See How Tough Your Immune System is With "Blood Wars" 119
Thanks to a new art/science exhibition called "Blood Wars," you can find out whose dad has the toughest immune system once and for all. The brainchild of artist Kathy High, "Blood Wars" pits white blood cells from two different people against each other. From the article: "In order to create the blood duel, High gets a phlebotomist to take blood samples from two different people. She then separates the white blood cells from the rest of the blood and stains them using different colors. They are then placed in a Petri dish and their interactions are filmed under a microscope using time-lapse microscopy. The cellular 'winner' of each round will go onto fight another participant."
Blood wars (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Blood wars (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
You must be new here!
Re: (Score:1)
Dude, that's awful. I sincerely wish you a prompt and complete recovery.
You know, there's one thing that seemed odd to me, you say you probably got it from some food ... I thought such a disease would be either genetic or developmental, but you say you got it through some food. Does it have some kind of viral/bacteriological origin?
I truly hope you get better, and remember, we can be fucking idiots sometimes, but /.ers do take care of each other. If you are having a hard time and need any kind of help (fina
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I had GBS 4 years ago and I would say that is definitely what you have. They should be able to do a lumber puncture to determine if it is that. I had great fun relearning to breathe for myself again and learning to walk again. Not so easy when you can't feel the floor!
However I doubt that you got it from some food in south east asia. Neither I, nor anyone in the support group of GBS sufferers that I know have ever been to Asia never mind eaten some food there. Whilst they don't know what causes GBS. N
Re: (Score:1)
There are many types of autoimmune diseases, I have diabetes type -1. Which is usually a autoimmune disease.
A few ohters are;
Reumathism, psoriasis and well yeah lupus as some mentioned.
Here is a uncomplete wiki list of autoimmune diseases; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoimmune_disease [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
At least my legs and hands still work little bit so I will be able to recover.
Hey, you can visit slashdot, that definitely counts as a blessing :p
I pray for your speedy recovery.
Re: (Score:2)
DUDE! You need to compete! Your overaggressive white blood cells would kick ass!
Re: (Score:2)
Damn. Take care of yourself, hope you recover soon!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I disagree.
Re: (Score:1)
Retreive Winning Cells (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Retreive Winning Cells (Score:5, Funny)
Presumably that would only boost your immunity to humans. And here I thought I couldn't possibly be any more antisocial...
Re:Retreive Winning Cells (Score:5, Insightful)
It might make it nearly impossible for you to get a transplant at a later date due to the white bloodcells fighting off the "bad" cells, or worse causing an auto-immune disorder of some kind.... I'll stick to my own cells, not the ones that have been through anti-terrorist training.
Re: (Score:1)
Why not inject the "winning blood" into the owner of the "loser blood"?
Suppose that kills the loser? Wouldn't that be a problem? "Could" doesn't mean "should". After all, we could send you in chopped up bits to a glue factory (why? ART), but maybe you wouldn't prefer that outcome.
Re: (Score:2)
Suppose that kills the loser?
I think that was his point. Somehow he thinks the two are comparable.
Anytime someone says something like "How the fuck can be this considered ART?" it just encourages the pretentious types to try to be even more strange.. I think the first "modern art" "sculpture" was started as a statement about how crap art was becoming, but people embraced it and just started trying to outweird each other for the sake of it.
Re: (Score:2)
Art is anything that wants to be art.
Heh. This sounds like just the type of thing a really crappy artist would say..
Imperfect Analogy (Score:5, Informative)
Essentially, the newborn cells of the adaptive immune system (B and T-cells) undergo rearrangements of their DNA to produce a incredibly wide variety of receptors.
Then, they go through a selection process - if they react strongly with self, they die (negative selection). After a few more maturation and selection steps, the surviving immune cells are sent throughout the body.
If one of them later binds strongly to something (which is presumably foreign) in the right context, they activate. They trigger an immune response and proliferate. A subset of these daughter cells become essentially immortal - outlasting the immune response they fought in, but ready to quickly mobilize should that foreign substance be encountered again.
So, the memory cells are the hardware, but the rearranged antigen receptor gene they harbor is the information they need to work.
Sounds like a bad fantasy movie backstory ;) (Score:2)
the daughters became immortal - outlasting the the battle they fought in, but ready to quickly mobilize should that enemy be encountered again.
...and guess what happens in the movie.
Re: (Score:2)
Person #1: That's a lot of blood. Whose is it?
Person #2: Does it really matter?
Person #1: I guess not - as long as it's not mine.
Re: (Score:2)
i wonder if you can retrieve the ultimate winner cells (your cells) and it will boost your immune system?
There can be only one!!!!!!!!!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Um, I thought the "memory" was provided by antibodies, which help tag known intruders and serve as a "rally point" for lymphocytes (white blood cells).
I suppose white blood cells can eventually figure out for themselves if another cell is a friend or foe, but the presence of antibody tags makes them go into ingest mode much more quickly.
Without antibodies, I'm guessing the rival white blood cells would spend some time sniffing each other out, and the "more aggressive" one will recognize the other as foreign
No Planescape references yet? (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Oblig. XKCD [xkcd.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re:No Planescape references yet? (Score:4, Funny)
Geeze, what kind of geeks read slashdot these days?
Realms fans, cutter.
