the experiment you can make as many/much variations as you want.
@okaydetar8217 ай бұрын
@@jonhinman2471 It's just meant for running experiments, that's not meant to be a final product.
@Jerrycourtney2 ай бұрын
This gives me great hope in a future that I was taught to anticipate in the 90s… one that I’ve long abandoned
@Nothingseen7 ай бұрын
"When you think about it, milk is just purified blood" is NEVER a sentence I expected to hear
Don't think about the circumstances for the cows to produce milk then.
@feuerling7 ай бұрын
Milk is just fancy sweat. Much more tasty than normal sweat though, luckily.
@GoldenPantaloons7 ай бұрын
@@feuerling How DOES normal sweat taste?
@vineet_20037 ай бұрын
Holy shit the concept is freaking genius If this works on large scale And is refined The cost of animal tissue culture will reduce by a significant amount
@mbirth7 ай бұрын
The cost might get reduced, but the market price will stay the same. That's how it usually works.
@the_seg_faulter7 ай бұрын
Nobody wants lab grown meat
@chriswheeler60927 ай бұрын
People have already figured that out and started investing serious money. Now people are debating the Morality of it.
@charlethemagne54667 ай бұрын
@@chriswheeler6092 raising and killing a cow is a lot more immoral than growing meat. One requires death and suffering the other doesn't, and no I'm not a vegan.
@dieselbaby7 ай бұрын
@Ger954 aka the future
@FCHenchyАй бұрын
"a better solution" You didn't pause for laughter, but I still caught it and appreciate it.
@antonpavlov90197 ай бұрын
The project of growing a complete gamer on gatorade is ongoing I see
@gehthoffentlich7 ай бұрын
I'm a little confused - wouldn't the most important test here be a control with sterile water diluting the DMEM? To see if the alternatives are either really helping (like DMEM) or just not hurting anything while enough DMEM is available. Sorry if it's a dumb question.
@lucky-segfault7 ай бұрын
Nah that's a good point. If DMEM can be diluted with distilled water and still work well, that's an instant drop in costs cuz every lab has access to distilled water. Heck, AC units make it as a side effect of cooling the air
@jetison3337 ай бұрын
Actually I think your entirely right! I hope he responds to this comment
@theeyeofomnipotent7 ай бұрын
Could be, but the 100% version with replaced fbs does remediate the results somewhat, Although yeah the data is better with dmem 0-100% with reverse osmosis distilled water dilution, it's not that complicated to do too, However the research from japan in video is probably more complete,
@person80647 ай бұрын
If my bio knowledge hasn't failed me, I think that's a negative control: a group that doesn't receive treatment and isn't expected to produce a result.
@NoNameAtAll27 ай бұрын
@@jetison333you're*
@imstupid8807 ай бұрын
Guys are really about to put out an open-source generic brand DMEM. I'm interested now how Aquarius, another Japanese Pocari Sweat competitor, would do. There's also apparently now a "new" Green Dakara, would be interesting to see if it does any different than the regular Green Dakara. I can help answer part of why the nutritional yeast did so well: it's literally just dead cells. When we brew, we use yeast nutrient, which is honestly just mostly dead yeast. In fact, a quick and dirty way to make yeast nutrient is to just boil a packet of bread yeast for a few minutes. The dead cells contain a lot of the necessary building blocks for new cells to grow, for obvious reasons. It's really crazy to me that any lab can just casually say they can order some DNA to get printed. Imagine telling someone that 100 years ago.
@AR-yd2nd7 ай бұрын
Not really open source, those brands are still proprietary. But cool af
@laurieb37037 ай бұрын
DNA? Wassat
@conanhighwoods43042 ай бұрын
Yeast cannibalism, lol!
@drek9k22 ай бұрын
Yeah but that kinda spooks me about bioterrorism, realistically while it may not be full on Tom Clancy's The Division tier, the idea that someone could just begin making designer viruses has got to be about one of the most terrifying concepts in the history of humanity also.
@memejeff7 ай бұрын
I was reading papers some months ago looking for replacements for FBS growth factors and half gave up. Never thought of eggs and milk. Genius.
@akmalbakar50787 ай бұрын
Thanks
@Darnetal577 ай бұрын
Note to self: the first step to my genetically engineered catgirls project might be gatorade and beer.
@AIoverlordDave2 ай бұрын
Honestly it's 100 percent possible to do so do what makes you happy!
@abadger0477 ай бұрын
its so cool being able to watch these videos now having done cell culture in lab. this channel was such a huge inspiration for me over the last six or so years
@hitnrun73 ай бұрын
Pocari is available as a powder - not only is it a lot cheaper to ship, but you could adjust the concentration.
