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  • September21st

    I wake with a not insubstantial hangover. Colin’s tiny shower offers little solace for my aching head, but slowly I return to normality and head into Manhattan to meet Rachel Holtzman, my US publisher at Penguin Avery for lunch. This is the first time I’ve met Rachel in person, although we’ve had many phone conversations since she bought the American rights for the book (demonstrating her obvious good taste and intelligence).

    There’s an easy, but steely calm to Rachel. If she were an animal she’d be a swan, a powerful grace that I suspect, if necessary, could quite quickly become formidable, but rarely has a need to. “I don’t have trouble with many authors,” she says, “but some do turn out to be stealth assholes.” I laugh. I’m looking forward to working with her. She just seems, well, solid.

    I’m full of excitement about the book and talk hurriedly and a little disconnectedly about everything I’ve been discovering (there is so much in my head it’s still a little jumbled up). It’s pouring out of me in a less than coherent fashion, not helped I’m sure by the bath of red wine and beer I subjected my neurons to the previous evening. On the basis of this I suspect Rachel may be thinking ‘If he talks like this, then God alone knows how much editing his writing will need.’

    One thing that does concern me is the proposed publication date for the book, a whole 18 months after I’m due to deliver my manuscript. I’m worried this may compromise its grasp of the zeitgeist. For instance, there’s a very high possibility that synthetic life will have been created by the time the book hits the stores, yet my manuscript will read as if it hasn’t happened. Sub-orbital tourists will likely be in space by the time you can buy a book that describes them as a near-future possibility. Advances in machine learning (already moving faster than I had expected) may have delivered headlines in the time between the delivery of my manuscript and publication that will make my work seem, well, behind the curve (hardly good for a book about the future). I’m struck by how fast everything I am investigating is moving, and how slow book publishing seems in comparison.

    Ideally I’d like the book out before Christmas 2010 but both Penguin and Profile (my publishers outside the US) are talking of mid-late 2011. It seems impossibly far away, but there are a number of good reasons for the delay. There is the process of working with my editors to hone the manuscript – an experience I’m rather looking forward too (I tend to work better with a sounding board). There is the need to consider marketing strategies, design book covers, and schedule promotional activities. The various TV, radio shows, book fairs etc that will form part of my promotional duties need to be approached and slots booked well in advance. In the end, the speed of publication is largely dependent on the quality of my initial manuscript. The closer it is to the mark, the easier it is for Rachel and Mark (Ellingham, my publisher at Profile) to expedite its route to market.

    All that said, I’m feeling that the book will be a lot more about ethics, attitudes and moral frameworks than I had previously thought. These themes are perennial, and if I weave them well into the text, it should remain ‘current’ whatever the publication date. Indeed, Juan Enriquez’s As the Future Catches You is largely out of date, in terms of the statistics and studies he quotes, but the intellectual and moral issues he asks us to consider have a ongoing resonance. Perhaps I’m worrying too much…

    I spend the early part of the afternoon walking down the west side of Manhattan spending time in Rockefeller Park and watching yachts sail up the Hudson. On one I see an advert for ‘America’s only gay sailing tea dance’ – surely one of the few businesses where a single supplier can saturate the market. Seriously, how many gay sailing tea dances can one economy support? Wandering into the island I hit a sea of humanity, a wall of intent. Everyone has something to do in New York, somewhere to go, someone to see, something to be getting on with. I too have an appointment, with neuroscientist René Hen.

    René is the head of Colin’s neuroscience lab at Columbia University Hospital where his team research Stem Cell Biology and the ‘Neurobiology of Learning and Memory’. He’s also incredibly French. Immediately you know you’re in the presence of someone with a wildly playful spirit. It goes beyond the kind of comic book Gaelic exuberance you might imagine (although he has this in abundance). It’s a look in his eyes. They’re bright from deep within as if little pinpricks of pure inspiration are burning somewhere behind the retina. He smiles easily, laughs easier. He wears his brains like a great musician wears his instrument, not as a badge of honour, or a mark of their profession – but as something they just have a great deal of fun with.

    René Hen - impossibly French

    René Hen - impossibly French

    I ask René how he got into neuroscience. He laughs. “Um… it was my experience with magic mushrooms a long time ago. The idea a tiny amount of this discrete compound could have such a powerful behavioural effect was interesting. You take half of a mushroom and you get effects that are pretty profound and last for hours…”

    “In fact they’ll turn you into a neuroscientist,” I say.

    “Yes! But beyond that I thought that a lot of the mystery had gone out of biology and immunology. Then, and now, the biggest mysteries lie in the brain. That was the other attraction.”

