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A lot of scientists at A-Bio took turns having interviews with Jessie. Because Young-Joon volunteered to be the very last, she met with Carpentier’s spine regeneration team, Cheon Ji-Myung’s organoid team, and Choi Myung-Joon’s type-2 diabetes team.
“Spinal regeneration still has a long way to go. We did see results in mice experiments, but the experimental group was small. Also, we have to do monkey experiments due to the nature of the research to finish pre-clinical experiments,” Carpentier said.
“The small intestine organoid has a lot of room for future applications in the research and treatment of various diseases, including Crohn’s disease. Oh, we spent nights making progress because we were motivated as well. We were like, “Finally! It’s done! Boom! Organoids!”... but now, our CEO wants to do livers as well. If you can, can you add a job posting at the end of this interview? Our team is dying right now,” Cheon Ji-Myung said.
“All of this success was created from our CEO’s critical insight and brilliant ideas. All we did was strictly follow the basic strategy he designed and control various factors and conditions. Similar to how you can be the first in your class if you study by the book, we developed Amuc following the direction of our CEO…” Choi Myung-Joon said.
“I heard that you developed this in collaboration with Celligener. Could I meet someone from Celligener?” Jessie asked.
“I think you’ll have to go to Celligener for that. They don’t work here.”
Celligener: it was a venture company that became pretty famous at the IUBMB. Jessie had heard that they were doing...



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