@ThatGuyRNA7 ай бұрын
Every day, I get closer to my clone army
@tr3vk4m7 ай бұрын
you should probably throw those tissues away
@adora_was_taken7 ай бұрын
elsewhere in the world, someone's working on a droid army
@ThatGuyRNA7 ай бұрын
@@adora_was_taken that’s my buddy vin, I sure hope we don’t have conflict in the future
@ThatGuyRNA3 ай бұрын
@@tr3vk4mdidn't say clones of ME
@electroninja87687 ай бұрын
With regards to using milk, about a hundred+ years ago physicians did try using milk as a blood replacement for transfusions. It didn't work, but I thought it was interesting to consider that other people throughout history were on a similar path.
@CAMSLAYER137 ай бұрын
You can use coconut milk a blood plasma substitute in a pinch
@nexttonic64597 ай бұрын
xD that Idiocracy joke I was just waiting for it and You didn't left me hanging
@sreal-iron58987 ай бұрын
bruh 13:20 was such a genius prediction from whoever edited or scripted the video! i literally zoned out and got caught spot on, i enjoyed that !! thats a whole different layer of humor
@72perseids7 ай бұрын
Fellow biologist here, I think this should be someone's master's thesis or student project and it is showing promise to be a startup one point. A big however, the only reason I believe that DMEM's can't be replaced by homemade recipes in academia is not the growth issue, more about replicability of the experiments. It's already so hard to follow protocols even though you use the exact brand, the exact amount indicated in the paper. Other than this, let's break the monopoly of lab suppliers lol.
@kokofan507 ай бұрын
Maybe the industry should move away from proprietary formulas to standardized formulas
@72perseids7 ай бұрын
@@kokofan50 as the video says, more or less each DMEM contain the same ingredients however such small differences may create certain issues. The point here is the homemade recipes will complicate the issue even more and academia will probably won't like it.
@andresmorera64267 ай бұрын
Hell yeah, let's break those price gouging monopolies and cartels that make research unnecessarily expensive!!! Also, I agree small differences in cell culture media do cause issues. But in a hypothetical situation where labs are making their own DMEM from the same recipe, I believe from my experiences in cell culture that variability that already exists due to differences between lots of FBS is way more significant than the likely differences between homemade batches of DMEM substitute. I hope that sentence made sense.
@Oh6667Ай бұрын
I’m actually doing a project on this! I’m a 11th grader in Germany, and for my finals, I’m doing a presentation testing accessible methods for growing tissue cultures. It’s part of our final-year research component, where we’re encouraged to choose topics with scientific or social relevance. This video was what inspired me!
@creepaze6 ай бұрын
My brain was already going towards meringue when you started blending the egg whites, the visual just made it easier.
@Somedude202827 ай бұрын
Buddy you could have found a local Asian market for that pocari sweat & green one.. But props to burning that money for science!
@ThePenisMan7 ай бұрын
Not everyone has a local Asian market. I know my town sure doesn’t, and it’s the second biggest in the state I’m in. The most Asian thing I can buy here is like… lo mein noodles from an actual Asian restaurant and offbrand pockys from Trader Joe’s
@solofdragons64467 ай бұрын
Thing is, Thought Emporium is a Canadian channel, and outside of major cities it can be very difficult to find ethnic markets that sell stuff like that. Even within the shops that do, it can be difficult. I know here in Manitoba, there's a store in Winnipeg called Oomomo, it specialises in Japanese products. I have not once seen Pocari Sweat or Dakari Green there, but even if i had the stock changes with whats popular in Japan. but Japanese products in general can be hard to locate here. Most Asian markets i've seen cater more towards Chinese and Filipino products as we just have a much larger population of Chinese and Filipino immigrants than we do Japanese.
@Shall0e7 ай бұрын
@@solofdragons6446inside London, Ontario, there are a couple of Asian Markets, and I'm decently sure they have those there, if he lives nearby or wants to make the trip, it's a good idea to check.
@rogerp.24427 ай бұрын
@@solofdragons6446He’s in Montréal, Pocari Sweat is 100% available here on some japanese/korean supermarkets
@moscuadelendaestАй бұрын
@@solofdragons6446 Order online.
@shootingblueyes7 ай бұрын
Months of patreon support to pay for a teaspoon of baby cow juice, worth it.
@gian79922 күн бұрын
Thought this was some clickbait garbage but saw who posted it and clicked fast as hell
@mbfhh7 ай бұрын
God I love how much detail they go into 😭😭😭 take my money just don't stop making this amazing insane content
@Pay-No-Mind7 ай бұрын
For a moment there I thought those cartons said "Concentrated concentrate" I was thinking "That must be some INCREDIBLY concentrated...whatever the fuck it is!" 🤦😅😑 I need sleep, but AFTER this awesome vid!