    The problem with neuroscience, to put it bluntly, is it’s bloody complicated. One of the reasons ‘the biggest mysteries lie in the brain’ is that it is an inordinately complex piece of kit. There are, for instance, 400 miles of blood vessels and100 billion nerve cells in that jellylike mass of fat and protein sat inside your head (that’s approximately the same as the number of stars in the galaxy). Trying to understand the interplay of all that cognitive wetware is a mammoth task. Isolating and studying specific in-brain systems or processes is hard to do, akin to trying to concentrate on a single shade of blue throughout a picture of the entire ocean.

    For many years neuroscience made use of those unfortunate enough to have suffered a brain injury or ‘lesion’ as a way to try and understand how the whole system worked, the method of deduction roughly being, ‘well it seems if you take that chunk of the brain out then the patient loses the ability understand basic social etiquette’ (this is actually a direct quote from a physician looking at a brain scan of Boris Johnson).  The brain is not divided into neat departments. As René says, “you can lesion many parts of the brain and get similar behavioural deficits, say in memory or mood. Or, you can lesion one part of the brain and get a particular behavioural outcome, but there could be 50 reasons for it.” Similarly, even though the genetic mutations that are related to diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or Huntington’s are long identified we still don’t understand how these mutations eventually lead to behaviour we see in patients. There’s just too many variables to consider in the way the brain develops and compensates for us to have a model of how these diseases develop. “If you have a mutation early on, you have the whole cascade of developmental compensations, re-wiring afterwards, and at the end there is no way to trace it back to the mutation,” says René. At least not yet.

    Trying to ask specific questions about brain chemistry and physiology is a bit like asking my mum about whether she enjoyed her dinner. “Well, I had fish, which reminds me that there was a great deal on fish at Sainsburies this Saturday, which I found out from talking to Beryl, you remember Beryl? we met her on holiday in Greece and it turned out she lived just down the road in Dunchurch, where by the way the statue in the square was hit by a car, it was in the paper, front page, did you know your brother’s bought a new car…?” (My mum does an amazing thing. She will eventually tell you if she enjoyed her dinner and in the process of getting there will tie up any loose ends she’s left hanging during her tangential asides. It all comes together like the video of an explosion being played in reverse.)

    Because the physiology of the brain is not unlike my mum’s method of answering a questions (everything is related to everything else) isolating useful lines of enquiry is quite hard. You need to get rid of a lot of ‘noise’. This is why when I visit Colin’s bit of the lab (which I have to say needs a damn good tidy up!) he is peering at individual rat neurons under his microscope. Neuroscience is now a largely ‘bottom up’ profession. When neuroscientists therefore find a system that seems to behave in a predictable way within the brain they get excited. Neurogenesis – the ability of the brain to generate new neurons is one such system.

    That our brains generate new brain cells still comes as a surprise to a lot of people, even though it’s been 20 years since neurogenesis was discovered occurring in the hippocampus (a part of the brain associated with long term memory and spatial awareness).  “The dogma was that no new neurons are added in the mature brain,” says René..

    (Another popular myth is that alcohol kills brains cells. Roberta Pentney, professor of anatomy and cell biology at the University at Buffalo concluded it doesn’t, but it does hamper the ability of your brain cells to communicate – although the effects are not permanent. René, I notice has a fine selection of beers and spirits sat on his desk).

    “For some reason we still don’t understand anti-depressants stimulate the production of young neurons – neurogenesis – in the hippocampus,” says René. “So here we have a form of brain plasticity that’s very easy to manipulate, it’s a cell type that’s very unique, you only find it in the hippocampus and maybe one other area. So it’s a window into a brain function. In a sense nature gave us a tool here.”

    “Almost a little laboratory in the brain?” I ask

    “Exactly.”

    You can stimulate neurogenesis yourself. Exercise, learn something new. ‘Enrichment’ says René is good for your brain. “It’s probably a good idea to have more of these neurons,” he says. “We actually don’t know for sure how much more is good though”.

    The discovery and understanding of neurogenesis offers hope to those battling neurodegenerative disorders. If we can learn to switch on the process, coaxing stem cells in the brain to become neurons then we may be able to reverse the damage done to memory by Alzheimer’s, or to repair brain damage caused by more direct means (say a head injury or listening to James Blunt).

    Warning. May contain Andrew Lloyd Webber.

    Warning. May contain Andrew Lloyd Webber.

    “There are stem cells all over the brain,” says Rene. “So even though there are only two niches where neurogenesis is taking place in normal conditions you could wake them up in other parts of the brain. We know that they are elsewhere because if you lesion other parts of the brain, you can get neurogenesis there. So clearly the stem cells are there or are recruited from outside. Theoretically you could treat any neurodegenerative disease. Or a spinal cord injury. Or a cortical injury. That’s something that’s still science fiction but I would not be surprised if we can achieve that.”

    “That’s an incredibly exciting proposition?”

    “Yes, it is very exciting. The interest in this area is enormous.”