Re: (Score:1)
Highlander (Score:1)
There can be only one!~
Re: (Score:2)
As I'm starting Season 4, that's a nice coincidence...
Hell yes! (Score:1)
Re:Hell yes! (Score:4, Funny)
on facebook. duh.
don't forget to spam everyone's news feed with "join my blood in blood wars!"
Re: (Score:2)
So what's up next? Farmville with real sperm and egg?
Chuck Norris (Score:2)
In Chuck Norris virus kicks you.
can't resist (Score:2)
This is bloody cool!
Predicted Future Events (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
FTFY
Re: (Score:2)
I'm still waiting for the zombies, there are gonna be zombies in this movie, right?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No, they don't [keenspot.com].
Re: (Score:2)
And the Champion is: (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:4, Funny)
I meant she should label the Petri dishes, but I spoke too quickly. I reread it and she mixed up both cells in the same Petri dish.
Of course she did that. It's quite hard for white blood cells to fight each other if you put each of them in their own petri dish.
White blood cells generally are unable to use ranged weapons to their full effectiveness.
FTA- "Art-Science installation" (Score:3)
This may be science, but it's sure not art *I* like.
~creepy~
Re: (Score:2)
Indeed. Your blood cells are just hanging out patrolling your body and keeping you safe from bad stuff. These people would have you sacrifice them in an arena for no purpose other than entertainment. Even the "winner" blood cells are going to die in the end. I know they're not people, but it still seems like a "mean" thing to do.
(And yes, i know blood cells die all the time etc. but if i were a blood cell, i wouldn't want to go out like this)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Pussies like you make me sick. Your blood could be out there vying for dominance in the arena and facing down the toughest in the world. It could venture forth into the open world where viruses roam and the very environment could kill it. Instead you want it to sit at home in the couches of your arteries and veins twiddling it thumbs.
Do something for your species! Send your blood cells out to hunt down those terrorist diseases in their homes! Pre-emptively strike at their very hearts before they bring the w
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That would be different (and i believe such tests already happen a good deal in actual research).
In this art project they're pitting blood cell against blood cell, not blood cell against things that are actually harmful to humans, so success here doesn't prove anything. Also, given that auto-immune disorders are probably currently a bigger health problem for people than infectious disease, figuring out how to moderate white-cell action is arguably more important than finding the most bad ass ki
Re: (Score:2)
As long as the gallery doesn't get firebombed, or the funding cut, outrage=artist cred.
Re: (Score:1)
Crip Wars (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
I don't mean drug violence or even that one South Park episode, but really this is a great conceptual way to represent aspects of the body in ways people clearly understand. The hazards of obesity, smoking, etc. compared to baseline or especially an above-average person seem to me a clearer way to visualize this versus any shock-factor "shriveled prune" organ approach.
I am not entirely sure that you mean; that this will be a great individualised service to provide to those who are in need of seeing how compromised their 'immune system' has become (and with 'immune system' too acting as an even more general proxy for their 'overall state of health'). But if you do, I agree, you'd get a very visual and engaging and, I expect, quite an indicative result [you will likely have stronger feelings around wishing this "team" wins than any of the teams you have ever followed/'be
Re: (Score:1)
Are you kidding? This is an amazing display of some of biology's most important fields at the moment. Sure it is not doing research but it is approaching science in a novel and fun way. If even one person is inspired by this it is worth the paltry cost (Lets face it the apparatus needed to pull off this display could be bought used from many universities for next to nothing. As far as the needles/test tubes/storage/whatever goes, most people probably spend more on gas getting to the museum) of the exhibit.
P
Life War (Score:2)
The ultimate immune-system-combat champion ... (Score:3)
OnionSports (Score:2, Funny)
.
How high is High? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Because then we could analyze the results and see if we could find out WHY some white blood cells are stronger than others?
Or, after rereading the summary, this is art. There is no "why" in art.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
...but why would anyone care if one blood strain is tougher than another?
Ever heard of "sport"?
Re: (Score:2)
I might do it if given the chance. I was always sick as a young kid but rarely get sick as an adult. I like to think all those illnesses in my youth gave me a super immune system, what better way to check then a fight to the death?
Currently in development at Discovery Channel... (Score:3)
- White Blood Cells vs Predator
- Deadliest Warrior: White Blood Cells or Roman Centurion
- Jurassic Fight Club: White Blood Cells vs Stegosaurus
survival of the fittest (Score:1)
If darwinism is right... (Score:2)
Then women should find the winner of this very very attractive. I'm in.
I'll mail an envelope full of blood right away.
Re: (Score:2)
uhh... (Score:1)
Paper, Scissors, Rock (Score:2)
And buried deep in the EULA (Score:2)
I visited it yesterday (Score:1)
I visited this exhibition last night.
Interesting stuff, and much more fascinating than repellent. Full marks to the Trinity College students who take you through each exhibit - their enthusiasm added a lot to the experience, particularly for one grounded in engineering rather than life sciences. One of the more interesting pieces was related to the piezoelectric properties of bone. The artist had taken cow bones and turned them into (rather inefficient) speakers.
Hearing "Old MacDonald had a Bone" played
Two blood samples enter; one bloody sample leaves! (Score:2)
Two blood samples enter; one bloody sample leaves!
Racists! (Score:2)
Chuck Norris already won... (Score:1)