@Flesh_Wizard7 ай бұрын
I was concentrating on the concentrated concentrate too
@Aqoric7 ай бұрын
I think testing electrolyte powders would be an interesting next step, there are unflavoured ones that can be purchased in bulk for very cheap( $20 for 250L). Would remove any additives from the equation.
@brylozketrzyn7 ай бұрын
At that moment just go for pure additives. Electrolyte drinks are mostly salt, sugar and flavour, sometimes with a small amount of potassium chloride
@Aqoric7 ай бұрын
@@brylozketrzyn Proper rehydration formulas often contain BCAAs and other amino acids as well as
@brylozketrzyn7 ай бұрын
@@Aqoric more complex ones for sure, but we can get aminoacids from many sources. It is about balancing nutrients and hormones.
@Aqoric7 ай бұрын
@@brylozketrzyn Absolutely, my original point was simply for large scale production it would likely prove cheaper
@Volvith7 ай бұрын
God, i love science. >laberatory technicians developing a nutritional aid for artificial cell growth in labs< _"Wait... What if we just swap it out with Japanese Gatorade?"_ *>actually works
@Frostfern947 ай бұрын
Just finished work and nearly fell asleep part of the way through. Woke up to the meringues and was VERY confused
@xeddiustripp63987 ай бұрын
You absolutely killed me with the bit around 13:25. Top notch
@WaitWhat997 ай бұрын
This was the best video ive seen all month. Cant wait for part 2!
@vensmoons6 ай бұрын
17:57 Egg yolk... not yoke. A yoke is the wooden beam they use to keep oxen together when pulling wagons. I just couldn't keep my mouth shut.
@JonnyMack337 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to work in a chemical plant as an operator, yhe company was the type you'd take a concept to, and they'd do the R, D & P... and never before in my life have I been more regretful than then... the fac I didn't study chemistry GUTS me.. or any the sciences tbh. Literally EVERYTHING is chemistry. And it blows my damn mind.
@StoneBox_761a7 ай бұрын
blud is bluffing hard with that grammar, he did not work in a chemical plant yall.
@LordDragox4127 ай бұрын
@@StoneBox_761a He was just an operator making the shine, the rest of the gang was doing science on improving the taste to sell it for more.
@StoneBox_761a7 ай бұрын
@@LordDragox412 regardless, i dont think he worked there with that grammar, the requirements to be there are immense.
@LordDragox4127 ай бұрын
@@StoneBox_761a He used to have perfect grammar, but then he drank some heads. That's why he's regretful he didn't study chemistry in middle school. Quite a sad story.
@Raphe90007 ай бұрын
Finally, I can make my own Meatcubator!
@NeilSearle7 ай бұрын
Well done mate, love the videos. Always a good day to find a new one from you.
@renuissance7 ай бұрын
thank you for your passionate projects that you bless youtube with. this stuff makes me want to go into molecular biology
@ultrarageman29567 ай бұрын
18:25 "Maybe the cells wanted more uMAMI?" hahahahah😂 so great.
@ego58092 ай бұрын
Wish I had seen this vid sooner. This guy is singlehandedly destroying the Biotech market and scientific processes. Good Job! 👍
@alonsorojas38297 ай бұрын
Your channel is the most interesting thing I've found on KZbin ever. I wish you success so you can keep working on the projects you want to do and for us to watch them
@musicbyerland7 ай бұрын
At least 2-3 states have, or are about to, ban the sale of cultured meat products. So what we need is a simple, affordable "kit" to grow meat at home. Something akin to gardening, mushroom cultivation, or home brewing. I feel like we're watching the development of such a kit with every new video here! I would love a simple kit/machine where all I'd need to do is subscribe to some kind of service for regular deliveries of raw materials, nutrients, etc., plop those into a machine like an inkjet cartridge, and grow cheap, infinite steaks at home. Also, kindof shamefully curious to sample my own cells and grow some my own "long-pork-belly." Honestly, I bet I'd be delicious...
@sparking0237 ай бұрын
I don't think that will ever fly because it's not just the "affordable kit" that's involved in this. It's also all the equipment required and the sterilization and handling protocols required to grow meat tissue in labs. This team is trained in that area, and even then they're prone to mistakes because that's how it goes. So letting the average Joe meddle with this sounds like a good recipe for an outburst of salmonella or something like that. I'm not a chemist or a biologist, but with my experience in IT and programming I can attest: the hardest thing to do is making your process user-proof. Someone *will* find a way to screw things over, and in the case of foods, the responsibility falls back on the distribution company.
@skorp56777 ай бұрын
Wait, let me guess: The states trying to ban this are also full of right-wing, book-burning, cucumbers?