    My time with René is up, but I’ve been invigorated by talking to him. He’s like a cross between Winnie the Pooh, Jean Reno and Albert Einstein. That’s a compliment.

    Colin takes me to the pub with another neuroscientist, Clay, who I am reliably informed is ‘beyond clever’. We drink Guinness and talk about girls.

  • September11th

    Boston13

    Today I meet George Church, professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School, a towering intellect and, as it turns out, a generous, warm and funny guy.

    I’m exhausted before I meet George. I’ve been cramming as much knowledge into my head as I can about the areas he works in. I don’t want to squander my opportunity with one of the fathers of the genetic age. I’m worried that my weariness will affect my concentration during the interview and as I approach 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur I’m almost dead on my feet. I have a splitting headache and feel deeply fatigued. Suddenly travelling, research, a couple of night’s fitful sleep and doing gigs in the evening has caught up with me. Pull it together Mark.

    Despite my tiredness I can’t help but be amused by a sign found all around the Harvard Medical School campus…

    Harvards smoking plan

    Some of the cleverest people on the planet work at Harvard Medical school – but it’s heartening to think that even they may sometimes need some help telling ‘inside’ from ‘outside’. 

    As soon as I sit down with George my tiredness vanishes. We’ve two hours allotted, which is generous given his standing. We talk in the end for four, and get on well. He likes the idea of the book and is a passionate advocate of communicating the implications of the genetic age to wider audiences. I’m a conduit. And really, when it comes to feeling tired, I can hardly complain. George is a narcoleptic.

    Perhaps one of the cornerstones of my book will be trying to convey just how deeply incredible and mind-blowing cells and the genetic apparatus they contain are. We are entering the genetic age where, within my lifetime, I am now convinced children in many nations will have their genome sequenced at birth. In the future you may well be given a user manual for you as your very first birthday present. Your genetic heritage and its implications will be accessible to you.

    If like me, you’ve heard the words ‘gene’, ‘genome’ and ‘DNA’ a lot, but not really understood the implications then you’re in for a shock. A good one I think. As I researched deeper into the subject I had numerous ‘Bugger me!’ moments.

    Imagine if you will that someone plonked a computer into the middle of a society that had never seen one. Imagine they start to examine it, first understanding and making sense of the different components parts, until after long years of study they discover that patterns of material they’ve found at various places throughout the computer are code. Sets of instructions. Then they learn to decipher the code. They can read it. Then they learn to alter it. Now the computer isn’t an impenetrable curio, now they can change it. It becomes a tool.

    Now replace the word ‘computer’ in the last paragraph with ‘human’ and you’ve got an idea of where biology has got to. You’re full of code. Code that we can now read, and potentially ‘fix’ and change. Stop for a second. Think about it. You’re full of code. In fact, every single one of your cells has code in it. Most cells have the entire code that describes you wrapped up inside. A trillion infinitesimal USB sticks of data that define how you are made.

    Some people call DNA a ‘blueprint’ but, as George and I discuss, it’s more a cookbook of recipes for all the different parts of you. Understanding not only the cookbook, but how particular cells choose which recipes to make, in what quantities, and how the external environment affects the chef is the challenge genetic medicine now faces.

    We’re just at the beginning of the genetic age. Juan Enriquez (who I’m seeing on Wednesday) makes the analogy that as explorers we have a genetic continent to discover, and so far we’ve mapped a part of the coast. Whilst the ‘code’ you are given at birth is important to understand, how that code is interpreted as we age, or affected by what we eat, drink and do (or ‘expressed’ in genetic parlance) is not fully understood. Or to put it another way, the interaction between us and our environment is yet to be made of sense of, genetically speaking.

    To this end George has set up the Personal Genome Project (PGP) – which is recruiting 100,000 volunteers who are “willing to share their genome sequence and many types of personal information with the research community” in order to “advance our understanding of genetic and environmental contributions to human traits and to improve our ability to diagnose, treat, and prevent illness”. Or, to put it another way to work out why some people who drink and smoke like crazy don’t get really ill, while most of us would. I’m one of the volunteers (for the PGP, not the drinking and smoking). George has put his money where his mouth is. Want to see his genome? Go here. See, I wasn’t joking about the narcolepsy.

    Anyway, if I started now on everything we discussed I’d have no time to prepare for my interviews next week. Suffice to say we covered ethics, engineering, gene therapy, synthetic biology, sociology and politics. And then he took me for a beer.

    I’ll return to the subject of genetics in future posts… for now, I need a brain rest.