@badflamer7 ай бұрын
@@sparking023 Off the top of my head, I'd ask if you knew anyone who ever sued hasbro for their kid getting food poisoning from an Easy-Bake Oven cake. Or, alternatively, sued betty crocker after using unrelated salmonella-infected eggs in a cupcake batter and let their kid lick the spoon. It seems to me that whatever products would be made of a kit like this would fall under the same kind of legal classifications. As long as the obvious, instructed, and prescribed usage of the kit and its supplementary products is safe, user mishandling would be seen as exactly that, and not tie back to the kit distributor.
@anonduckduck7 ай бұрын
@@sparking023tbf (a small amount of) people (non-commercially) can their own food which also requires massive precaution in handling It wouldn’t be in supermarkets but I could see a world where it becomes a culinary niche as opposed to a home lab niche
@SubLordHawk7 ай бұрын
Ban the sale? Just how much did the farming lobby -bribe- _ask nicely_ for that?
@Astrelt6 ай бұрын
It is fantastic to see someone in the same field as you do what your university does not have the gonads to fund. Finally, a source of joy for both myself AND my cells.
@noob190877 ай бұрын
I guess feline bovine serum is like the real life equivalent of LCL from Evangelion.
@KarachoBolzen7 ай бұрын
@@azertyQthe cat cows are taking over
@memejeff7 ай бұрын
MooYow
@noob190877 ай бұрын
@@azertyQ Wow. That's hilarious, how did that get in there? I'm keeping it!
@Adshercott7 ай бұрын
Yoga serum, but only the one pose.
@Pixelarter7 ай бұрын
18:32 Try combining the top performers to test if they can complement each other somehow. Maybe a mixture of some can have a more complete nutrient profile for the cells. Also another idea to try: "Soylent complete meal powder". It's supposed to be a balanced mixture of most nutrients the body needs.
@PreinstallableАй бұрын
I'm suspecting that Soylent stuff isn't vegan...
@Celesmeh6 ай бұрын
So I have to say dmem and fbs works for a lot of things, to grow, yes, but to maintain specific metabolic actuvity of whatever distinct cell type youre using, without risking too much differentiation, you need the specific media.
@RJL77 ай бұрын
Agreed, the first sentence of this video is definitely a normal sentence people say on a daily basis.
@mrslinkydragon99107 ай бұрын
This video makes me think about ameture orchid seed growing. The book "growing orchids from seed" (Seaton and ramsay 2005, Kew publishing) Actually lists a recipe for cell medium which involves a blended banana (p.g 75)
@fisrtnamelastname30837 ай бұрын
Orchid, organ, potato pataya
@mrslinkydragon99107 ай бұрын
@fisrtnamelastname3083 well growing orchids from seed is akin to cell culture due to how orchids have evolved. The seeds don't have an endosperm (they are more akin to spores than seeds) and rely on mycorrhizal fungi to provide the developing seedling with nutrients. When growing them, you have to put them in a medium to recreate the conditions. As a result, you need to work aseptic!
@fisrtnamelastname30837 ай бұрын
@@mrslinkydragon9910 wow! That's really cool! Never thought I would learn such a fact by making an awful joke lol
@mrslinkydragon99107 ай бұрын
@fisrtnamelastname3083 oh I didn't get the joke, I just like saying facts
@honichi16 ай бұрын
youve been one of the most interesting channels ive watched recently
@levprotter12317 ай бұрын
I think the Vitamin water ingredient responsible for the cells not growing may have been vitamin A.
@noi01247 ай бұрын
I think it's the kiwi curse. Even jello doesn't work with kiwi.
@clioneclione9866 ай бұрын
Came here to say this, I think it's likely.
@ayulin95777 ай бұрын
I always head on over to youtube after watching your videos on nebula to leave a like and write a comment for the algo :) wish it wasn't necessary but oh well
@huraqan37617 ай бұрын
Except if you don't watch that hurts the watch time and could be worse. I dunno, maybe
@MineSpeak447 ай бұрын
that was some really cool results. I noticed the best fbs 100% replacements were not also the best at 50%. I'd be curious to see the fbs test with 75% added for an extra data point
@platypus42677 ай бұрын
I would have loved to see a control with water or saline used to dilute the mixtures (even though that would probably lead to death pretty fast, but it would kinda put into perspective how beneficial the gatorade ect were)
@mothrahlurker7886 ай бұрын
I thought the same.
@ethans65397 ай бұрын
Aw sweet man made horrors within my comprehension, thanks to this awesome channel!
@MartynDerg3 ай бұрын
for the egg bit, you had me completely until "piping bag", at which point I absolutely lost it XD