  • September7th

    I arrive in Boston tired after a long journey from Guildford, via Woking, Heathrow and a nice chat on the plane with Ryan, a undergraduate physics student at Brown University (which has recently entered the public consciousness in the UK, it being the choice of Harry Potter actress Emma Watson). We have a long chat about genetics (he’s reading Dawkins’ The Selfish Gene) the Large Hadron Collider (he’s not a big fan, saying that the money spent on it could have funded thousands of other labs globally) and what to call meals when your flying between timezones. We can’t decide whether it’s ‘Linner’ or ‘Dunch’. Thinking about the LHC, its current ‘out of operation’ status is something of an embarassment all round, not least I suspect for the person who had to make the phonecall to all the funders… ‘What do you mean it’s the parts and the labour?!’

    Hungry, I find a seafood bar near my hotel, where I’m rewarded with a cool beer and the hugest starter I’ve witnessed, well, since the last time I was in the US. Even in these first few hours Boston reveals itself to be a town that values intellect. My waitress is training to be a pychotherapist after quitting her job as a producer at ABC and I chat to senior couple (childhood sweethearts) one of whom worked on Byte magazine, which was something of a sacred text for computer geeks everywhere in the late 70s. Before going to bed I e-mail my article about the psychology of humour to The Telegraph and note with amusement that they’ve let me have my gags about Ed Milliband (Labour) and Lembit Opik (Liberal Democrat) but have removed my suggestion that Tory’s get caught naked more often than representatives of other political parties. Hmmm. I’ll refrain from wondering what this says about The Telegraph’s sense of humour.

    A jet-lagged inspired early rise the next day sees me set of to explore Boston, which is deserted. I put this down to the early hour but it stays ominously quiet. Outside the MIT media lab (where I’ll interview Cynthia Breazeal on Wednesday) I meet a grumpy PhD who explains it’s a national holiday, ‘Labor Day’ (like William Shatner, a Canadian import). He’s not happy, explaining he’s left completing his doctoral dissertation a little late, hence having to work on a holiday that traditionally marks the end of summer for US citizens.

    The day warms into one of pure summery goodness (if this is the last day of summer it’s going out on a high) and I walk and walk and walk. All in all I’m out for 8 hours, and walking for 7 of them. In the Public Gardens I stumble on a large demonstration in support of President Obama’s proposed health reforms. It’s interesting to think that while I’m here I’ll be meeting scientists that may make many of the conditions that these demonstrators believe need legislative reform to provide equitable treatment a thing of the past. Indeed, my research on the genomics revolution shows it has the potential to drastically reduce the healthcare burden in all societies… but as ever politics will need to play its part. Let’s hope it’s an equitable one. Genomics has applications in reducing the cost of health care but also raises the ugly spectre of insurance firms turning you down for cover based on a risk-assessment of your genome.

    I chat to a few of the demonstrators and ask why they think some people are anti-reform. A few mention the worry it’s ‘socialism by the back door’. In America it seems anything that might have the word ‘socialist’ attached to it is treated like one of the ugly tumours genetic medicine may banish. It strikes me as sad that the word has become devalued by misinterpretation, like ‘feminism’ seems to have and, to a certain extent, ‘optimism’. One thing that is bothering me is that everyone I speak to asks me where in Australia I’m from.

    Boston is a city built on learning. You can’t move for college campuses. I wander to Harvard Medical School, where I’ll interview Professor of Genetics George Church on Friday and feel slightly awed by how important the building on 77 Louis Pasteur Avenue is in relation to the future of medicine and synthetic biology.

    Today, by contrast, was a research day, reading up on sociable robots… and comedy clubs in the city. I’ve scored a gig tomorrow night at Mottley’s Comedy Club which should be fun, my first gig in the states…

    I’ve just stayed up to do an interview on BBC Radio Wales about the psychology of humour, it’s 1:40am. Time for bed.

  • August17th

    I’m just back from a trip to the University of Southern Denmark to see Mark Bedau. Mark’s your average polymath, and one of the key thinkers in synthetic biology – most notably because, not only is he one of the directors of Protolife (who are trying to create life in the lab), he’s also a professor of philosophy. He’s also had an interesting brush with outsmarting casinos which I’ll certainly be touching on in the book. Besides all this he’s setting up a Scientific Social Responsibility movement (taking a leaf out of business’ CSR movement) which isn’t making him popular with some of the old guard of the scientific community. Some fear that his work in opening up the discussion around the ethics and applications of synthetic life will put funding at risk. I had an amazing chat with him – and he was very passionate about the book. I had a TV crew in tow who are using this visit to create a ‘taster’ of the accompanying TV series they want to get made – so I’ll post it up when they’ve done. It’s my first proper crack at TV presenting – and I have to say I really enjoyed it.

    My abiding memories of this trip are not only the deeply philosophical and inspiring chat I had with Mark but Tom (Keeling, cameraman) doing an impression of Gollum that was, quite frankly, scary. Tom mentioned that an ex-girlfriend of his was actually turned on by this. We both agreed this was very wrong.